Sustain America: Vision, Economics, & Preservation

HIST/EDUC 600

May 5-7, 2006

Suzzanne Kelley

Course Evaluation Rubric

1 graduate credit

Grade

Expectations

Notes

A

1.  Register for North Dakota’s 13th Annual Historic Preservation Conference, “Sustain America: Vision, Economics, & Preservation,” May 5-7, 2006.

2.  Attend 13 hours of conference sessions, in any combination of program choices. A minimum of 75 percent of the sessions you attend must be led by degreed professionals listed at the end of this rubric.

3.  Submit Attendance Record by midnight, May 14, 2006.

4. Choose one of the three main themes of the conference (Tourism, Economics, Preservation). Write a 250-word critical essay about that topic, describing your observations and insights resulting from attending this conference. Essay must be submitted as an attached MSWord document to zzannie@plainsfolk.com by midnight, May 14, 2006. This essay will be shared with professional peers and the public via web-based publication at the Preservation North Dakota web site. 

Register for conference by April 21, 2006, to obtain student discount price of $65 ($75 for non-students). After April 21, add $10 to registration fee. Registration fee includes all sessions and tours. Transportation to and from the conference, meals, and lodging are not included in the registration price. The conference will meet at Valley City State University.

B

1.  Register for North Dakota’s 13th Annual Historic Preservation Conference, “Sustain America: Vision, Economics, & Preservation,” May 5-7, 2006.

2.  Attend 13 hours of conference sessions, in any combination of program choices.  A minimum of 75 percent of the sessions you attend must be led by degreed professionals listed at the end of this rubric.

3.  Submit Attendance Record by midnight, May 14, 2006.

4. Choose one of the three main themes of the conference (Tourism, Economics, Preservation). Write a 200-word critical essay about that topic, describing your observations and insights resulting from attending this conference. Essay must be submitted as an attached MSWord document to zzannie@plainsfolk.com by midnight, May 14, 2006. This essay will be shared with professional peers and the public via web-based publication at the Preservation North Dakota web site. 

C

1.  Register for North Dakota’s 13th Annual Historic Preservation Conference, “Sustain America: Vision, Economics, & Preservation,” May 5-7, 2006.

2.  Attend 13 hours of conference sessions, in any combination of program choices.  A minimum of 75 percent of the sessions you attend must be led by degreed professionals listed at the end of this rubric.

3.  Submit Attendance Record by midnight, May 14, 2006.

4. Choose one of the three main themes of the conference (Tourism, Economics, Preservation). Write a 150-word critical essay about that topic, describing your observations and insights resulting from attending this conference. Essay must be submitted as an attached MSWord document to zzannie@plainsfolk.com by midnight, May 14, 2006. This essay will be shared with professional peers and the public via web-based publication at the Preservation North Dakota web site. 

D

1.  Register for North Dakota’s 13th Annual Historic Preservation Conference, “Sustain America: Vision, Economics, & Preservation,” May 5-7, 2006.

2.  Attend 13 hours of conference sessions, in any combination of program choices.  A minimum of 75 percent of the sessions you attend must be led by degreed professionals listed at the end of this rubric.

3.  Submit Attendance Record by midnight, May 14, 2006, to zzannie@plainsfolk.com.

4. Choose one of the three main themes of the conference (Tourism, Economics, Preservation). Write a 100-word critical essay about that topic, describing your observations and insights resulting from attending this conference. Essay must be submitted as an attached MSWord document to zzannie@plainsfolk.com by midnight, May 14, 2006. This essay will be shared with professional peers and the public via web-based publication at the Preservation North Dakota web site. 

F

Neglect to fulfill any ONE or more of the four expectations from above.

Seventy-five percent of the sessions you attend must be led by degreed professionals listed here:

Anderson, Dough (MBA)

Anderson, Val (MA)

Anderson, Wes (MA)

Chaffee, Ellen (PhD)

     Ice-Breaker: President’s House Guest Inn Tours

     Keynote Address: Campus Preservation

Humstone, Mary (MA)

     Historic Barn Preservation Workshop

     Barn Again! Strategies in Preservation

Isern, Tom (PhD)

King, Steven (PhD)

     Valley City State University

Lindberg, Jim (MA)

     ND’s 3 Most Endangered List

     Rural Preservation  

     Barn Again! Strategies in Preservation

     Economics of Historic Preservation

     Roundtable: Historic Preservation 101

     Progress in Preservation Dinner: Native ND Foods

Hepper-Olson, Bobbi (Vice-chair, American Institute of Architects)

     Buxton Bank: A Work in Progress

Pratt, Claudia (MA)

Quinnell, Susan (MA)

Stickler, Joe (PhD)

    

Non-degreed presenters:

Bentley, Dale (Executive Director, Preservation North Dakota)

     Extreme Restoration: How to Restore a Prairie Church

Koepplin, Bobby (Development Director for Cass County Electric)

     Scenic Route to Economic Development

Ledohowski, Ed (Manitoba Heritage and Tourism)

     Packaging a Heritage Tour

Lindell, Jason (Vice Chair, New Bohemia)

     Still Inspiring: Historic Church to Artist Studio and Home

Miller, Veronica (Preservation North Dakota)

     Adaptive Re-use: Prairie School Workshop

Myrdal, Rosemarie (Lt. Gov. [Ret.])

     Heritage Tour

Schilling, Annette (North Dakota Tourism)

     Heritage Tourism and Historic Preservation in North Dakota

Schultz, Jan

     Armchair Tour: Bridges of Valley City