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Marquette University's COVID Conversations

Marquette University's COVID Conversations

By COVID Conversations

This podcast showcases a series of interdisciplinary conversations between experts from Marquette's STEM and Humanities communities to bring you insights into the pandemic that you may be missing.
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Community-Engaged Research and Teaching in Times of COVID

Marquette University's COVID ConversationsNov 19, 2020

00:00
56:44
What have we achieved (so far)?

What have we achieved (so far)?

This Covid Conversation looks back at the growth of Marquette’s Covid Research Initiative to evaluate how the various projects that emerged under its umbrella provide templates and ideas for collaborative research.  It is especially noteworthy that each participant wears several hats at Marquette. We also consider what it meant to produce 24 episodes of this podcast and where it may go in the future.  Participants include:

Dr. Edward Blumenthal, Associate Dean of Faculty, Research, and Graduate Studies in the Klingler College of Arts and Sciences and professor of Biology; former co-director of the Northwestern Mutual Data Science Institute.

Dr. Sandra Hunter, chief convener of the Covid-19 Research Initiative, director of the Athletic and Human Performance Research Center, and professor of Exercise Science.

Dr. Lezlie Knox, organizer of the Covid Conversations podcast, and associate professor and chair of the Department of History

Dr. Andrea Schneider, inaugural director of the Institute for Women’s Leadership and director of the Alternative Dispute Resolution program in the Marquette University Law School where she is a professor.

Sep 24, 202153:23
COVID 19 Conspiracy Theories

COVID 19 Conspiracy Theories

Lezlie Knox and Donald Leech (University of Virginia at Wise) discuss his recent co-authored book, Covid-19 Conspiracy Theories: QAnon, 5G, the New World Order and Other Viral Ideas (McFarland, 2021).  As two medievalists, they focus on similarities between the Black Death and our current pandemic, as well as why conspiracy theories are so appealing and how we can counter them.  Leech also reflects on research as a collaborative process, sharing what he learned from working with scholars who come from policy and education fields, medicine and social justice, along with folklore and history.

Appearing in this episode:

Dr. Lezlie Knox - Associate Professor of History and History Department Chair, Marquette University.

Dr. Donald Leech - Associate Professor of History, the University of Virginia at Wise. 

Jun 04, 202132:09
COVID 19 & The Infodemic

COVID 19 & The Infodemic

According to the World Health Organization, people are not only living through a pandemic but also an “infodemic” that has made it difficult to know which information and advice about the virus are accurate. In this conversation, Marquette colleagues discuss this infodemic and why it is different from tabloid news and other types of misinformation that have circulated in the past.  We also discuss societal and individual ways to deal with the infodemic including our own role in challenging fake news when we encounter it.  Participants include:

Valerie Beech, M.S.L.S.- An associate librarian at Raynor Memorial Libraries with research interests in the assessment of freshman English research skills and subject responsibilities in business, advertising, and foreign languages.

Dr. Amrita George-  An Assistant Professor in the College of Business with research interests in health information technology, business intelligence and analytics, and emergent technologies.

Dr. Erin Hoekstra- An Assistant Professor in Social and Cultural Sciences with research interests in health and medical sociology, social movements, and social change.  She regularly incorporates skill development in information and data literacy as part of her teaching.

Dr. Laurieann Klockow - A virologist in the Biomedical Sciences Department who teaches about microbiology and outbreaks, including a new class focused on understanding Covid-19.

May 06, 202140:26
Mask up Marquette II

Mask up Marquette II

The panelists from Mask Up Marquette Episode 4 in Season 1 reconvene to review the current science on COVID-19 transmission and mask-wearing.  They discuss how masks are still effective in preventing transmission of the COVID-19 variants now circulating in the U.S, how winter affects viral transmission, and the importance of continuing to wear a mask even if you have been vaccinated. Though Americans are approaching the one-year anniversary of dealing with COVID-19, the panelists maintain that a mask still remains one of the best tools in containing this pandemic until enough people can be vaccinated. Participants include:

Dr. Paul Gasser - A biologist and neuroscientist in Biomedical Sciences who teaches biochemistry.

Mike Haischer (HSci ‘14) -  The research lab manager at the Athletic and Human Performance Research Center and a current PhD student in Exercise and Rehabilitation Science.

Dr. Laurieann Klockow - A virologist who teaches about microbiology, including a new class focused on understanding Covid-19.

Dr. Paula Papanek - A physiologist and Director of Graduate Studies for Clinical and Translational Rehabilitation Science and faculty member in the Department of Physical Therapy.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Feb 25, 202139:59
COVID Messaging

COVID Messaging

This week our panelists, three Marquette undergraduate students from different disciplines, reflect on their experiences with COVID messaging during the past 10 months. They discuss the efficacy of mask-promoting and social-distancing campaigns; recall their efforts to find reliable sources of information on COVID; and offer their assessments of Marquette's communications to students about the campus's response to the virus.

Dr. Brittany Pladek - Associate Professor of English

Georgia Wahl - Nursing Major

Maggie Thompson - Biomedical Science Major

Johnathan White - Civil Engineering Major

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Feb 04, 202147:28
Looking Back at Season One, Looking Forward to Season Two

Looking Back at Season One, Looking Forward to Season Two

In this bonus episode, the Covid Conversations Organizing Team looks back at season One to discuss some of their favorite episodes and discuss the things they learned. They also look ahead to provide potential topics for season two. 

Appearing in this episode:

  • Dr. Laurieann Klockow, Department of Biomedical Sciences
  • Dr. Lezlie Knox, Department of History
  • Dr. Sameena Mulla, Department of Social and Cultural Sciences
  • Dr. Brittany Pladek, Department of English
  • Elizabeth Wawrzyniak, Raynor Library and the Digital Scholarship Lab
  • Benjamin Linzy, Department of History

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Jan 28, 202146:58
Community-Engaged Research and Teaching in Times of COVID

Community-Engaged Research and Teaching in Times of COVID

This week our panelists talk about how they work with community partners to collaborate on research and interventions. Working in varying research areas, including nursing and racial disparities in maternal and health outcomes, the long civil rights movement and criminal justice reform, and autism and disability advocacy, the panelists think together about specific challenges that arise in their work. They discuss ways that the communities among whom we work are directly impacted both by COVID as well as movements for racial justice. How can we be better partners to our collaborators, and what lessons do we bring to our students that we learn from our communities?

Dr. Karen Robinson, Associate Professor of Nursing

Dr. Robert Smith, Johns Chair of Urban Studies, Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center for Urban Research, Teaching and Outreach

Dr. Amy Van Hecke, Professor of Psychology

Dr. Sameena Mulla, Associate Professor of Anthropology


For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Nov 19, 202056:44
 How COVID-19 Has Changed How We Teach

How COVID-19 Has Changed How We Teach

This conversation, between three Marquette faculty who team-taught a course in Spring 2020, reflects on the ways in which COVID-19 has reshaped their pedagogy, from syllabus design to student expectations.

Participants include:

Dr. Michael Zimmer, Associate Professor in Marquette’s Department of Computer Science, is a privacy and internet ethics scholar, whose work focuses on digital privacy, internet research ethics, data ethics, and the broader social & ethical dimensions of emerging technologies.

Dr. Yoon Choi is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Marquette University. She is interested in Kant’s philosophy as well as theories of self-consciousness and self-knowledge.

Dr. Brittany Pladek is Assistant Professor of English at Marquette University. She specializes in Romantic literature and literature and medicine.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2


Nov 13, 202047:58
Death, Dying, and the COVID Pandemic

Death, Dying, and the COVID Pandemic

This week we discuss ways that people have responded to previous pandemics and large-scale death events, and are there parallels to how people are responding today.

Fr. Michael Maher, SJ, - Visiting Professor, Marquette University Department of History.

Dr. Amy Amendt-Raduege - English Adjunct Faculty, Whatcom Community College. 

Kat McConnell - Counseling Psychology Ph.D. Student who studies bereavement and multicultural psychology. 

Elizabeth Wawrzyniak - Digital Humanities Specialist, Raynor Memorial Libraries' Digital Scholarship Lab.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2





Nov 05, 202046:07
Undergraduate Research During COVID-19
Oct 29, 202030:02
What Chicago’s Historic Bronzeville is Teaching us about Pandemics

What Chicago’s Historic Bronzeville is Teaching us about Pandemics

Dr. Jane Peterson and Noel Hincha discuss their archeological efforts to recreate life in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood. As a result of the Great Migration, the area became home to many Black Americans in the early twentieth century. COVID-19 interrupted their fieldwork but prompted them to pursue new methods and pay more attention to racial health disparities, especially in the context of the Influenza Pandemic of 1918–1919.

Dr. Jane Peterson - Professor of Anthropology in Marquette's Department of Social and Cultural Sciences.

Noel Hincha - A Spring 2020 Marquette University graduate with degrees in French & Anthropology working as a Field Technician for the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Cultural Resource Management Program and the Commonwealth Heritage Group.

Dr. Alison Clark Efford - Associate Professor of History in Marquette's Department of History.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2 

Oct 22, 202034:54
COVID Longhaulers

COVID Longhaulers

This week's conversation focuses on the emerging phenomenon of "COVID Longhaulers" and the challenges associated with tracking this phenomenon through healthcare data management systems. 

Dr. Jessica A. Pater - Research Scientist and Manager of the Health Services and Informatics Research Lab in the Parkview Research Center (PRC) in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

Dr. Shion Guha -  Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science. 

Dr. Sameena Mulla -  Associate Professor in the Department of Social and Cultural Sciences. 

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Oct 08, 202034:41
Marquette Research and the COVID Pandemic
Oct 01, 202034:57
Public Health and the Managing of Pandemics
Sep 23, 202039:05
Privacy & Survelliance during a Pandemic
Sep 17, 202022:15
History and Catholic, Jesuit Contribution to Healthcare and COVID-19
Sep 10, 202036:50
Politics and COVID-19
Sep 03, 202037:54
Mental Health Contexts and COVID
Aug 27, 202040:31
Pivot to Digital
Aug 20, 202037:54
Reading and Rereading During The Pandemic

Reading and Rereading During The Pandemic

This conversation focuses on the value of reencountering works of art—and especially writing—during a pandemic. We touch on how the meditative focus of re-reading can help combat doomscrolling and the attention deficit of a 24-hour bad-news cycle. We also discuss how returning to beloved written works can offer solace and strength during difficult times. Participants include:

Gerry Canavan - is an associate professor in the English Department here at Marquette, specializing in twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature. His first book, Octavia E. Butler, appeared in 2016 in the Modern Masters of Science Fiction series at the University of Illinois Press.

Angela Sorby - is a professor in the English Department at Marquette. She has published 4 single-author books and 2 edited collections. She has won multiple awards for her poetry, including a Midwest Book Award and the Brittingham Prize.

Amy Cooper Cary - is Head of Special Collections and University Archives in the Raynor Memorial Libraries at Marquette University. In addition to her MLIS, she holds a Masters in Comparative Literature and Translation, and is an eclectic reader with interests in British history and dystopian fiction.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2

Aug 13, 202032:16
Adolescent Voice

Adolescent Voice

In this podcast, we discuss various perspectives on how to put youth voices front and center as schools, colleges, and universities consider the coming academic year. We touch on the challenges young people and their families face, as well as strategies to elevate their perspectives and participation. We end by addressing the potential of restorative practices to heal and transform during this challenging time.

Speakers:

Gabriel Velez is an assistant professor of Educational Policy and Leadership in the College of Education at Marquette University currently working on a study of adolescent experiences of COVID-19. Twitter: @GabrielMVelez

Dorian Tellis is very immersed in the work of restorative practices and has taught various members of the community as well as organizations both locally and globally. Ms.Tellis’ email is Dorian.Swish@centerinc.org

Antonio Butler works at the Center for Self Sufficiency in collaboration with the Office on Violence Prevention as a Restorative Practices practitioner and is on the front line of social justice. Facebook link: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100004219350601

Heather Sattler has taught in the Milwaukee Public Schools for 24 years and presently teaches Restorative Practice (RP) at The Alliance School and co-facilitates RP workshops and trainings with her current and former students as well as her work partner, Sharon Lerman.

For more information on the podcast or the research being done at Marquette University, you can visit Marquette's COVID-19 research initiative here: https://www.marquette.edu/innovation/covid-19-research.php

You can email the podcast at covidconvos@marquette.edu

Music is "Phase 2" by Xylo Ziko https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Xylo-Ziko/Phase_2


Aug 06, 202040:14
Mask up Marquette
Jul 31, 202036:20
Native American Responses and Strategies for COVID19

Native American Responses and Strategies for COVID19

This conversation focuses on the unique perspectives and concerns of Native American tribal nations and communities in the face of Covid-19. We discuss the ways in which Native people both draw on generational knowledge and practices when faced with a new disease as well as new innovations that are helping us sustain and protect our communities during the pandemic. We also touch on unique challenges, like issues of funding, data collection, and reporting that Native communities face both in the local Milwaukee area and nationally.

Participants include:

Dr. Samantha Majhor (Dakota/Assiniboine) – a Native literature scholar whose work focuses on Native American material philosophies and relationships between the humans and nonhuman

Dr. Mark Powless (Oneida Nation) – an advocate of Oneida language and culture, the director of Our Ways at the Indian Community School, and a Marquette alumnus who serves as a member of the Marquette University’s Council on Native American Affairs

Jul 16, 202038:02
 Race, Immigration and COVID19
Jul 09, 202031:39
Covid Convos, an Introduction
Jul 07, 202003:13
Narratives of Disease
Jul 07, 202025:35