The Monthly Rag, a publication of the Feminist and Gender Studies interns, is found affixed to toilet stall walls around the Colorado College campus.
A documentary about what happens to a farming community when there is no water left.
Agenda written for the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 6, March 2011.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 1, September 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 1, September 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
A family traveling on the Oregon Trail finds a man stranded in the wilderness.
A group of writers struggle to finish a romantic comedy script. As the writers voice their ideas we see them played out on screen as if they were an actual movie.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Agenda written for the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 2, October 2015.
Agenda written for the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 6, March 2011.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 6, March 2011.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
The Common Data Set is a standardized compilation of descriptive elements created by publishers and data providers in the higher education community to meet the external needs of the community through standard reporting. Institutions annually submit data in the standard form of the Common Data Set and have access to each other's data for comparative purposes. The CDS includes data on enrollment and persistence, admissions, academic offerings and policies, student life, tuition and fees, financial aid, faculty and class size, and degrees conferred.
Using Drake’s Bay Oyster Farm as an example, the conflict between the National Park Service and local community is examined. To analyze this conflict from a legal, historical or political perspective does not fully explain why these tensions came to a head in such an extreme way in the Oyster Farm battle, or illuminate larger implications for land use in the United States. I argue that a post-structural analysis of discourse reveals larger difficulties that have made this conflict virtually unresolvable and damaging to the community, and it indicates that conflicting discourses are present and problematic in other National Parks in the United States. In this paper I examine how the Federal Government, the NPS and the employees of Point Reyes National Seashore have created a powerful discourse of conservation, that has long conflicted with a counter discourse of sustainable local agriculture in the area. The existence of agriculture and aquaculture within PRNS presents a friction point between these two discourses. This friction culminated in a controversy over the removal of Drake’s Bay Oyster Company, and was escalated by a community that has a history of activism and resistance to change. This conflict became a political and legal battle that illuminated the differences in power, scale, and ideologies between the participants in the conflicting discourses.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 6, March 2009.
Meeting minutes for the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 2, October 2015.
Meeting minutes for the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 3, November 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 2, October 2015.
Appendix to the Colorado College faculty meeting, Block 5, February 2015.