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Skidmore College

Skidmore receives nearly $2 million in grants; research earns national award

August 17, 2020

New grants totaling nearly $2 million will support interdisciplinary and collaborative programs at Skidmore College and reinforce its position as an innovative, leading liberal arts institution, and a professor’s collaboration with other leading research programs is being recognized as an outstanding effort in promoting firefighter health and safety.

MDOCS receives Mellon Foundation grant for community partnerships

Skidmore College’s John B. Moore Documentary Studies Collaborative (MDOCS) has received a $798,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to foster enduring community partnerships and documentary projects.

The four-year grant is the latest in a series of awards from the foundation to the College since 1970 that have together exceeded $9 million.

“At the heart of this initiative, generously funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, is the concept of co-creation — that professional documentarians and members of the Skidmore community partner with community organizations to use documentary as a means of addressing important issues that affect our region,” said Adam Tinkle, director of MDOCS and assistant professor of media and film studies. “We are grateful for the opportunities for community partnerships, innovative learning and new approaches to documentary that this funding supports.”

The program builds on MDOCS’ record of sustainable, impactful documentary initiatives with the community. Recent partnerships have included work with the Saratoga County Economic Opportunity Council’s (SCEOC) Latino Community Advocacy Program and a separate project with a coalition of community groups (SHARE/Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy) that advocated for environmental justice for a predominantly Black community in Albany.

MDOCS community partnership

Jesse O'Connell, MDOCS program coordinator (second from left), Andrew J. Schneller, assistant professor of environmental studies and sciences (second from right), and Adam Tinkle, assistant professor and director of MDOCS (right), partnered with the Sheridan Hollow Alliance for Renewable Energy (SHARE) to host “Climates of Inequality: Stories of Environmental Justice” at the Albany Stage 1 Gallery in March. The international touring multimedia exhibition showcased Albany's SHARE and 21 other communities working to expose the roots of environmental injustices.

The latest Mellon Foundation grant, which continues through 2024, will support MDOCS faculty and staff positions and provide support for grants to community organizations. The scale of MDOCS’ resources and opportunities for documentary production are unique among liberal arts colleges.

The grant will also help to infuse documentary production experiences into Skidmore’s new General Education curriculum, which received previous support from the Mellon Foundation and goes into effect this fall.

Grants will fund new scientific equipment

An award of approximately $500,000 through the Sherman Fairchild Foundation’s Scientific Equipment Program and two grants totaling nearly $600,000 from the National Science Foundation come at a pivotal moment for sciences at Skidmore. As the number of science majors at Skidmore has doubled over the past decade, the College’s new Center for Integrated Sciences (CIS) will support the conviction that scientific literacy is essential in today’s society and will drive the careers of the future. The North Wing of the CIS was completed this summer and construction of the East Wing is now underway. Completion of the full facility is expected in 2024.

Over the four-year grant period, 2020 to 2023, the Sherman Fairchild Foundation funding will allow Skidmore to purchase $494,240 worth of new scientific equipment — from a Raman microscope to an electron spin resonance spectrometer — to support inquiry-driven research and collaboration in Skidmore’s chemistry, environmental studies and sciences, health and human physiological sciences, biology, neuroscience and geosciences programs and beyond. The CIS will house all of Skidmore’s science departments and programs and foster interdisciplinary connections between and among the sciences, arts, humanities and social sciences.

Juan Navea

Juan Navea, associate professor of chemistry, collaborated with fellow Skidmore faculty members to secure approximately $500,000 for the College through the Sherman Fairchild Foundation’s Scientific Equipment Program.

“The grant brings to CIS cutting-edge equipment that will allow students to integrate and connect ideas from classrooms and laboratories across departments,” said Juan Navea, associate professor of chemistry. “It will provide them with hands-on experience on techniques to untangle challenges, be creative and find their way around our increasingly integrated world.”

Two new awards from the National Science Foundation — nearly $327,000 for the Skidmore Chemistry Department’s purchase of a nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer and nearly $267,000 for the Neuroscience and Biology departments’ purchase of an analyzer that measures glycolysis and mitochondrial respiration — will also enhance research and instruction in the CIS.

In addition to coinciding with the phased completion of Skidmore’s new state-of-the-art science facilities, the grants are timed with the rollout of its new General Education curriculum this fall and will help students and faculty fully realize their innovative and multidisciplinary educational goals.

Professor earns prestigious award for improving firefighter health and safety

Denise Smith, Tisch Family Distinguished Professor of Health and Human Physiological Sciences and director of the First Responder Health and Safety Laboratory at Skidmore, is one of the leading scientists on a series of studies that have earned a prestigious 2020 Bullard-Sherwood Research to Practice (r2p) Award from the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) for improving firefighter health and safety across the United States and abroad.

Smith, who has researched the physiological effects of firefighting for decades, worked alongside partner researchers from the Illinois Fire Service Institute, Underwriters Laboratory and NIOSH for five years to study cardiovascular and carcinogenic risks under realistic firefighting conditions and translate that work to firefighters across the country. The NIOSH-IFSI-UL-Skidmore research team’s findings and actionable recommendations to firefighting agencies have led to policy and procedural changes and improvements, including in training videos created by the New York State Office of Fire Prevention and Control and distributed throughout New York state.

Firefighter safety research

Denise Smith, Tisch Family Distinguished Professor of Health and Human Physiological Sciences and director of the First Responder Health and Safety Laboratory at Skidmore, and Chief Craig A. Haigh of the Hanover Park, Illinois, Fire Department help Marcus Jackson '19 put on firefighting gear during a research session at Skidmore in 2018.

“The award was personally very gratifying because it validates our research agenda, which is to provide sound scientific research to the fire service so the policies and procedures they use to protect themselves and the community can be grounded in science,” said Smith.

The Bullard-Sherwood Research to Practice Award recognizes outstanding efforts by NIOSH scientists and their partners in applying occupational safety and health research to prevent work-related injury, illness and death.

The mission of the First Responder Health and Safety Laboratory at Skidmore College is to conduct research that enhances the health, safety and performance of first responders. The lab receives major funding from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

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