Veritas Forum 2015 events

Please save the date and plan on joining us for the 2015 Veritas Forum events next month:

1. Veritas Forum Faculty Lunch: Thursday February 12, 2015 1-2pm in UU 220. Short lecture over lunch with our guest speaker, Dr. Francis Su – followed by discussion in small groups with other faculty members. 

Veritas PROMO 2015

2. Veritas Forum Evening Program: Thursday evening February 12, 2015 7:30-9pm in the Performing Arts Center featuring Dr. Francis Su (Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College) dialoguing with Dr. Kenneth Brown (Philosophy, Cal Poly) on “Nurturing the Yawp: an Atheist and a Christian discuss Education, Achievement, and the Point of Learning.” The discussion will be moderated by Associate Vice Provost Dr. Albert Liddicoat (Electrical Engineering, Cal Poly) and will be followed by Q&A from the audience. This event is free and open to all Cal Poly students, faculty, and staff.

3. Panel Response Lunch: Wednesday, February 18, 2015 12-1pm in UU 220. An opportunity for faculty and students to explore and discuss topics from the Thursday evening forum over a complementary lunch.

 

 

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“Weekend to Remember” Marriage Conference March 27-29, 2015

weekend-to-rememberThe Family Life “Weekend to Remember” marriage conference is an outstanding weekend get-away and opportunity to invest in your marriage.

We hope you’ll consider attending March 27-29 2014 at the Ventura Beach Marriott with a group of us from Cal Poly. 

Here’s a short video gives a good overview of what the conference is all about – and what to expect:

 

Last year, eight couples from Cal Poly attended – and we’d love to have you join us this time around. Please contact us for details. 

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“Winds of Change” Christian Faculty Conference: February 21, 2015

Winds of Change 2015

Winds of Change is an annual conference for Christian professors and graduate students.

This year’s conference will be held Saturday February 21, 2015 in Ontario (Southern California) and is an opportunity to connect with other Christian professors and graduate students from a variety of campuses and disciplines. This year’s conference theme is: “Rising Above the Challenges.” As Christian professors, how does one respond to: 

  • Politics in academia – unfair treatment, misperceptions of you and your work.
  • Teaching today’s students – cheating & ethics, their expectations and yours.
  • How can we appropriately reveal/share our faith?

Professors from various school and life situations will share what has helped them to live by priorities. There will be time for Q&A, and small groups where you can share your ideas. This conference will be held near the Ontario International Airport, in Ontario, California. Click here for information and registration.

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Save the date: Veritas Forum Thursday Feb 12th, 2015

SLO-CalPolyPAC

Please save the date and plan on joining us Thursday evening February 12, 2015 7:30-9:00pm in Harman Hall, in the PAC as Dr. Francis Su (Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College) dialogues with Dr. Kenneth Brown (Philosophy, Cal Poly) on “Nurturing the Yawp: an Atheist and a Christian discuss Education, Achievement, and the Point of Learning.” The discussion will be moderated by Associate Vice Provost Dr. Albert Liddicoat (Electrical Engineering, Cal Poly) and will be followed by Q&A from the audience. This event is free and open to all Cal Poly students, faculty, and staff.

In addition, a lunch and faculty response panel is planned for Wednesday, February 18th @ 12noon in UU 220, giving further opportunity for faculty and students explore and discuss topics from the Thursday evening forum. 

 

 

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In the public square: PRISM “up close” article on MIT’s Cullen Buie

Rich Savage brought to our attention this short, encouraging article in PRISM, the monthly publication of the American Society for Engineering Education.

An article highlighting a Christian in academia is encouraging; finding it in an otherwise secular publication – even more so. Enjoy.

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Article of Faith

A cutting-edge researcher and devout Christian puts belief at the center of both.

By Mark Matthews

In his day job, Cullen Buie fits the profile of a driven, high-powered assistant professor of engineering – of whom the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has more than a few. His Laboratory for Energy and Microsystems Innovation (LEMI) specializes in turning scientific discoveries into workable processes and devices by solving problems that have stumped previous researchers. A prime example is its prototype hydrogen-bromine flow battery. While others knew that the reaction between hydrogen and bromine could generate a powerful electrical current, Buie’s team figured out how to get around the need for a costly membrane and still prevent a power-wasting spontaneous reaction. Result: a relatively low-cost and compact means of storing and releasing energy generated by intermittent solar panels and wind turbines. ”There’s a huge potential market for devices like this,” Buie says.

Similarly, it was no secret that energy could potentially be extracted from wastewater. But LEMI is finding a way to do it, developing tiny microbial fuel cells that use bacteria to turn organic materials, sugars, and acetate into electricity. Installed in a wastewater treatment plant, Buie says, these fuel cells could generate enough power to run the plant itself. Other LEMI experiments explore how to extract more DNA and thus expand the range of bacteria useful for genetic engineering.

It’s in his off-hours that Buie is atypical. A devout Christian since an undergraduate at Ohio State, he lectures at campuses around the country through the Veritas Forum, a group founded by Christian students at Harvard to engage students and faculty in discussions about religion, life, and philosophy. “Unfortunately, faith, religion, and belief have become something that people are told to keep private and not share,” he says. Charismatic on stage and accepting of doubters, he laces his remarks with self-deprecating humor and occasional lapses into the highly technical (“Let me geek out for, like, 30 seconds”).

For Buie, the common theme linking religion and cutting-edge research is faith, which he defines as belief based on incomplete information: “I would argue that the very best research scientists are those who exercise a lot of faith every day.” It took faith, he says, for him to persevere and ultimately prevail in designing an electro-osmotic pump for a fuel cell when he was a Ph.D. candidate in mechanical engineering at Stanford. Two postdocs had tried the same thing and failed; one said it couldn’t be done. Buie tried anyway. “Along the way there were several times when I wanted to quit, but something kept me going,” he says in a videotaped lecture. “That ‘thing’ – I would argue – was faith that ultimately I would make my experiment work. . . . This is the kind of faith you find at the frontier of any scientific endeavor.” While he doesn’t proselytize in class, faith influences how he treats students, he says, and recently caused him to open up a class discussion following the death of a student.

Buie is quick to credit mentors who gave him faith in himself. The list includes Gregory Washington, now dean of engineering at the University of California, Irvine, who offered Buie, then an undergraduate, a head start in research at his Ohio State lab, and Minnie McGee of the Ohio State University Minority Engineering Program. Buie is a mentor in turn. Active in the National Society of Black Engineers while a student – “I want people to notice I’m gone if I leave” – he offered tips on “proposal writing that yields results” at this year’s NSBE convention and serves on the steering committee of the Academic Research and Leadership Network. He and his wife, Donielle, are associate housemasters at an MIT dorm, where they live as they raise two boys. Interaction with people, Buie contends, “is the only thing you do that’s eternal.”

 

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Mother Jones columnist’s thoughts on the CSU “all comers” policy

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Kevin Drum, commentator for Mother Jones magazine, shared a few thoughts earlier this year on the new CSU “all comers” policy:

I think I’m over the stomach bug that laid me up this weekend, so let’s get back to this blogging thing. Today, the New York Times informs me that university Christian groups are losing official recognition because they won’t agree to allow anyone, regardless of religious beliefs, to become a group leader:

At Cal State, the nation’s largest university system with nearly 450,000 students on 23 campuses, the chancellor is preparing this summer to withdraw official recognition from evangelical groups that are refusing to pledge not to discriminate on the basis of religion in the selection of their leaders. And at Vanderbilt, more than a dozen groups, most of them evangelical but one of them Catholic, have already lost their official standing over the same issue; one Christian group balked after a university official asked the students to cut the words “personal commitment to Jesus Christ” from their list of qualifications for leadership.

At most universities that have begun requiring religious groups to sign nondiscrimination policies, Jewish, Muslim, Catholic and mainline Protestant groups have agreed, saying they do not discriminate and do not anticipate that the new policies will cause problems. Hillel, the largest Jewish student organization, says some chapters have even elected non-Jews to student boards.

Apparently this was sparked by a court decision that ruled it was OK for public universities to deny recognition to student groups that exclude gays—including Christian groups. I’m fine with that. But requiring Christian groups to allow non-believers to lead Bible studies and prayer services and so forth? That seems pretty extreme. I have to admit that if I were a member of a campus Christian group, I’d have a hard time believing there were no ulterior motives at work here.

As for the Jewish/Muslim/Catholic/etc. groups that “do not anticipate” problems, I hope they’re right. But this is the kind of thing that’s ripe for mischief-making. I can easily imagine a bunch of campus halfwits who think it would be the funniest joke in the world to join a religious group en masse and then elect an atheist president. These are 19-year-olds we’re dealing with, after all.

But maybe not. Perhaps that requires too much sustained effort. Nonetheless, if it were up to me, I’d allow Jewish groups to remain Jewish and Christian groups to remain Christian if that’s what they want to do. It’s hard to see the harm.

Here’s a link to the original article. 

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“I’m An Agnostic” – Response to De-Recognition from a Cal Poly Student

Perhaps you saw this article in the Mustang News – arguing that the new “all comers” policy unfairly targets campus ministries such as Cru and InterVarsity. Interesting, especially, as columnist Aja Frost is an agnostic. 

The article came out the same day Cru was de-recognized as a student club at Cal Poly – InterVarsity was de-recognized about ten days earlier. 

Mustang News

I’m an agnostic. But it wouldn’t be completely bizarre for me to join Cal Poly’s Campus Crusade for Christ (Cru) chapter. After all, I could meet cool people, get involved in the local community, fill up my social calendar and maybe even have some stimulating debates about religion. But what if I wanted to join Cru’s officer board? I don’t share the group’s core values about religion or its mission to “Win, build and send Christ-centered multiplying disciples who launch spiritual movements.” Should Cru be able to stop me from being an officer? What about making major club decisions — would I get a vote? 

Click here to read the rest of the article.

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Cru & InterVarsity formally “de-recognized” as Cal Poly student organizations

Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo - b&wThis month both Cru and InterVarsity Christian Fellowship have been formally de-recognized as student organizations at Cal Poly. We’re saddened, disappointed, but honestly not surprised by these decisions.

As we shared previously, the 23 campus California State University system has instituted a new “all comers” policy – meaning leadership in any recognized student organization must be open to all students. Campus ministries can no longer use religious beliefs or practice as a criteria for student leadership.

Being “de-recognized” means now having to pay for meeting rooms on campus that previously were free, not being able to participate in student club fairs, and not being listed on the Cal Poly website. 

What it does NOT mean is that these two groups (or others) are somehow being “kicked off” of Cal Poly. They are able, and will continue, to minister to students and faculty on campus. Students will continue to host Bible Studies in their dorm rooms and share their faith with others; Christian faculty will continue to bring their faith into their classrooms and offices. They can even still use meeting rooms – they just have to pay for them now. 

Cru, InterVarsity, Navigators and many other ministries are working together at the statewide level to see this policy reversed – please join us in praying for this process. 

In the meantime, these ministries will be thinking creatively, be doing a few things differently, and continuing to trust God for the task he’s called them to on campus. 

As part of the California State University system, we fully understand that Cal Poly must enforce the policy that the Chancellor’s office has created. We encourage any comments from alumni, students or supporters to be directed to Chancellor Timothy P. White and the CSU Board of Trustees

Please join us in praying that this policy will be reversed, and that student leadership and the full-time campus ministry staff of Cru and InterVarsity will remain faithful to the Lord and to what he has called them to on campus. 

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New Faculty Welcome Lunch: 10/15/14 12:10-1pm 10-100

Please join us as we welcome new faculty at a

“New Faculty Welcome Lunch”
Wednesday October 15th
12:10-1pm Bldg 10, Room 100 (please note this location change)

welcome

This lunch is designed to welcome all new faculty members. A couple of tenured faculty will be sharing a few brief thoughts on how to have a successful experience at Cal Poly – otherwise, the focus will be on enjoying lunch and getting to others from different parts of campus. 

We hope you’ll also consider personally inviting any new faculty from your department to attend with you – or just come.

Lunch is free for new faculty – otherwise there is a $5 suggested donation. 

Please rsvp by Monday Oct 13th (our contact info is found here).

We hope you can join us. 

 

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Praying for student Christian fellowships on campus

As you may have heard, the 23 campus California State University system has recently enacted a new policy that prohibits student groups from selecting leaders based on religious beliefs. This follows a similar policy enacted at several private universities, starting with Vanderbilt University – where two years ago 13 Evangelical and Catholic student organizations lost their campus recognition.

Here’s an excellent video from Greg Jao on InterVarsity’s response to the situation, and a recent article from Christianity Today.

Cal Poly (which is part of the CSU system) has historically been very accommodating to student religious organizations, so at this point we’re unsure how this new policy will affect our campus. None the less, Christian ministries (including Cru, InterVarsity and others) have already been “de-recognized” at several other CSU campuses.

Please know that regardless of current or future policy changes, these organizations are committed to actively ministering on campus. Whether or not they are formally recognized by the university, they will continue to be involved in the lives of students and faculty and serve the larger campus.

As you remember, please pray for our campus’ administration, for ministries on other campuses affected by this new CSU policy, for those making an appeal that this policy would be rescinded, and that God would be glorified regardless of the outcome.

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