
Robin Arutt is director of educational programs and services for a small, multicultural/educational publishing company in Philadelphia.
Maria-Claire Cazorla is working for Americorps in Ithaca.
Rachel Corr was awarded a Fulbright grant for field research in Ecuador. She received a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Illinois and now teaches at Florida Atlanta University.
Paul Guggenheim is on the staff of the Chicago Field Museum focusing on conservation education with the population living in the buffer zone of a new national park in Peru.
Pam Keef received a master's degree in biology. Pam now teaches high school in Maine and leads field trips to Costa Rica.
An academic adviser to the business school of Florida State University, Janice Lindsley is working on a Ph.D. in the humanities program there.
Laura Moran, after having her departmental honors paper published, was accepted by the graduate program in anthropology at Oxford University.
Jessica Ranciato works as a policy analyst in the Massachusetts legislature.
Rich Steinberg is a staff member at the Children's Museum in New York City.
Ken Voorhees completed a master's degree in social work and is now employed at a mental health clinic in Omaha, Nebraska.
After interning in a Milwaukee museum as an undergraduate, Jennifer Wiggins is pursuing a graduate degree in anthropology and museum studies at the University of Nebraska.
Brett Heindl is visiting assistant professor of development studies at Brown University's Watson Institute for International Studies.
After a stint in the Peace Corps teaching mathematics and computer studies in Tanzania, Joe Holler (2003) has entered the graduate program in geography at the University of Buffalo with an Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training Program scholarship. Joe will study development problems in East Africa.
NEWS ABOUT OUR FACULTY
Joel Savishinsky documents legacy of fieldwork for IC anthropology majors.
Barbara Johnson, anthropologist and founder of Jewish Studies, retires.
ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT HOSTS 26TH ANNUAL NORTHEAST ANDEAN CONFERENCE
If you can picture yourself excavating a pre-ceramic site in the high Andes, studying traditional taro farming on the Big Island of Hawaii, working on a farm with local Native Americans, helping refugees establish projects to raise scholarship money, working to empower handicapped people in India through music, or recording the behavioral patterns of howling monkeys on an island in Nicaragua, then you may want to consider majoring in anthropology at Ithaca College. Anthropology is the study of the human species, including its origins, evolution, shared traits with other primates, the development of past and present cultures, and diversity between and within cultural traditions. For more than three decades our faculty have guided students in fieldwork, research, and internships in all areas of anthropology. To date, student projects have taken our majors to 22 U.S. states and 54 countries and foreign territories. An extensive list of our students' projects and the kinds of careers they have gone on to is available in Close Up and Far Away: A Database of Student Fieldwork, Research and Internship Projects in Anthropology, Ithaca College, 1973-2006.
The Department of Anthropology at Ithaca College embraces the holistic tradition of the discipline. As a result, our students get thorough grounding in the fundamentals of biological anthropology, archaeology, and cultural anthropology before advancing to more focused coursework in anthropological theories and methods. Our diverse faculty helps students gain regional specializations in the Americas, Africa, the Pacific, and Asia. Other upper-level courses focus on skill building in research methods. These courses emphasize applied anthropology by demonstrating ways that anthropologists make substantial contributions to global issues such as cultural preservation, world hunger, environmental degradation, economic development, cross-cultural understandings of medicine, gender roles, aging, and refugee resettlement.
The guiding philosophy of the anthropology department is that "the best way to learn anthropology is to do anthropology." Anthropology majors are regularly presented with opportunities to participate in faculty research. In addition, community service projects in cultural preservation and community building and empowerment challenge them to apply their knowledge and skills in real settings. Recent practical training experiences and projects have included the following:
Our students also regularly receive internships with some of the most respected organizations. Emily MacDowell interned with National Geographic, where she wrote "Did You Know?" articles for their National Geographic Online! Freshman Melendy Krantz spent the summer of 2006 in Bangladesh, studying Bangla on a Critical Language Scholarship through the Council of American Overseas Research Centers. Elana Sukert interned at the indigenous rights organization Cultural Survival, where she helped to organize bazaars at which vendors, artists, and musicians come together to raise money and awareness for the organization.
We are very proud of our graduates and their accomplishments as well. Indeed, recent graduates have found research positions and internships with the UN's Food and Agricultural Organization in Rome and in nursing homes, courtrooms, museums, organic farming operations, and public schools throughout the United States.
Faculty in the anthropology department are deeply involved in research, consulting, and the applications of anthropology to global as well as local concerns. And our faculty often include their students in their research efforts. Here are some examples of our research:
The small size of our department gives students and faculty the chance to get to know one another and interact together in a close, mutually supportive environment. Faculty work one-on-one with students as mentors, advisers, and fieldwork supervisors. Many students get involved with our anthropology club, which is oriented toward both service and social activities. This strong sense of community also expresses itself in a variety of extracurricular activities. Staff and students participate in informal seminars, picnics, and dinners, and travel to conferences, museums, and field sites. Elected student representatives play a vital role in shaping programs in the department.
Students in anthropology will find that the faculty is interested in promoting their personal growth as well. The department emphasizes that in studying anthropology and the world's cultures, students also learn a great deal about themselves. Overseas study opportunities are encouraged as a means of broadening one's view of the world. We are committed to giving undergraduates the attention and support they need as they shape their future role in a culturally diverse and interdependent world.