Present Your Work!

With generous support from the New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance (NJSAA), the NJHC has issued a call for posters related to New Jersey history and welcomes you to participate! Topics related to the Mid-Atlantic region with an emphasis on New Jersey are encouraged. And while environmental history and preservation are being featured at the 2016 New Jersey Forum, posters on a broad range of topics are welcomed!

Proposals MUST include: ? Contact Information (address, telephone, e-mail) ? Title of Poster ? A three (3) sentence bio that includes your current school/professional affiliation and how you would like to be listed in Forum promotional materials ? An abstract of no more than 100 words ? A diagram of your poster ? Any required materials (easel, table, stands etc.) Submission Guidelines: Please include a 100-word abstract on your poster’s topic and research to Chief Programs Officer Niquole Primiani at Niquole.Primiani@sos.nj.gov by September 19, 2016. Your submission will be reviewed and you will be notified of the acceptance of your proposal no later than October 7, 2016. If accepted, further information will follow.

Lees Seminar Schedule for Fall 2016

September 23, 2016 (Friday), 4:00-6:00 p.m.“The Business of Preservation: Antiquarian Views and Commercial Enterprise in the Early Republic”                                                        WHITNEY MARTINKO, Assistant Professor of History, Villanova University & Commentator: Zara Anishanslin, Assistant Professor of History, College of Staten Island

October 21, 2016 (Friday), 4:00-6:00 p.m.“American Grievances Red-Dressed: Imperial Politics, the Breakdown of Authority, and Theft by Boston Crowds During the Townshend Acts Crisis”                                                                       DAVID NIESCIOR, Rutgers University-Camden & Commentator: Michael W. Zuckerman, Professor of History Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania

November 18, 2016 (Friday), 4:00-6:00 p.m.“Mexico, the United States, and the Idea of Development in a Globalizing World, 1808-1830”                                                           KAREN CAPLAN, Associate Professor of History, Rutgers University-Newark &Commentator: Lorrin Thomas, Associate Professor of History, Rutgers University-Camden

Volunteer Opportunity: Meet the Leading Scholars of Early American HIstory

The 16th Annual Conference of the Program in Early American Economy and Society (PEAES) at the Library Company of Philadelphia on Thursday evening October 6th and Friday October 7th, 2016. Our History Department and the Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences are cosponsors. Graduate students (4 or 5) are needed to help out on a volunteer basis to assist with greeting conference attendees, working the registration table, and ushering attendees to seating. This is an opportunity to list your work as “Service to the Profession” on your CV’s and to meet and network with important scholars, authors, journal editors, as well as fellow graduate students.*Due to a recent change in the leadership at the Library Company (the host institution) the conference leaders cannot promise monetary remuneration at this time but they are trying to get everyone paid.* To learn more about the conference or to register, visit:

https://www.librarycompany.org/Economics/2016conference/

If you are interested, please contact Dr. Demirjian ASAP at: rdemirj@camden.rutgers.edu .

Civic Engagement Graduate Fellowship Applications

The Office of Civic Engagement is presently accepting applications for our 2016-17 cohort of Civic Engagement Graduate Fellows.  The Graduate Fellows program is an excellent opportunity for your students to develop firsthand classroom leadership experience while exploring the pedagogy of engaged civic learning. Graduate Fellows are provide a stipend of $1,000 per semester.Those interested in learning more about the Graduate Fellows program can visit our website, and students can submit an application either through our site or by following this link.

 The deadline for applications is Monday, August 22; students who have any questions are welcome to contact Michael D’Italia, program coordinator for engaged civic learning, at 856-225-2710 or via email atmichael.ditalia@camden.rutgers.edu.  

Paid Part-Time Fellowship Opportunity

The National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia is looking for a recent graduate or graduate student to fill a paid part-time Fellowship position in the Education Department. The Museum Education Fellow will lead educational programs for school groups on-site, and off-site throughout the region. They will facilitate lessons and activities with school groups during the week and occasional weekends. This is a great opportunity for recent graduates and graduate students to gain practical experience.

Contact:
Rachel B. Urkowitz
Manager of Education
National Museum of American Jewish History
101 South Independence Mall East, Philadelphia, PA 19106
rurkowitz@nmajh.org 
(215) 923-3811, extension 153