Monday, February 8, 2016

A psychology research lab prepares students for graduate school

At the May 2015 Association for Psychological Science convention in New York City,
Anne Cathrine Krebs Bahn (BA ’14), Natalie Pierson (BA ’15),
Assistant Professor of Psychology Katherine Aumer, Ph.D., Cortney Janicki and Nic Guzman (BA ’15).
Born and raised in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Assistant Professor of Psychology Katherine Aumer, Ph.D., first came to Hawai‘i in 2003. This is when Aumer’s research focus, studying relationships and the correlation love has to hate, began while she volunteered in the lab of University of Hawai‘i at Manoa professor Elaine Hatfield, Ph.D. 

"What we found in the current literature is that most of the discussion around hate surrounds people who are outside your in group,” noted Aumer. However, she and Hatfield found “that love and hate are quite common together,” whether it be in relationships with a significant other, a step parent, parent or a sibling.
 
Aumer eventually went on to pursue her Ph.D. at the University of Texas at Austin, and following dissertation work and serving as a lecturer at UH Manoa, she joined the faculty of Hawai‘i Pacifc University in 2010.

At HPU, Aumer teaches psychology and leads a research lab with student collaborators. Students currently in the lab are undergraduate Psychology majors Michelle Britt, Ning Hsu, Christina Imada, Michelle Poirson and Shion Pritchard, and master’s in Clinical and Mental Health Counseling majors Cortney Janicki and Natalie Pierson (BA ’15).      

The team is involved with the research Aumer started with Hatfield, continuing to better understand the presence of hate in relationships. They are currently doing a study in their lab with couples, conducting an activity and using the Google Glass. One person interviews while the other wears the Google Glass and then they switch.

The research experience these students are gaining in the lab, similar to what Aumer experienced working in Hatfield’s lab at UH, is preparing them for graduate school and Ph.D. programs.

“A lot of it here is developing professionalism for the students,” said Aumer. “This is what a lab can be like (in graduate school). This is what an advisor is going to want from you.”

Another opportunity for students to prepare for graduate school is through conference participation, and Aumer and her student lab team members have done that for the last three years. Students get to network, hear speakers they read about in their psychology textbooks, learn about other people’s research, and present the research they have worked on in their lab.

Last May, the HPU team attended the Association for Psychological Science (APS) convention in New York City. Student poster presentations included “I loved hating you: Measuring the relationship between hate and love,” by Anne Cathrine Krebs Bahn (BA ’14), Natalie Pierson (BA ’15), Cortney Janicki and Nic Guzman (BA ’15); “Assessing racial preferences in movies,” by Devin Blas (BA ’15) and Donna Mabuti (BA ’15), who could not attend; and “Male birth control and its effect on perceived attractiveness” by Abigail Rooney (BA ’14), who was unable to present. Additionally, Aumer chaired a panel, “Diverse environments and their diverse outcomes,” and presented “Being a white minority: Experiences of microaggressions in diverse settings.”   

The 2016 APS convention is being held in Chicago in May. In January, Aumer and her students worked on grant proposals, hoping to finance their attendance at this year’s conference.

“The (APS) experience is huge because it brings people from all around the world and across the United States,” Aumer said. 


See Aumer (starts at 6:05, then 10:10, 20:35) on this HuffPost Live panel interview, “Inside the Culture of Hatred,” which originally aired December 2014.

More information on HPU’s BA in Psychology, Psychology minors and MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, posted here.

Kameda-Madar publishes research on Tokugawa-era painters

The book chapter entitled "Copying and Theory in Edo-Period Japan (1615-1868)" by Kazuko Kameda-Madar, Ph.D., Lecturer of Art History, was included in an anthology, Theorizing imitation in Global Context, published by Wiley in January 2016.

Abstract of the book chapter:Kameda-Madar's chapter challenges the stereotypical ideas attached to copying, while reconsidering the issues of allusion, adaptation, transculturation, and pedagogy in the Japanese art tradition, through case studies of the Tokugawa-era (1615-1868) literati painters, Nakayama Kōyō (1717-1780) and Nakabayashi Chikutō (1776-1853), who copied the Chinese paintings.

Kōyō and Chikutō were prolific theorists who, in their treatises, theorized that the proper study of painting began with copying Chinese models in order to gain the technical discipline necessary for the development of an individual style. For literati painters, the practice of copying after the particular style of masters was an intellectual activity that prominently displayed their knowledge of history.  However, these literati painting theories are also filled with intriguing irony, and they often contradicted their practice.

More on the anthology
here.


Kazuko Kameda-Madar, Ph.D.,
art history lecturer & coordinator of
HPU’s
Japan Research Group.

Teacher interns participate in industry conference

Linda Andrade Wheeler, Ed.D., Field Director of Education/Associate Professor of Education in the School of Education (SOE), College of Extended and Interdisciplinary Education, arranged and coordinated for the participation of 14 teacher interns from the BEDEE, MEDEE and MEDSE programs to attend the 2nd Annual Hawaii School Empowerment Conference, “Engage, Empower, Innovate” held at the State Convention Center on Sunday, Jan. 25.   
The SOE students were provided a scholarship to attend this world-class educational event by the Education Institute of Hawaii. They actively volunteered their services in preparing folders for the conference, the registration process, and participation in group sessions collecting questions from attendees.
At the conference, the teacher interns were able to hear the messages of the First Lady of Hawaii, Dawn Amano-Ige, and the Chair of the Hawaii State Board of Education, Lance Mizumoto, along with keynote speakers Diane Ravitch (Professor, New York University), Pasi Sahlberg (Visiting Professor, Harvard University), Catherine Payne (Chair, Hawaii Charter School Commission) and Ray McNulty (Dean of the School of Education, Southern New Hampshire University).
Many of the HPU students who attended this event said that it was an “enlightening experience” for them and that they had gained insight into the current trends and issues in education worldwide.
More information on the HPU School of Education here.

Feb. 9, 2016: Announcements

International faculty development seminar grant: Application due 2/19
The HPU Study Abroad & International Exchange Programs Office is excited to offer another $2,000 grant to participate in one of the Council on International Educational Exchange’s (CIEE) International Faculty Development Seminars. Full details, including the guidelines and application due on Feb. 19, 2016, and CIEE’s 21 international seminars to choose from, are posted here. (Christian Gloria, Ph.D., third from left, attended a summer 2015 seminar in Laos and Thailand, Approaches to Healthcare: Successes and Challenges.) 

HPU Preview Day: 3/12
Do you know a student whom you’d like to learn about HPU and its undergraduate programs and student services? If yes, invite them to Preview Day, which will be held at Aloha Tower Marketplace on Saturday, March 12. Check-in begins at 8 a.m. and validated parking will be available. Prospective students will meet and speak with faculty, current students, alumni and staff through various activities. More information and RSVP link here.

Resident & Community Advisor applications due 2/15
Are you a “people person?” Do you enjoy helping your fellow students? Have you been looking for your niche in the university community? Maybe a Resident Advisor at Hawaii Loa or Community Advisor at Waterfront Lofts position is your answer. RAs and CAs are full-time students who provide support to the community and collaborate with Residence Life and Student Life. Applications available on HPU Connect are due: Monday, Feb. 15, 5 p.m., HLC Residence Life (top of the hill next to Academic Center) or Student Life at ATM. Questions? Email Katie Scott, Residence Life Coordinator, kscott@hpu.edu.

Auditions for Da Freakshow: Confirm by 2/12
Start preparing your act NOW for Da Freakshow, HPU’s 11th annual talent show, which will be at Hawaii Theatre on Tuesday, March 22, 7 p.m. Winners are eligible for a cash prize!

·         Auditions by appointment only and must be confirmed by Feb. 12 with Katie Scott,   kscott@hpu.edu. Aloha Tower Marketplace, 2/16, noon-2 p.m.; 2/18, 10 a.m.-2 p.m; HLC Dining Commons, 2/17, 10 a.m.-noon; 2/19, noon-2 p.m. Applications posted here. Bring completed application to the audition.
·         Call for Volunteers: students needed to help with auditions, rehearsal, front of house, production/stage management. Email studentlife@hpu.edu with your name and HPU email address.

Bookstore #CareerNow Sweepstakes to 2/12
Barnes & Noble College Bookstores has partnered with Why Millennials Matter to put together its first ever #CareerNow Contest. Five lucky winners from across the country will each get a 1 x 1 career boot camp session on campus plus $150 toward a work wardrobe refresh! To enter, students need to go here and submit a 150 character entry describing themselves and their career goals. Deadline: Friday, Feb. 12, 2016. More information at the Bookstore's Facebook page.

BOGO women’s apparel sale to 2/11
Want to get a fresh start to the New Year with a great look? Then come to the Downtown or Hawaii Loa campus bookstores and buy one women's apparel item at regular price and get the second (of equal or lesser value) at 50% off!* The entire stock of women's apparel from Jansport, Red Shirt and Under Armour is included in the sale, no exclusions. Sale runs through Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016. (*Sale price may not be combined with any other offers.)

YMCA PAC Leaders program
The program offers eligible students with exposure to professional development workshops and career mentorship. Application deadline: Friday, March 11. More information and application here. Questions? Contact Ryan Tin Loy, Career Services Center, rtinloy@hpu.edu or 544-0230.

Faculty Workshop: EndNote Basic
HPU Libraries are offering Faculty Workshop: EndNote Basic, a free reference management program. Sessions will be held from Feb. 29- March 3 on both campuses. Faculty and staff are welcome to attend. More information and registration link here.

Spring 2016 UPass and distribution
Undergraduate and graduate students who are enrolled full-time during the Spring 2016 semester and are taking at least one class on the Downtown or Hawaii Loa campus are eligible to receive a UPass. A UPass is a sticker affixed to a student's HPU ID, which entitles the student to unlimited use of TheBus (Oahu’s public transportation system). For more information including the UPass distribution schedule, see The Transportation Fee (UPass) Website.