Reflections Magazine Issue #50 - Spring 1999 | Page 5
From the
Campuses
Michele Buku‘74
and her husband
Michael Buku ‘82
celebrate graduation
with their daughter
Holly Buku
Brielmaier ‘99.
5
Trustees approve new
social work degree
Coming to
Siena Heights
as the new
Dean of
Students is
Carolyn
Brightharp,
who is
currently
finishing her
Ph.D. in
higher education administration at
Bowling Green State University in
Ohio. Her student affairs experiences
include work at the University of South
Florida, the University of South
Carolina, and Lander University. She
will begin full-time work at Siena
Heights in August. Carolyn received
her master’s degree in student
personnel services from the University
of South Carolina and her bachelor’s
Siena is very pleased to have attracted
such an outstanding candidate, Artman
added, noting Carolyn’s “energy, her
commitment to helping students grow
and develop, her warm and engaging
personality and her ideas for the future
of our student development programs.”
Carolyn will marry Jim Ridgill this
summer. “Carolyn and Jim will be a
wonderful addition to the campus and
Adrian communities,” said President
Artman.
Siena around the world
Art department revives Italy trip
The art department will revive Siena’s
foreign study tradition with a three-week
trip to Italy offered in spring 2000.
While briefer than the Italy Semester that
Sister Jean Agnes Klemm coordinated in
the ‘70s and ‘80s, the trip will be similar
to the Paris Program offered by the
department in recent years. Details are
still being developed but the new Italy
trip will have an art history focus with an
optional studio art component for
students interested in earning credit in
those areas. Participation will be open to
students, faculty, staff and others, space
permitting. For information, contact art
faculty Peter Barr ([email protected]) or
Chris Reising ([email protected]).
n
“I am grateful for her outstanding
service,” President Rick Artman said.
“We will miss her contributions and we
hope she will return to Siena in some
capacity in the future.”
“I am looking forward to the contributions Carolyn will make to our
management team,” said President
Artman. “She and I are kindred spirits,
with our student affairs backgrounds and
degrees in higher education administration. We will work well together.”
Master’s
program will
partner with
Chinese university
Bob Gordon, dean of graduate studies
and lifelong learning, visited the
University of Science and Technology
of China in Heifei this spring to finalize
details of a joint program between Siena
Heights and USTC, making the Master
of Arts in Human Resource Development available to students in China.
Students in the program will spend two
semesters at USTC, three at Siena. The
first students may enroll in fall 2000,
arriving in Adrian in spring 2001 if
things go according to plan.
n
Prior to accepting responsibilities as
dean in fall 1995, Michele served as an
academic advisor and tutor coordinator
at Siena Heights.
degree in biology from the College of
Charleston.
n
fter four years as Dean of
Students on the Adrian campus,
and 30-plus years studying or
working at Siena Heights, Michele
Minier Buku ‘74 has decided to spend
more time as a mother, wife,
community volunteer and student (to
finish her master’s degree). She begins
a one-year leave of absence this
summer; after a year, Michele and the
University will consider alternative
options, without obligations for either.
tudents on the Adrian campus now
can earn the professionally
oriented Bachelor of Social Work
(BSW) degree. The Board of Trustees
voted in May to change the social work
program from a Bachelor of Arts degree
with a social work major to the more
focused BSW. Curriculum components
for the degree already are in place and
the University is seeking professional
accreditation. Accreditation is a
necessity for social work majors seeking
professional positions after graduation.
Accreditation also is becoming a
requirement for acceptance into graduate
study programs. About 40 current
students on the Adrian campus have
declared social work majors. Siena’s
curriculum already mee