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Department
of Modern Languages
Updated
October 7, 2004
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CV
ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE
- Chair, Department of Modern Languages, Wright State University,
July 1, 1999 to present
- Garrison was unanimously elected by his department in the fall
of 1998 and spent one year working and consulting with the outgoing
chair before taking over on July 1, 1999.
- Duties as Chair:
- Lead a department of eight professors, two lecturers, two instructors,
eighteen adjunct (part-time) instructors, one administrative specialist,
and two student workers.
- Supervise scheduling and budget.
- Serve as ex-officio member on all departmental committees.
- Advise all graduating majors and minors.
- Act as spokesman for the department.
- Teach three classes per year.
- Special Achievements as Chair:
- Enrollment Initiatives: guided the department to an enrollment
increase of 40% in the past five years through new initiatives in
collaborating with other constituencies of the university, scheduling,
hiring, and promoting the department’s mission.
- Master of Education in Modern Languages: designed and helped
create this graduate degree in conjunction with the WSU College
of Education and Human Resources.
- Hiring: hired one assistant professor in French and another in
Spanish, three instructors in Spanish and one in German, numerous
adjunct professors in several languages, two secretaries, and two
student workers.
- Nominations: successfully nominated a colleague for Distinguished
Professor; a District Court Judge for an Honorary Degree from WSU;
a high school Spanish teacher for a award of $1,000 sponsored and
presented by the local ABC television affiliate, Channel 22, and
also for the Freda J. Riley Award ($10,000, for an outstanding teacher
with a disability); a faculty member for a teaching award from the
Southern Ohio Conference on Higher Education; three students for
admission to the Institute for the Recruitment of Teachers in Andover,
Massachusetts; two students for scholarships from the national Spanish
honrary, Sigma Delta Pi.
- Departmental By-Laws: wrote a set of departmental by-laws in
accordance with specifications necessitated by a new union contract.
- Recruitment: created, organized, and directed various recruitment
initiatives, including presentations at local high schools and community
colleges, programs at WSU; edited various department brochures,
websites, and other publications.
- Grant collaboration: collaborated with Wright State’s College
of Business in the preparation of two successful Title VIA Grants;
worked on federal grant projects with the College of Health Sciences
and the College of Nursing.
- Liberal Arts Lecture Series: Co-Chair of the Liberal Arts Lecture
Series, 2000-present.
- Administrative Service to the Department before becoming
Chair:
- Immersion Program for high school Spanish students: designed,
organized, and co-administered an on-campus, one-day language immersion
program for area high school Spanish students. The department now
offers this program every year.
- The Major in Modern Languages: designed the major in modern languages
for students who wanted a broader background than was available
through a major in one language. The major in modern languages requires
indepth study of one language, proficiency at the intermediate
level in a second one, and at least one course in a third. It has
for many years been the most popular major in the department.
- WSU International Student Exchange Program with Paraná,
Brazil: co-founded and directed the international student exchange
program between Wright State University and two universities in
Brazil—the Federal University of Paraná and the Catholic
University of Paraná. This program takes WSU students to
Brazil for a one-month study tour that includes classes in Portuguese
and Brazilian culture, trips to various parts of the state of Paraná
and to Rio de Janeiro, and homestays with Brazilian families. In
addition to helping design the program and select the first group
of students, Garrison organized the orientation program, made all
travel and diplomatic arrangements, led the group in Brazil, and
acted as its interpreter. The year after the first successful exchange
with Brazil, WSU’s two exchange programs at that time—in
Brazil and Japan—received from the American Association of
State Colleges and Universities the G. Theodore Mitau Award for
innovation in higher education.
- Advisor of Sigma Delta Pi: served (and still serve) as advisor
to the national Spanish honorary society on campus.
- Advising Majors: served as advisor for all Spanish majors from
1993 – 1996; now serves as advisor to all majors in the Department
of Modern Languages.
- WSU Modern Languages Alumni Newsletter: founded the department’s
newsletter. In the first three years of publication, Garrison edited
it, designed the format, and wrote virtually all the copy.
- College Day Program: designed, organized, and administered a
recruitment program that brought interested high school students
to campus for a half-day of classes and special presentations by
the department.
- Translation / Interpretation for WSU: acted as translator/interpreter
for various constituencies of the university including the President’s
Office, Office of Student Affairs, Public Relations, Medical School,
College of Business, Registrar, Music Department, and Theater Department.
- New Courses: created the following courses: “Ancient Myths
in Modern Literature” (a comparative literature course tracing
the development of Ovidian myths), “The Art of Translation”
(a workshop in various kinds of translating and interpreting), and
“Essentials of Portuguese” (a practical course in spoken
Portuguese designed to prepare WSU students for the exchange program
in Brazil), “Spanish for Law Enforcement Personnel.”
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