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Haverford College
Hurford Humanities Center
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For Faculty: Curriculum Development

Access / Enrichment GrantsCourse Innovation/Renovation GrantsCourse Enhancement GrantsTuttle Fund for Development of Visual Culture Across the Curriculum

Access / Enrichment Grants

Astrolabe

Purchased with a grant from the HCAH, this astrolabe is modeled on a design from 14th Century Iberia.
Read more >

Recognizing that the stimulus for innovative research and teaching, as well as for the organization of public events, often emerges from ideas and experiences encountered outside the faculty's usual scholarly societies and conferences, the John B. Hurford '60 Center for the Arts and Humanities supports several Access/Enrichment Grants each year. This program provides financial support to attend events that are not normally supported by the Faculty Travel Fund or Faculty Research Fund (those intended chiefly for those actively participating in a scholarly conference).

Grants of up to $600 are available to fund such activities as interdisciplinary study days or visits to temporary exhibitions or special engagement performances sponsored by museums, libraries, arts presenters, and universities - programs not funded by other college resources. Funds may be used for travel and admission or registration, but not for material items (books, etc.).

How to Apply

Proposals are reviewed on a rolling basis. Only one grant per faculty member per year. The Center favors proposals for trips that anticipate, sustain, or develop themes from one of its other initiatives. Please email your application to Associate Director Emily Cronin at ecronin@haverford.edu.

Curriculum Grant Applications Form PDF

Past Access/Enrichment Grants

Course Innovation/Renovation Grants

Course Innovation Performance

Political satirists Charlie King and Karen Brandow perform with support from a Course Innovation / Renovation Grant.

Funding is available to help fashion a new course or renovate an existing one to augment its intellectual scope and appeal to students broadly interested in humanistic inquiry. HCAH offers two categories of funding for such course innovation/renovation:

  1. Organization of a sequence or cluster of class visits and public presentations by one or several outside scholars, experts, or artists whose contributions are integral, not merely supplementary, to the course design and its innovative or renovative features. Up to $5,000.
  2. Procurement of relevant materials (slides, videos, books); trips to libraries, collections, or other sites by the instructor; or to lend other aid to innovation. Up to $2,000. Additional information is included in the information sheet (the sheet also provides a sample of innovations under the second category).

The Steering Committee is particularly interested in courses that link experience in Faculty Seminars to course development, but welcomes applications addressing other interests and themes.

How to Apply

Date Deadlines: Please email your application by 5 p.m., Friday, October 26, 2012 to Associate Director Emily Cronin at ecronin@haverford.edu The next deadline will be Friday, March 29, 2013.

Curriculum Grant Applications Form PDF

Past Course Innovation/Renovation Grants

Course Enhancement Grants

Funding of up to $500 is available to support class visits to libraries, collections, or other sites. The grants are for one-time exploratory class trips. The Center does not support ventures beyond the initial grant.

How to Apply

Date Deadlines: Please email your application by 5 p.m., Friday, October 26, 2012 to Associate Director Emily Cronin at ecronin@haverford.edu The next deadline will be Friday, March 29, 2013.

Curriculum Grant Applications Form PDF

Past Course Enhancement Grants

Tuttle Fund for Development of Visual Culture Across the Curriculum

Pato Hebert

Artist Pato Hebert offered a survey of his work to a packed crowd in Sharpless auditorium. Read more >

This fund encourages innovative and experimental approaches to visual culture across the curriculum. To advance the integration of visuality in disciplines ranging beyond Art History and Fine Arts, and to engage students in its various theoretical, generic, and material modes, these grants support development of new courses, the major renovation of existing courses, and/or the creation of interdisciplinary curricular offerings in various areas of visual culture. Proposed work will require resources not normally available through departments or the Provost's Office and will address specific curricular goals.

How to Apply

Date Deadlines: Please email your application 5 p.m., Friday, October 26, 2012 to Associate Director Emily Cronin at ecronin@haverford.edu The next deadline will be Friday, March 29, 2013.

Curriculum Grant Applications Form PDF

Possible areas and activities for support include:

The Library of Congress Reading Room

The Library of Congress' Reading Room

  • Curricular Consultations by faculty from other institutions who have developed successful methods of integrating visual materials and issues into their teaching in any variety of disciplines (up to $1,500)
  • Travel to libraries, exhibitions, institutions, museums, and other sites to study relevant pedagogical techniques and/or primary works and materials with an eye to using them for course materials (up to $750)
  • Travel and tuition to attend courses or workshops providing technical or other expertise pertinent to the course renovation/innovation (up to $750)
  • Travel to educational venues for consultation with artists and faculty about content and/or pedagogy relevant to curricular offerings (up to $750)
  • Production of visual databases for classroom or on-line use (up to $1,500)
  • Short-term (50-100 hrs.) student research assistance to aid in any aspect of course development that will provide mutual intellectual benefits to faculty and students (Please use Tuttle SRA application form in additional to the general Tuttle application.)
  • Procurement of relevant instructional materials where library holdings are inadequate: slides, videos, books, etc. that are clearly delineated within a course syllabus (up to $500)
  • Organization of a visiting speaker series /artist series directly tied to the course's pedagogy and open to broad constituencies interested in the work of visual culture on campus (up to $5,000)
  • Curating an exhibition-cum-panel presentation directly tied to the course's pedagogy and student participants ($2,500-5,000 for panel, with exhibition budget to be established as proposed via the Center's "College Gallery Exhibitions" fund)
  • Self-designed workshops involving two or more faculty focusing on specific pedagogical strategies and/or collaborative course construction. Such joint work could result in a team-taught course if home departments support this initiative. This colloquy might take the form of an intensive retreat (up to $1,000 per participant, with an additional $1,000 to invite an expert consultant to the group).