MCLA to hold sixth annual undergraduate research conference

Print Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS – Gerol Petruzella ’01, a teacher at Mount Greylock Regional High School, will deliver the keynote address at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts' sixth annual Undergraduate Research Conference on Thursday, April 24, in Murdock Hall conference room 218, 2-3 p.m. The conference is free and open to the public.

This year’s conference features the research of students from across academic disciplines in several different formats. For this professional event, student submit an abstract of their work for review by the faculty conference committee. Students have the option of presenting their work visually through a poster session or orally with paper presentations.

New disciplines to the conference this year are environmental science and physics. Other disciplines represented at the conference include chemistry, psychology, history, sociology, biology, English and philosophy. “We are trying to make it as broad-based as possible to encourage undergraduates who want to be challenged to go beyond the classroom setting and be a part of a professional presentation, which would be part of a graduate program,” said Anthony Daly, MCLA history professor. “The conference highlights one of the strengths of the College in that students have the opportunity to do research with a faculty member.”

The event will begin with poster presentations from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Paper presentations will happen from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. A Philosophy Mini-Conference will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., following Petruzella’s 2 p.m. address. Petruzella will speak on “You Want Me to What? Research, Graduate School and a Real Life.” A native of Pittsfield, he earned his bachelor of arts degree in philosophy from MCLA in 2001. Soon after, Petruzella was awarded a Presidential Fellowship to enter the Ph.D. program in the philosophy department at the University of Buffalo, in New York. In 2005, he moved to Williamstown to write his dissertation, which he successfully defended in 2007.

Petruzella has an article under review in the New England Classical Journal, and is working with the American Philosophical Association and the Squire Foundation to bring philosophy to pre-college education, with a high school Ethics Bowl team. He has been an adjunct professor at MCLA in the philosophy department, and teaches Latin, English, Greek, and Sanskrit at Mount Greylock High School in Williamstown.

For more information about the sixth annual Undergraduate Research Conference at MCLA, go to www.mcla.edu/urc or contact MCLA Psychology Professor Maria Bartini, (413) 662-5463.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

North Adams Finance Recommends Public Safety, Administration Draft Budgets

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics.
 
The committee consists of Chair Lisa Blackmer and Councilors Andrew Fitch and Lillian Zavatsky. 
 
The City Council budget includes a 3 percent cost of living increase, in line with the across the board COLA for all departments.
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey said she included a codification administration line of $6,000 to cover the extra meeting the city clerk is doing as the council reviews the city's codes.
 
The elections budget is up about $10,500, largely for worker salaries to accommodate two state elections this year, the primary and the general. City Clerk Tina Leonesio said the extra poll workers are needed because state elections tend to draw a higher number of voters. The cost of the ballots, however, are covered by the state.
 
Leonesio explained how her office was able to save money on the city census and mailings by printing and folding the documents in house, as well as purchasing the supplies and training to maintain the vital statistics rather than sending them out.  
 
"The cost is in the supplies, because we have to put so many things in the census now, it would be a very large expense to have it done by a vendor outside," she said, estimating it would cost three times as much "because we have to pay for every piece of paper they have to print and fold, plus the mailing."
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories