The Shape of Things by Neil Labute
Eliza Brisbin, Robert Riffle
Sponsors: Meriah Sage
Performance includes the beginning and ending scenes of Neil Labute's play, The Shape of Things. Featured
characters include Adam, a museum night guard, and Evelyn, an aspiring artist. Eliza Brisbin (Evelyn) and
Robert Riffle (Adam) are both Theatre majors who are excited to demonstrate the craft of acting and staging
as learned in various classes such as Acting III, Voice and Movement, and Advanced Directing.
Session 2
Join sessionBack and Forth: Tutoring Sessions via Email Made Simple
Amy El-Zayaty
At the University of Findlay, both students and Writing Center Tutors have the option to schedule a tutoring
session via email. In my presentation, I will share some personal tips and academic research that
demonstrates ways tutoring sessions via email can be welcoming and efficient.
Session 3
Join sessionFrom Early Trials to Lasting Difficulties
Brandon Nusbaum
Sponsors: Robin Walters-Powell
Given that early life experiences form the adult experience in an openly-observable, natural progression,
the current proposal involves the examination of the influence of early substance use, specified individual-level
challenges, and specified family-level-challenges in shaping and deeply impacting later adult outcomes. It is
hypothesized that with an increase in incidences of the former factors, in early life, there will be a greater total magnitude of the latter, substance use and other, specified mental health disorders into adulthood.
Session 4
Join sessionRecorded Lectures: Survey of Student Use and Perception (Before and During COVID 19)
Brittany Stewart, Joseph Day, Matthew Gratton, Jennifer Pate, Trent Thompson, Cameron York
Sponsors: Amy Schlessman
Studies have found that using recorded lectures reduces test anxiety, improves test performance, and enhances learning. This study focused on student use and perception of recorded lectures before and during
COVID19. The results compare and contrast student use and perception of recorded lectures before and
during COVID19 between various courses as well as between graduate and undergraduate students. With the
growing popularity of the hyflex flip approach for course planning, which recommends the use of recorded
lectures, these results are timely and insightful. These results can assist faculty with considerations for course
planning.
Session 5
Join sessionThe Impact of Mental Illness on Artwork
Emily Falcone
Sponsors: Marie Louden-Hanes, Nathan Tice
The effects of mental illness are evident through centuries of creative work by artists that suffered with
mental illness. However, understanding the meaning behind their artwork involves knowing how mental
illness impacted their inspiration. Norwegian artist Edvard Munch suffered from agoraphobia and illustrated
his personal experiences of living with mental illness, particularly in his series The Frieze of Life. In this
collection, paintings such as The Scream depicted personal sorrows and confessions organized in themes of
love, anxiety, and death. Similar to another painting, Anxiety, The Scream portrayed how Munch’s fears
consumed him and altered his perception of nature, with a twisted human figure and intense colors of flames
in the sky. Although Munch endured multiple struggles, including a tragic childhood, panic attacks, and
alcoholism, he felt that his art was critical towards illustrating the pain and suffering of his inner self.
Session 6
Join sessionWhy Do Women Like "Rom Com's"? From the Perspective of Women
Micayla Anderson-Osborne, Jill Schmitmeyer, Betsy King
Sponsors: Christopher Medjesky
We are looking at movies that fit under the genre of “Romantic Comedies”. We chose 3 movies that are all
“Rom Coms” from the mid 2000s (2007-2009) and we picked a common actress among all of them in order to
keep a constant within our analysis of the similarities and differences within the different media texts.
Knocked up (2007), 27 Dresses (2008), and The Ugly Truth (2009), all starring Katherine Heigl, compare
different scenarios of heterosexual relationships coming together despite a conflict. Katherine Heigl is known
for her starring role in “Grey’s Anatomy” as well as her reputation in the acting world for being a “Diva”. This is
one of the reasons we chose her to be our constant. We are trying to determine why women enjoyed
watching these movies a couple of years ago and why they stopped enjoying them.