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New book examines near-death experiences
The
Near-Death Experience: A Reader, recently published by Routledge Press
and co-edited by Jenny Yates, professor of religion and philosophy at Wells
College and Lee W. Bailey, associate professor of religion and culture
at Ithaca College, provides readers with an interdisciplinary view of a
phenomenon that crosses epochs and cultures.
"I want to help physicians understand
what is happening to patients during and after the near-death experience,"
says Yates. "We include essays from the fields of religion, psychology,
and philosophy. It is important for people in the contemporary scientific
world who are encountering this phenomenon in hospitals and elsewhere to
learn that there are other ways of knowing and seeing."
Research on near-death experiences
(NDEs) has increased and become more sophisticated over the last 20 years.
A remarkable consistency has emerged as numerous accounts have been studied
and analyzed. (A Gallup Poll in the early 1980s revealed that 15% of adult
Americans reported an unusual experience around death.) Some of the most
common NDEs involve traveling through a dark tunnel, out of the body travel,
the appearance of beings made of light, and a rapid review of one's life.
The perspectives represented in the
book are panoramic. The anthology includes an essay by Raymond Moody, a
physician and philosopher who brought NDEs to a mass audience in 1975 with
his bestseller
Life After Death. An article by psychiatrist Karl
Jansen focuses on the drug Ketamine which induces similar images of tunnels,
lights, and out of the body travel in subjects. Jansen believes a sudden
release of brain chemicals, similar to the effects of Ketamine, might be
responsible for NDEs. A piece by researcher and NDE skeptic Susan Blackmore
is included. Along with these discussions is an essay by Tibetan Buddhist
Sogyal Rinpoche about death and rebirth images in the Tibetan Book of the
Dead. Judith Cressey's work is represented which locates parallels between
mystical experiences and NDEs. Lee Bailey's contribution recounts the NDEs
of Peter Sellers, Eddie Rickenbacker, Plato, and Black Elk. These and other
selections provide the reader with a thorough understanding of the phenomenon.
The idea to assemble The Near-Death Experience began with a conference
at Cornell University in 1994 where Yates and Bailey presented papers.
Editors at Routledge were interested in publishing new scholarship on NDEs
and invited them to submit book manuscripts separately, but Yates and Bailey
decided collaboration would be a better way to approach the task of sifting
through the vast amount of literature on the subject. "We spent the first
summer doing computer searches on everything that had been published, particularly
looking at the recent offerings. We ordered prints of all of that material
and read hundreds of articles in addition to working with people we already
knew," she says.
In her Cornell lecture, Yates talked
about how mystical traditions across world religions report the appearance
of a being of light which she interprets as a universal symbol of spiritual
consciousness or enlightenment. "It is a phenomenon that is consistent
and not in conflict with any religion, which seems to me where we have
to move in the future in terms of understanding multi-cultures and multi-religions."
These views are reflected in her contribution to the volume entitled, "Being
of Light:
Dreaming the Vision Onward," which
presents a mixture of personal analysis and applied theory.
Yates believes that helping people
cope with their near-death experiences and subsequent life changes is important.
She dismisses discussion of the validity of NDEs with the simple statement
that we cannot deny the needs of the millions of people who have shared
the experience. "Whatever culture you are in, discipline, or religion,
people are reporting the same phenomenon in the near-death experience,"
she says.
September, 1996
Wells biology professor joins network
to transform teaching
Candace W. Collmer, associate professor
of biology at Wells, has been selected as a member of the Project Kaleidoscope
Faculty for the 21st Century (F21) network.
Project Kaleidoscope is an informal
alliance of individuals, institutions, and organizations dedicated to strengthening
the nation's undergraduate science and mathematics community. Collmer was
nominated for this honor by Ellen W. Hall, Wells' vice president for academic
affairs.
Members of the F21 network serve as catalysts for reform in science, mathematics,
engineering, and technology education, at both the local and national level.
A central objective of the program is to build local learning environments
that attract all students to science and math and encourage their persistence
in the study of these fields.
Collmer will have the opportunity to
attend the PKAL National Assembly, join regional networks of faculty to
stimulate dialogue, lead on-campus discussions of innovations in teaching,
apply for PKAL Visiting scholar grants, and serve in a consulting role
at other institutions.
Project Kaleidoscope provides persistent
opportunities for faculty and their administrative colleagues to exchange
ideas and share their enthusiasm and vision for building better learning
environments.
Collmer received her B.S. from Mary
Washington College of the University of Virginia and her M.S. and Ph.D.
from Cornell University and has been a member of the Wells faculty since
1990.
The Faculty for the 21st Century project
is supported by the Exxon Education Foundation and the National Science
Foundation.
September, 1996
New pathways to chemistry taught at Wells
College
Faculty and students from Wells College
and area high schools spent part of the summer learning how to make chemistry
classes appeal to more students, especially women. The workshop, "New Pathways
to Chemistry," was held at Wells College July 29 through August 16, with
breakout sessions at Southern Cayuga and Groton Central Schools.
The program encourages students to investigate chemical questions about
everyday items, and construct experiments to find the answers. The participants
developed four experiment modules, each with an average of six parts; one
at the elementary, middle, high school, and advanced placement levels.
The modules teach chemical concepts
in an inquiry-based, hands-on format, and are organized in a mystery story
context, which also emphasizes reading comprehension and logic skills.
Three of the four mysteries involved forensic science; one was a true story
about the mystery involved in the discovery of sulfa drugs. The experiment
modules will be introduced during the 1996-97 school year in the Southern
Cayuga and Groton Central Schools.
Jim Overhiser, science coordinator
and eighth grade teacher at Groton Central School, worked on the middle
school module. "This was a fantastic opportunity. Wells supplied us with
the time and resources to develop this unit, and try out a variety of things."
In January, Overhiser's students will solve the "Who Killed Professor Rig
R. Mortis" mystery.
Overhiser explains that he made a few
modifications to the project. "In the Professor Rig R. Mortis story, there
are eight characters who provide essential information. Our drama department
is going to perform the story, based on the script that was created at
Wells, for videotape. This way, students will be able to review the video
to look for clues."
This experiment was developed as part
of the New Pathways to Chemistry project comprising college and high school
teams. The workshop at Wells was one of four sites in three states. The
project is administered through the College-University Resource Institute,
Inc., in Washington D.C., under the direction of Julia Jacobsen of CURI,
Inc., and Wells College Professor of Chemistry Linda S. Schwab.
The curriculum began 10 years ago when
women faculty from four colleges decided that more effective ways of teaching
chemistry to freshman and sophomore college students were needed. Wells
College joined the group five years ago when the program was expanded to
include seven colleges.
Schwab says the easiest place to introduce
changes is in the laboratory, where there is room for freer exchange among
students. "When students establish their own questions, and find the answers,
they are imitating real work more closely," Schwab explains. "The students
learn to observe actions in the lab, keep careful records, ask questions,
then try to find the answers - just as they would if working professionally
in related fields."
Participants in the workshop were Margaret
Flowers, professor of biology at Wells; Stephanie Walker, a graduate of
Groton Central School and Wells College; James Overhiser, science coordinator
and Jennifer Evener, student Groton Central School; Sonja Sorochinsky,
science coordinator, and Stephen Bechtold, Nathan Krause, students at Southern
Cayuga Central School. Grant Dietert, a student at Southern Cayuga provided
technical assistance and Matthew Dietert, student at the Montessori School
of Ithaca, participated in procedural checking.
New Pathways is made possible by the
Jessie Ball duPont Fund, TRW, Inc. and Wells College.
September, 1996
Two from Wells attend White House policy
summit
President Lisa Marsh Ryerson and Kathrine
Ehrlich, a Wells senior from Weedsport, New York, had a working breakfast
at the White House on the morning of Tuesday, September 17, to explore
issues in women's education with top Clinton officials.
"Wells wanted to give an outstanding
student with a special interest in government a chance to be involved in
this important event," said the college's Dean of Students Susan H. Ryan.
Ehrlich, a public policy major, is part of the college's mentor program
that connects leaders from the junior and senior classes with first-year
students to teach leadership development.
Ryerson and Ehrlich went to Washington
along with other college presidents and students from the nation's 83 women's
colleges for a two-day policy summit. Women's education and leadership
issues were the subject of panels, roundtable discussions, and plenary
addresses.
"We not only got to speak our minds,
but I really felt like we were being listened to," said Ehrlich in a press
interview. "It was an absolutely wonderful experience to have your voice
heard."
The summit began with a keynote address
by Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala. The roundtable
discussions at the White House were led by senior administration officials
such as Theresa Loar, Director of the President's Interagency Council on
Women, and Judith Winston, General Counsel at the U.S. Department of Education.
Betsey Myers, Deputy Assistant to the
President and Director of the White House Office of Women's Initiatives
and Outreach, addressed the participants and led a panel discussion which
included senior White House advisors Carolyn Curiel, Senior Speech Writer
to the President, and Elaine Kamarck, Director of the Vice-President's
Reinventing Government Initiative.
They gave their unique perspective
on the various policies and initiatives likely to affect women in the 21st
century and answered questions from the floor. Evelyn S. Lieberman, Deputy
Chief of Staff to the President, accepted the resulting action agenda on
behalf of President Clinton.
The policy summit was a collaborative
effort of the Women's College Coalition (of which Wells College is a member),
the White House Office of Women's Initiatives and Outreach, and Mount Vernon
College.
September, 1996
Other Articles
in Wells College News:
| September,
2002 |
September,
2000. - May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| August, 2002 |
September,
1999 - August, 2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| September,
2001. - May.,2002 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
|
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
November - December,1996 |
|
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
|
February -March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
|
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
|
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
|
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
|
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
February - March,
1996 |
Last updated 01/22/2003
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