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Voice with the Voiceless

Voice with the Voiceless

Sharon Irving

“I want to be a voice with the voiceless,” says a 2008 graduate preparing to perfom in the next round of America’s Got Talent. Irving will debut a full-length album of original works in the coming months.

ϳԹ graduate Sharon Irving to perform live this month on America’s Got Talent

CHICAGO (August 10, 2015) — It was three days before Sharon Irving was to audition for the TV series America’s Got Talent. Mere hours before and earn her an automatic trip to the live rounds in New York City. But the 2008 ϳԹ graduate had her mind on another gig.

She was in Angola, Louisiana, at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, also known as the “Alcatraz of the South.” She was performing with the worship team in front of hundreds of inmates as part of an ongoing prison ministry.

“I didn’t want to do it because I thought, ‘I have to save my voice for America’s Got Talent,’” Irving says. “But I think God lined that up because it put things in perspective.”

Irving tells the story of a community of people with amazing voices who sang their hearts out that night. Some of them came up to her after and told her to think of them when she’s up in front of the judges.

“During my sophomore year at ϳԹ I started saying that I want to be a voice for the voiceless,” Irving says. “It kind of evolved to I want to be a voice with the voiceless, because I’m all about empowering people. That’s what I wanted my music to be about.”

So when she walked on stage, she wasn’t thinking about the celebrity hosts or the bright lights. She was thinking about the men in Angola who sang their hearts out. “It’s easy to focus on the wrong things because it’s a competition,” Irving says. “You get nervous and you start to compare yourself with other contestants. I’ve been reminded constantly that this is bigger than me.”

Music as a bridge to healing

Irving was born and raised on the South Side of Chicago. She grew up singing in her grandfather’s church, Greater Mount Moriah Baptist. “Music has always been a part of my upbringing,” she says. Her parents have videos of her writing music when she was five years old, before she was even aware that her father was a premier musician himself, a former musical director for jazz legend Miles Davis. “I really believe that this is something that I was born to do.”

Sharon Irving, America's Got Talent

“Sometimes people have a gift where we can move our hearts, and you moved every heart in this room,” America’s Got Talent Judge Howie Mandel told Irving on stage on June 9. America’s Got Talent airs live on NBC on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 8/7c. Irving’s first live performance will be either August 11, 18, or 25.

The pieces were there that linked music with a larger purpose. Irving describes how in “black culture, music is closely linked to our struggle,” and with that, she also speaks about the example of her grandfather, who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “When the slaves had to run for their freedom, they came up with these songs that carried them through. And so for me, that tradition is passed on from my grandparents. Music is healing and it bridges the gap between people.”

It was when she came to North Park in 2004 that she started to link those elements together and find her own identity and purpose with music.

Irving says she feels a responsibility and a calling to be a prophetic voice through her music, a “mouthpiece” to create an atmosphere of freedom where people “would feel reconciled to God and to each other.”

“I had a professor at ϳԹ, , and he was one of the first professors that taught me about what it means to live in this world as an agent of change and to take the path of least resistance,” Irving says. Simms, professor of Africana studies, takes his students on a journey through history from an Afrocentric standpoint, and considers the ways that African Americans, Afro-Mexicans, and Mexican Americans experience life in the United States today. The role of music in that context is essential.

Irving was a major, and minored in . These areas drove her interest in understanding how things work in society, specifically with issues of race and class, and figuring out ways to use her talent to speak to those issues.

It was around the same time that she began leading worship with , a weekly communal worship experience on North Park’s campus. She says this experience shaped her “in a big way.” She found her voice, not just in melodies or songs, but also with different forms of communication, specifically a type of poetry known as spoken word.

“I started writing about my experience growing up in Chicago and what that was like,” Irving says. “It’s one thing to have a talent for writing songs in your room that no one hears, and it’s another to actually use that voice for good.”

As part of the worship team for Collegelife, Irving helped to record an album for the North Park community, which featured a spoken word performance. You can listen to the track from that album here: Listen

Eclectic style

Ahead of her live performance, Sharon Irving offered this playlist to highlight her musical influences. Listen in the stream above or head to .

After graduating from North Park, Irving worked as a vocalist at Willow Creek Community Church for several years. She recently left that position and is nearing completion of an album due out sometime this fall. It’s titled 69th and Bennett, the address where she grew up, paying homage to foundations that continue to influence her.

Though Irving does admit her upbringing is not the only influence on her music. She boasts of a surprisingly eclectic taste in music, which presents opportunities and challenges her as an artist.

“Being a black girl from the South Side of Chicago, I think some people might be surprised to find that I love Dolly Parton. I love Bjork, Sufjan Stevens, Radiohead, and Led Zeppelin.” She says she is influenced by what feels good, and is drawn to artists who are thoughtful about the entire musical experience, including stage design and wardrobe. “I love old school because I’m an old soul, but I also love world music, and any music that uses a lot of different instruments.”

Her brother is also a musician, doing mostly underground instrumental work, and Irving says he is one of her biggest inspirations.

Some people in the industry tell Irving it would be easier if she clarified whether or not she was a Christian artist, or picked some kind of pre-defined category. That would be easier to sell. But that wouldn’t be true to her as an artist, and especially to the breadth of her musical influences and interests.

Live show

Irving can’t reveal the song she will sing for her first live performance in New York City. She does hint that it will be closely tied to her identity and mission as an artist. “I’ve been really encouraged by the process,” Irving says. “Television is a whole different world for me. I thought they would try to make me more commercial or do things I didn’t want to do.”

Instead the opposite happened. She has worked with producers and musical coaches who have encouraged her to share her message of hope. They told her she was the only artist on the show with a mission to her music, and that wasn’t something to hide from.

“It is not just about entertaining people,” Irving says. “I hope that the music I sing in New York can break down those barriers that divide us as humans.”

 

America’s Got Talent airs live on NBC on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 8/7c. Irving’s first live performance will be August 11, 18, or 25.

 


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NPRESS Seeks to ‘Change the Game’

NPRESS Seeks to 'Change the Game'

NPRESS 2015

NPRESS students and their sponsoring faculty members gathered on Friday, July 24, to present findings from their 8-week research projects.

Students complete first summer of new research program

CHICAGO (August 3, 2015) — When the spring semester ends and the last finals are complete, most undergraduate students head out on their own summer adventures. But for a group of ten students, in collaboration with ten faculty partners, a new academic opportunity was just beginning.

“North Park has been around for almost 125 years and I can tell you there has never been a summer quite like this,” ϳԹ President David Parkyn told a full room on Friday, July 24, in the Johnson Center.

The audience was there to hear final presentations of the first group of NPRESS students. The NPRESS (North Park Research Experience for Summer Students) program provides opportunities for North Park students to conduct research with a North Park faculty mentor for eight weeks over the summer. It was the brainchild of a core group of faculty, and funded by a small group of donors, allowing students to dive into a topic in a way that the constraints of an academic year do not always allow. Students received a $3,500 stipend and were given the opportunity to live on campus, making it possible for them to focus solely on research.

“The donors who support NPRESS are individuals who are deeply committed to your experience here at ϳԹ,” Parkyn told the students. “They want invest in you, and figure out the kinds of things that can change the game for our students.”

NPRESS Architecture Tour

The NPRESS program had a number of communal learning experiences, including a historical architecture tour of Chicago.

More than 30 students applied for the program, with 10 chosen. They worked with a faculty member on a topic and submitted a research proposal to the selection committee. The committee looked for diversity of topics, in addition to students who had laid the foundation for further research throughout their time at ϳԹ. A number of students conducted research in the sciences, while others did work in theology, English, and accounting. A complete list of participants and projects is below.

“Some of the students were sitting on the fence as to what their future holds as far as academia,” said , co-director of the NPRESS program alongside . “This is going to give them the gusto, the strong thirst for more research, and it will probably have a positive effect on the larger student body and faculty.”

Students spent time in private research and in conversation with their sponsoring faculty member, but an important part of the NPRESS experience was communal learning. Together, they listened to panels of North Park faculty experts, hearing stories of their current research projects. They also attended the Justice Conference in Chicago, and participated in a guided architecture tour of the city. It was part of an effort to demonstrate that research is a communal project, and while individual topics may be different, there are many points where they interconnect.

"All learning is a creative process,” Parkyn added in his message to the students. A significant amount of the research presented today took advantage of our location in Chicago, reinforcing the idea that this city is in fact our classroom.

NPRESS Matthew Davis

Matthew Davis, a senior double major in and , studied the ambiguous status of female prostitutes in Roman imperial religion with . "I believe the greatest strength of the NPRESS program is the ability to be mentored by faculty," Davis said. "Dr. Willitts helped me become a better thinker and writer, and for that it is an invaluable experience."

Alexandria Slavik, who is heading into her senior year at ϳԹ as a double major in and , said NPRESS was a valuable experience for her because she “was able to learn every step to the research process.” Her project investigated the relationship between personality, religiosity, and vocation in ϳԹ undergraduate students. The goal was to understand the relationship in order to develop a model for prediction of vocation based on personality and religiosity measures, aiding advisors, students, and student support offices with career counseling and development. “This opportunity was important because when I graduate from North Park I will be pursuing a master's degree in occupational therapy. That is a growing field and I will benefit from basic research about practices and treatments.”

The NPRESS program will continue next summer and applications for interested students and faculty members will be available in the coming months.

2015 NPRESS student and faculty participants:

Samantha Wagner with Dr. Kezia Shirkey ()
Gender Differences and Health Change: Physical and Psychological Changes in Students Enrolled in Stress and Health

Alexandria Slavik with Dr. Elizabeth Gray ()
The Association between Personality, Vocational Interest, and Religiosity in College Undergraduates

Susannah Thorngate, a senior double major in secondary education and English, participated in poetry events around the city as part of her research on poetry and social justice in Chicago. "NPRESS was a great chance for me to see the value of performance poetry in terms of shared human experience," she said. "I was able to expand my understanding of research, social justice, and community all at the same time." took place at the Green Mill, a historic jazz club in the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago. View more of her performances on her .

Kristin Lundeen with Dr. Stephen Ray ()
Modeling Pedestrian Comfort in an Arbitrary Geometry

Oluwakemi Oshimokun with Dr. Suzen Moeller ()
Rethinking the Trauma Center Placement on the Southside of Chicago

Yavor Todorov with Drs. Matt Schau and Drew Rholl ()
Detecting and Characterizing Human Pathogens in Ixodes scapuloris

Matthew Davis with Dr. Joel Willitts ()
The Status of Prostitutes in the Religious Communities of the First Century City of Rome

Debbe Elfren Espejo with Mr. Mark Gavoor ()
The Relationship of Inventory Turns and Cash using Managerial Accounting Performance Measures

Erika Husby with Dr. Ilsup Ahn ()
Pedagogy of Centro Autónomo: Popular Education as Postcolonial Resistance and Recovery

David Potter with Dr. Mary Trujillo ()
Sustainable Social Change through Contemplative Activism: An annotated typology of self-care practices

Susannah Thorngate with Dr. Kristy Odelius ()
Poetry and Social Justice in the Chicago Community

 


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Incoming North Park Freshman Invited to White House for Youth Summit

Incoming North Park Freshman Invited to White House for Youth Summit

Beat The Odds Summit

The Beat the Odds Summit, hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama on Thursday at the White House, focused on sharing tools and strategies to help more students successfully transition to college and complete the next level of their education.

Part of First Lady's Reach Higher initiative

CHICAGO (July 24, 2015) — Incoming ϳԹ freshman Cesar Bustos, a graduate of Steinmetz High School in Chicago, was invited to attend a youth summit at the White House on Thursday. He was one of 130 students from across the country selected to attend the Beating the Odds Summit, hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama.

The event was part of the first lady’s Reach Higher initiative, which is intended to get more U.S. students to continue their education after high school. Bustos participated in workshops and panels focusing on obtaining the tools and strategies to help more students successfully transition to college and complete the next level of their education. Students attending the summit come from a variety of backgrounds, all of whom had "overcome substantial obstacles to persist through high school and make it to college," the White House said in a statement.

“The experience sounds so surreal,” Bustos told the Chicago Sun-Times in an interview before leaving for Washington, D.C. “Being undocumented, I never believed I would ever go to the White House or even meet the first lady. I never thought this would happen to me. As undocumented immigrants, we come to work and hope we can provide better for our children. That’s what my mom wanted for me from the beginning.”

On Thursday, Michele Obama told incoming college students that "education should be cool again. This should be the cool thing to do in life."

A panel consisting of Obama, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, E! News co-anchor Terrence Jenkins, rapper Wale, and college senior and education activist at Brown University, Manuel Contreras, discussed the keys to success in college.

“Failure is a necessary part of growth and success,” Obama said. “Don’t let that be your mental barrier. Roll up your sleeves, don’t be afraid to work hard, and if you fail, recover. Get over it."


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Golden Apple Scholarship a Springboard for Smrt

Golden Apple Scholarship a Springboard for Smrt

Steve Smrt Golden Apple

“Nothing can prepare you for teaching more than actually submerging yourself into the teaching profession,” says Steve Smrt, who began an assignment this summer at Robeson High School with the Golden Apple program.

ϳԹ junior sees teaching as a kind of ministry

CHICAGO (July 23, 2015) — Steve Smrt, a Rockford native and ϳԹ junior, had intentions in high school of becoming a . But by the time he got to campus his freshman year, he began to “feel a tug in a different direction,” as he describes it.

“I felt a calling towards teaching, but I would say that teaching is still a kind of ministry,” says Smrt, a double major in and . It’s a calling to serve and invest in young people, though the environment may be different.

That calling was affirmed this spring when Smrt received the , the . Beyond financial assistance to complete his teaching degree at ϳԹ, the Golden Apple award also provides career development and mentoring opportunities throughout his undergraduate program and into his teaching career. 

This year, 200 college students from Illinois were selected for the Golden Apple Pathway Scholarship, bringing the total number of statewide participants to more than 1,800 since its inception in 1989. The program is designed to prepare future teachers to thrive in the most challenging high-needs school environments where more resilient teachers are needed. 

Smrt’s first-hand experience has already begun this summer, as he received a teaching assignment at Robeson High School in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago. He is teaching a small class of seven high school students, leading many of the classes alongside a cooperating teacher from Robeson. It’s a credit recovery course in social studies, his favorite subject, which allows the Robeson High School students to earn credits to move on to the next grade level.

School of Education Award Recipients

Steve Smrt, second from right in top row, with additional 2015 award recipients from the School of Education.
Front Row, left to right:

  • Christina Phillip (Lincoln Academy Student Laureate Award)
  • Katherine Bast (School of Education Award for Outstanding Junior)

Back Row, left to right:

  • Valerie Lee (School of Education Outstanding Senior)
  • Taylor Peterson (The Peder Hedberg Foundation Scholarship)

After teaching all morning, he and his fellow Golden Apple award recipients then regroup from their teaching assignments for additional classes and workshops on the art of teaching.

The demand of the program thus far has been challenging, Smrt admits. “But it also inspires me to become a better teacher. It’s my first experience inside of a classroom. I’m not only bettering myself in my content areas, but also learning how to reach different kids. People learn in different ways and it’s about differentiating your teaching.”

, professor in the and liaison to the Golden Apple program, sees no limits to Smrt’s potential. 

“I am impressed by Steve's love for learning, professional and personal integrity, and willingness to collaborate with others,” Maduram says. “I am sure his experiences with Golden Apple are enabling him to become a thoughtful educator. I know he will distinguish himself as an excellent teacher.”

After his upcoming junior year at ϳԹ, Smrt will receive another teaching assignment for next summer as part of the Golden Apple program. Once he does graduate from North Park in 2017, he plans to continue teaching history or social studies to high school students, preferably in an urban setting. As part of the Golden Apple Pathway Scholarship, Smrt has committed to teaching in a high-need school in Illinois for five years following college graduation.

“We applaud these young people for making the selfless choice to inspire and lead future generations of students through a career in education,” said Dominic Belmonte, Golden Apple president and CEO, in a release. “As teachers they will experience the reward of improving the lives of thousands of children. We know from experience that excellent teachers produce successful students and we welcome this new class of future educators with deep gratitude and enthusiasm.”


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More Than Just Fun Times and Winning Games

More Than Just Fun Times and Winning Games

North Park Lost Boys playing on the Hump

In the early 2000s, the Ultimate Frisbee team got its start playing on the Hump behind Old Main.

The Lost Boys, 15 years later

CHICAGO (July 9, 2015) — In the spring of 2001, a group of ϳԹ students would gather a few times per week on the Hump. That’s what the rolling green space behind Old Main is called. It has served many purposes over the years, including for these students as a makeshift Ultimate Frisbee field, with bushes and trees acting as end zones and out-of-bounds markers. The games were casual, something to do after class and to meet people.

That year, one of the team members got in touch with a rival college west of Chicago and asked if they wanted to come to North Park for a formal game.

“I remember them showing up with jerseys and cleats and thinking, ‘This is the sport I want to play,’” says Luke Johnson, who was a junior at the time. “At that point I went from a casual observer and casual player to spearheading a movement that year that we needed to form a club.”

The ragtag group of guys lost the match that day, but that summer Johnson, along with fellow student Jeff Keyser, approached the University’s about turning their casual group into a formal school club. They eventually got their own set of jerseys and over the last decade have risen to become a regional power in the sport of Ultimate Frisbee. “I can tell you we haven’t lost to that team very often since that day on the Hump,” Johnson adds.

The Lost Boys, originally known as Extend, has three goals: brotherhood, fun times, and winning games. “The idea behind Extend was to use Ultimate Frisbee as a platform to talk about Jesus,” says Johnson. “Even though it’s not called that anymore, it instilled a value set that still exists today.”

Since the formal inception of Division-III Nationals in 2010, the North Park team has made it there every year except one, finishing as high as third. That is made even more impressive by the fact that only one team per year from the region earns a bid to nationals. At one point, the team was ranked as the 38th best collegiate Ultimate team, which includes teams from Division-I and Division-II universities.

And although leery of the name change at first, Johnson came to appreciate its purpose. “When they changed the name to Lost Boys I think it really captured well the spirit of the team,” he says. “There is this group of guys that really don’t belong in the sport. They are not the jocks or have much experience at all, but here they are competing at the highest level.”

Case in point, by 2009 the club had improved and was competing regularly with teams across all college divisions. Johnson tells the story of a young student at ϳԹ, who was not particularly athletic, still working on his English, and trying to find his community on campus. One day that student was walking by the Hump and spotted the group of guys running around throwing a Frisbee. He asked them what they were doing, and quickly earned an invitation to play.

“He fell in love with the spirit of the team and the friends,” says Johnson. “He came to every tournament, played maybe two-to-three points in a whole weekend, but he’d warm up, be in huddles, and he didn’t care. I’m happy to be a part of a club that can have a guy like that on the team. That’s what makes this team so special.”

More than Frisbee

The Lost Boys is ultimately about something more than an official 175-gram disc and formal jerseys. Johnson knows this firsthand, as his journey with the club ventured far beyond his days as an undergraduate.

First ϳԹ Lost Boys Ulitimate Frisbee team

The team's original name, Extend, instilled the values of brotherhood and character that persist today.

After graduating from North Park in 2003 with a double major in and Johnson moved to Oregon to serve in a church. By 2009, he was thinking about graduate education, and pursuing a master of divinity through

“It might sound silly, but a huge factor in considering North Park Theological for seminary was knowing that I could come back and play college Ultimate,” Johnson says.

His eligibility had not expired—in college Ultimate the five-year clock starts ticking once you play your first game—so he decided to move back. And that decision paid off in more ways than one. At his first tournament in St. Louis he met a North Park undergraduate student, Kelly, who was an Ultimate standout in her own right and still the only female to ever play for the Lost Boys. She also starred for Allihopa, North Park’s women’s Ultimate Frisbee team.

It turned out a few years later the two would get married, and Kelly would go on to play for the , a women’s professional Ultimate Frisbee team in Seattle, where she would help them to win the 2014 World Championship in Lecco, Italy.

What’s more, Luke Johnson turned his love for Ultimate Frisbee, born out of the Lost Boys, into a partnership with the . Johnson’s company, , works on video production for the men’s professional Ultimate Frisbee league, which has seen an incredible amount of expansion in recent years.

Allihopa North Park

The North Park Women’s Ultimate Team, Allihopa, is a group of dedicated ladies who love to play Frisbee and love the Ultimate community of friends and fun. Allihopa formed as a club sport in the spring of 2003.

The fundamentals of Frisbee

On a warm sunny day in late June, a current member of the team, Adam McDowell, and coach and former player, Cameron Hodgkinson met us on the field at nearby Von Steuben High School to toss around a Frisbee. McDowell, sporting his Lost Boys jersey, was taking a break from a summer physics course on campus, while Hodgkinson, a 2011 alum, stopped over on his lunch break wearing work pants and black leather dress shoes.

At its most basic form, the point of Ultimate Frisbee is to pass the disc from one end of the field to the other without dropping it. It’s free flowing, relying on the integrity of the players, with no referees.

“The game itself fits right into the spirit of the Lost Boys, and becomes a perfect avenue for players to fully embody what it means to play with character,” says Luke Johnson.

There are two main positions, McDowell and Hodgkinson explained, cutters and handlers. They can be thought of as wide receivers and quarterbacks. , including some complicated ones like the hammer and the chicken wing. But the two basics are the forehand and the backhand.

“Other teams try to get fancy with their throws and it can look nice, but we rely on fundamentals,” Hodgkinson says.

Each fall, the Lost Boys bring in fresh recruits with little experience for basic training. The first thing is to teach them how to throw, and players line up across from one another for a simple game of catch. It can get tedious, but after the fundamentals, they then move on to the team’s signature on-field strategies.

On offense, a team usually plays what’s called a horizontal stack or a vertical stack, basically how they line up on the field and where the players run. The Lost Boys prefer the horizontal stack, though they will switch it up, and prefer deep throws to a collection of short ones. The team is mainly known for its defense, and its execution of a zone. Most teams play man-to-man. It’s simpler and requires less strategy. But the Lost Boys practice the zone, and take advantage of the windy conditions of the Great Lakes region. They count on the other team’s inability to successfully complete a series of passes, and more often than not, it works.

Yet despite all of the strategy, and practicing, and game plans, for Hodgkinson, like Johnson and everyone else who came before, the Lost Boys is about more than winning.

“Since we are not a varsity sport we don’t make any cuts,” he says. ”It doesn’t matter if you’re in shape, whether you were a star athlete in high school. We could care less if we win or lose. Obviously we want to win, but we just want to be with our friends.”

It’s a spirit born out of the North Park experience. “You are becoming an adult, figuring out life, and just spending so much time together,” Johnson adds. “That brotherhood is a natural thing.”

Setting the mark

North Park Lost Boys

“When they changed the name to Lost Boys I think it really captured well the spirit of the team,” Johnson says. “There is this group of guys that really don’t belong in the sport. They are not the jocks or have much experience at all, but here they are competing at the highest level.”

In April 2014, the Lost Boys suffered a shocking defeat in the quarterfinals of the Great Lakes Regional to Indiana Wesleyan. It meant the first time the team wouldn’t get the one and only bid to nationals for D-III since its officially inception in 2010.

This past April, the team had an opportunity to earn back its place as the premier D-III Ultimate Frisbee power in the region with a return matchup against Indiana Wesleyan in Rockford. That Indiana Wesleyan team happened to feature the D-III national player of the year, yet the Lost Boys started fast and won 14-11, securing its place at Nationals.

They returned a few weeks later to Rockford for the national tournament, and would exceed expectations, finishing in a tie for 11th. After the tournament, the team posted on its :

“Thanks and good luck to all of our seniors. It was a pleasure playing with you guys for the past 4 years! The team will take some time off and enjoy the summer, but are already gearing up for a trip to North Carolina next May for Nationals.”

On ϳԹ’s campus, you’ll still see a fair amount of Frisbees flung around the Hump, whether it’s a small game of Ultimate or a group of freshmen learning about the infamous secret disc golf course. The team now plays at a larger park down the street on Foster Avenue. In the fall, they will put up posters and recruit new students to join them for practice a few times per week. Nationals is the expectation now, and probably will be for some time. There is no shortage of belief. It’s a far cry from that day in 2001.

Still, the spirit of the club remains the same. “It’s the community that keeps me around,” says Hodgkinson. “I want to be a part of continuing this tradition however I can.”

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The last game of the day for the North Park Lost Boys was a tough one. There was one player though who stood out for the boys from Chicago. Check out his highlights and final words of the day to his teammates.

Posted by on Saturday, May 16, 2015

 

 


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Andrea Mitchell Receives Fulbright to Teach in Latvia

Andrea Mitchell Receives Fulbright to Teach in Latvia

Andrea Mitchell

“No matter where I am, whether that’s getting the opportunity to teach in Latvia or after the Fulbright, North Park has given me tools to meet people where they’re at,” said Andrea Mitchell, 2015 alumna and the University’s 18th Fulbright recipient in the last seven years.

CHICAGO (June 24, 2015) — A third ϳԹ graduate from the 2015 class has received a Fulbright award, bringing the University’s total to . Andrea Mitchell, an from Austin, Texas, will travel to Latvia this fall to serve as an English Teaching Assistant in either a university setting or as part of the community with younger students.

“No matter where I am, whether that’s getting the opportunity to teach in Latvia or after the Fulbright, North Park has given me tools to meet people where they’re at, to care for the 'whole person,' Mitchell said. “That is a life of significance and service, and it’s an honor to have been given much to serve with.”

While at ϳԹ, Mitchell worked in the admissions office and in the . Her elementary education focus was in music, and she also earned a minor in and an .

“It’s the people who have most shaped me at ϳԹ,” Mitchell added. “Yes, I got an education. But I also was challenged to be a young adult who follows and seeks after Christ with all that I have.”

After serving in Latvia, Mitchell plans to return to Chicago to teach at the elementary or middle school level.

“Andrea's wit, intelligence, and depth of analysis will enable her to be a very effective English teaching assistant in Latvia,” said , professor of education at ϳԹ. “She has greatly researched into the customs, language, and life of the country. It has been said that a powerful teacher displays several of the same characteristics of a great actor or actress. Andrea's zeal makes her do just this. She will mesmerize her students while teaching them about our language and country.”

Earlier this spring, Natalie Wilson and Kate Asnicar were awarded Fulbright awards for English Teaching Assistantships in Ecuador and Malaysia, respectively. .

The Fulbright Program was established by the U.S. Congress in 1946, and is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State. It is the largest U.S. international exchange program offering opportunities for students, scholars, and professionals to undertake international graduate study, advanced research, university teaching, and teaching in elementary and secondary schools worldwide.

 


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Nonprofit Management Awards Announced at Axelson Center Symposium

Nonprofit Management Awards Announced at Axelson Center Symposium

Nick Tasler leads Jenga exercise onstage at Axelson Symposium

Nick Tasler, internationally acclaimed author, delivered the day's keynote, which included an illustrative round of Jenga to introduce the strategy behind decision-making.

Honorees include Accion Chicago, Intonation Music Workshop, and Teen Living Programs

CHICAGO (June 24, 2015) —The Axelson Center for Nonprofit Management announced the winners Monday of its and its as part of the .

The 2015 Alford-Axelson Award, given for exemplary nonprofit management practices, was presented to Accion Chicago, with an honorable mention awarded to Teen Living Programs. The 2015 Excellent Emerging Organization Award, presented to an up-and-coming Chicago-area nonprofit, was given to Intonation Music Workshop.

The awards were part of the one-day conference dedicated to bringing nonprofit professionals together to discuss management topics that affect all types of organizations. The event included a series of workshops, in addition to a keynote address by , internationally acclaimed author of Why Quitters Win and The Impulse Factor. In his talk, “Everyday Decisiveness: Decision-Making for Organizational Excellence,” sponsored by BMO Harris Bank, Tasler urged the audience to “be deciders” and to “change the world one decision at a time.”

Accion Chicago award winners with Dr. Pier RogersIntonation Music Workshop award winners with Dr. Pier RogersTeen Living Programs accepts Axelson Award

Award winners for 2015 announced at Monday's event were (left) , Alford-Axelson Award winner, which believes in fair and equal access to economic resources so that entrepreneurs can achieve their full financial potential; and (center) , Excellent Emerging Organization Award honoree, empowering children to become rock stars on every stage of life through innovative music education. (right), earning honorable mention for the Alford-Axelson Award, offers comprehensive, year-round services specifically for youth who are homeless, which includes emergency needs and housing to education, job readiness, and whole health services.

The awards were presented during the luncheon portion of the event. This year’s Alford-Axelson Award for Nonprofit Managerial Excellence winner, , helps entrepreneurs in underserved groups achieve financial security, grow their businesses, create jobs, and stabilize their communities. Since 1994, Accion has made nearly 3,800 small business loans in Illinois and Northwest Indiana totaling $30 million. Accion Chicago believes in fair and equal access to economic resources so that entrepreneurs can achieve their full financial potential.

As part of the Symposium, a number organizations participated in the "Make Your Pitch" contest, sponsored by Urban Partnership Bank. , an off-campus program with 40 years of experience providing students the opportunity to live, learn, and work in Chicago, took home the $1,000 prize.

“We accept this award on behalf of the people we serve,” said Betsy Neely Sikma, director of development and communications at Accion Chicago. “Thank you for letting us be a part of this nonprofit community,” she added, before imploring the audience to “transform the small business economy together.”

The Alford-Axelson award honors and continues the legacies of Nils G. Axelson, a devoted community healthcare leader and visionary, and Jimmie R. Alford, a leading contemporary thinker and practitioner in the nonprofit arena.

, the 2015 Excellent Emerging Organization Award winner, empowers children to become rock stars on every stage of life through innovative music education. Intonation works with youth ages 6-17 in Chicago to channel their love of music into a valuable skill set and an opportunity to express their creativity. From 2013 through 2014, Intonation served almost 700 students, comprising 51 pop bands across 12 city sites.

“To think the founder began this organization not long ago with his own instruments out of the back of a van,” said Development and Resource Manager Kevin Claxton. He went on to thank Intonation’s partners, in addition to the Chicago nonprofit community that continues to support their work.

Intonation received a $2,500 cash prize, sponsored by , a commemorative award, and a capacity-building package that will support improvement of services and efficiency.

For more information about the Axelson Center for Nonprofit Management, please visit

The 16th annual Axelson Center Symposium welcomed hundreds of area leaders to collaborate on ways to create organizational excellence.
Take a look at the collection below for some of the images and conversation that took place.

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‘Did You Bring Your Genius?’

'Did You Bring Your Genius?'

In Search of Genius students

In Search of Genius encourages kids from underserved communities to discover new life skills and sparks a sustained interest in science.

North Park hosts In Search of Genius science competition for third consecutive year

CHICAGO (June 18, 2015) — Summer months can be a little quieter on the ϳԹ campus. That was not the case on Tuesday when hundreds of area elementary school kids filled the gymnasium for the (ISOG) Inter-School Science Competition.

For the third consecutive year, North Park hosted the event, which has students participate in a series of hands-on science challenges related to the environment, electricity, and physics. Founding Director of ISOG, Gary Walanka, rallied the kids at the start of the day by asking them, “Did you bring your genius?” The students responded with a resounding yes that echoed through the gymnasium. This is the sixth competition in all for the organization, which Walanka has described as “a unique, living example of how to involve several generations, including the youngest at a key age, with STEM.”

The competition is the culmination of ISOG’s educational program, which provides critical enrichment education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields to elementary students in Chicagoland’s most underserved communities. ISOG encourages students to discover new life skills and sparks sustained interest in these critical fields through a 20-week, hands-on program delivered by young, successful mentors and role models.

“You all have schools that you go to every day to learn,” ϳԹ President David Parkyn said as he welcomed the students. “I'm happy because today you get to visit my school. Learning is about discovering something you never knew before, and that is the most exciting thing you can do in life.”

Near the end of the day, one student from each school received the Perplexus Award, acknowledging their persistence to succeed even when faced with the difficulties and challenges of STEM learning.

Toni Preckwinkle, president of the Cook County Board, has been on hand the last several years for the event. “We’re proud of you,” she told students at the start of the competition. “You’ve worked hard all year long, and that makes all of you winners today.”

Dr. David Parkyn with R2D2 at the In Search of Genius Event

President David Parkyn got to meet one of the event's other celebrity guests, R2-D2.
Hibbard Elementary team and teacher at In Search of Genius event

Hibbard Elementary, a neighborhood school just down the block from ϳԹ, took home the prize for the physics challenge.
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ϳԹ Alumna Shines on America’s Got Talent

ϳԹ Alumna Shines on America’s Got Talent

Sharon Irving, America's Got Talent

Sharon Irving earns automatic trip to live rounds in New York City

CHICAGO (June 10, 2015) — Sharon Irving, a 2008 ϳԹ graduate, dazzled the judges and audiences last night on America’s Got Talent. Her rendition of “Take Me to Church” by Hozier led to a standing ovation and an immediate invitation to the live performances at Radio City Music Hall in New York City later this summer.

Irving was a major while at ϳԹ and led worship for . Now 29, she recently left a position at Willow Creek Community Church to . She grew up singing in church, inspired by her grandfather who was a Baptist preacher.

“Sometimes people have a gift where we can move our hearts, and you moved every heart in this room,” America’s Got Talent Judge Howie Mandel told Irving on stage. “I think you moved every heart in America.”

Watch the full video of Irving’s performance on .

 


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Making Impulsive and Excellent Decisions

Making Impulsive and Excellent Decisions

NickTasler

Nick Tasler, author and CEO of Decision Pulse, says growing up in an impulsive family shaped how he makes decisions today. “I don’t put as much pressure on myself to make a decision that other people see as risky. It’s probably not going to go as sour as you might think it would.”

A conversation with Axelson Center Symposium keynote Nick Tasler

CHICAGO (June 8, 2015) — , author and CEO of Decision Pulse, says the challenges organizations face are not between right versus wrong decisions, but right versus right decisions.

“The real challenges are those when you have three or four different possibilities, four different big goals you could pursue this year, and you can make a case for why all of them are somehow going to move you forward,” Tasler says. “The difference between excellent organizations, excellent teams, and mediocre ones, is the mediocre ones try and do all those things all at once all year long.”

At this year’s , June 22 in downtown Chicago, Tasler will explore this and other ideas in his keynote presentation, “Everyday Decisiveness: Decision-Making for Organizational Excellence.”

The Symposium, hosted by ϳԹ’s , brings together nonprofit professionals from across the sector to discuss management issues that affect all types of organizations.

Tasler is an industrial psychologist and author of two books, , and most recently, . In addition to consulting and speaking, he also writes for Harvard Business Review, Psychology Today, and Bloomberg BusinessWeek, among others.

North Park recently spoke with Tasler about his research and what he is looking forward to at this year’s Symposium.

North Park: The Impulse Factor discusses how some people have impulsive tendencies and how that can influence decision-making. You describe yourself as an impulsive and instinctive decision maker. Was that always the case and does that ever get you into trouble?

Nick Tasler: On the one hand I’ve always been a little bit more on the impulsive side. When I feel something is the right course of action I just kind of go with it. I tend to be pretty intuitive with my decision-making, but over the years I’ve realized the limitations of my impulsivity. I guess what that means is that I know the areas where I can be more instinctive and be okay but I also know the areas where I really need someone else’s guidance. I’m as impulsive now as I’ve ever been but I think what’s changed is I’ve gotten smarter about how I use it.

NP: Most of the people you work with are at an advanced level in their career. Is impulse as valuable for different levels throughout an organization, for instance when you’re working your way up and don’t have as much influence?

NT: Impulsivity is kind of high risk, high reward in a lot of ways. Particularly earlier in your career where you don’t have as much experience. Your impulsivity isn’t quite sharp or as finely tuned so it’s a little bit more dangerous to use your intuition in a space where you don’t have much actual experience. The other part about it is that there’s a career risk and there’s a social risk. I had one guy at a big health insurance company say that the risks for his career are just higher than the rewards made possible by taking a risk with his organization.

NP: Did you coach him away from that?

NT: I kind of said you’re putting parameters on your risk taking. Because the other extreme of this is you’re so afraid to take a risk that you reach a career plateau. You never trust your intuition and you need all the facts every time you make a decision. Which in most cases is just impossible. What ends up happening is you become known in the organization as a person who gets things done but nobody ever really sees you as the kind of person who can be a leader, a person who can actually step up and say “This is what I think we should do” and rally people around you. There’s never enough information, never enough facts, never enough people who have given input, and so you end up never making a decision. And that’s just as much career suicide as being too impulsive.

NP: You say some of these instinctive and impulsive behaviors stem from being part of an impulsive family. Is there a story that shines light on your family and upbringing?

NT: Well, there are many of them. The best example is that before I graduated high school, we had lived in 18 different houses and 11 different towns. We were not a military family, my parents just wanted to move, and they wanted to do something different. This is where it gets into the nature/nurture thing, so possibly I have a genetic disposition to be impulsive. I grew up in a household that was full of impulsive behavior and realized that it really wasn’t as dangerous as people thought. I’ve carried that into my approach to decision-making. People tend to think that when they make a decision it’s going to be the final judgment and that the world is going to stop turning. If it goes wrong their whole life is over and everything they know will have changed. What I learned from my childhood is that decisions are all just a bunch of mini-experiments. You make one, some of them work out, some of them don’t, and nothing really changes as dramatically as you think it was going to. I don’t put as much pressure on myself to make a decision that other people see as risky. It’s probably not going to go as sour as you might think it would.

 

Lead the Way: Creating Organizational Excellence

This year's Axelson Center Symposium for Nonprofit Professionals and Volunteers will take place on Monday, June 22, 2015 at the Hyatt Regency Chicago. Registration is available through June 17.

 

NP: In your most recent book, Why Quitters Win, there’s this concept of right versus right decisions. What do you mean by that, and how is it different from right versus wrong decisions?

NT: Typically when people think of decisions, they think of them as right versus wrong. But when we look at the vast majority of decisions we have to make either personally or professionally, it’s rarely the right versus wrong decisions that trip us up. For instance, one of the things we are talking about at the Symposium is this notion of being excellent, or deciding to be excellent. The difference between excellence for most people and most organizations and most careers is not a matter of cutting out bad things. The challenges, the real challenges, are those when you have three or four different possibilities, four different big goals you could pursue this year, and then you can make a case why all of them are somehow going to move you forward. The difference between excellent organizations, excellent teams, and mediocre ones, is the mediocre ones try and do all those things all at once all year long. The really excellent ones separate themselves by making a choice about which of these value added things, which of these “good things,” is going to actually provide the biggest lever to create the most change. This is instead of cutting ourselves off at the knees and trying to spread our resources, our time, our energy, our people, and our creativity evenly across all of the things we could do.

NP: In some way you serve as a leader of other leaders. Do you view everyone in an organization as some kind of leader or is there a difference in leading individuals on a team versus leading other leaders?

NT: There is a difference in that some people have more formal authority than others. When they make a call everyone has to go along with it, or at least those others don’t have as much authority to push back. With that being said there still are people at every level of an organization whose judgment is needed, who have the ability to make a decision and can actually influence people. And maybe it’s not a decision that’s necessarily carried out but you bring input to that decision, rather than going along with what everybody else is saying. And there is, getting back to the first part of our conversation, of course a risk that goes along with that. In my mind, I think a leader is someone who is accountable for the uncertainty and ambiguity in an organization and can stand behind a direction to move in.

NP: You’re giving the keynote at this year’s Axelson Center Symposium. What are you looking forward to?

NT: One thing I’m definitely looking forward to is the kind of audience who’s going to be there. It draws on all these people who serve in an organization with some kind of social mission. I find working with those kinds of audiences to be very personally rewarding. I like working with for-profit corporations too, but I also find that there’s something inspiring about people who have given over their everyday existence, their vocation, to advancing a social cause.

With that, a lot of the work I do is with large corporations and so I like getting the diversity perspective from different-sized organizations. This can sometimes include smaller staffs and smaller budgets. The issues can be different, but sometimes the same. I like to cross-reference the issues they’re facing with the issues the big corporate clients are facing and pull out major themes. This is where the researcher in me gets excited.

Registration for the Symposium is open until 5:00 pm on June 17. Review the entire event program and register at .

About the Axelson Center

The Axelson Center for Nonprofit Management at ϳԹ is the source for informative and engaging nonprofit professional development in the Chicago region. Through regular workshops, a BootCamp for new nonprofit CEOs, customized trainings and the , the Axelson Center delivers a superior educational experience for nonprofit managers, leaders and frontline staff, covering a vast array of topics from program evaluation to strategic planning, and communications to financial management. The valuable information presented through these programs enhances the impact of both the nonprofit sector and its professional staff. Visit for more information, including a full schedule of upcoming events.
 


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