Coordinators: Kim Sheahan, Assistant Director of Education, Spurlock Museum and Lynn Chaney, Associate Director, Strategic Initiatives and Special Projects, Alumni Association.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Fridays, 10:00 am – 11:30 am
Duration: 6 weeks, beginning October 10
Location: Spurlock Museum, 600 South Gregory, Urbana, just to the east of Krannert Center for the Performing Arts
Course Fee: $25
Pioneer settlers with their family farms represented a way of life that could not share the land with its previous inhabitants. The sixty-year period from George Rogers Clark’s "conquest" of Illinois to the Black Hawk War and the Indian removal of the 1830s provides the framework for this class. We will learn about the periods of violence that brought the Middle Ground to an end: the Revolutionary War, President Washington’s Indian War of the 1790s, the War of 1812, and the Black Hawk War of 1832. We will also explore the growth of the new society: the pioneer days for English-speaking Americans, the statehood movement for Illinois, and the beginning of changes that would end the frontier era forever—canals, railroads, steamships, and the first stages of the remarkable growth of Chicago.
Instructor: Recently retired from the UI Records Office, Fred Christensen has 36 years of teaching experience—history at the University of Kentucky, military science at the University of Illinois, the Command and General Staff Course for the US Army, and noncredit classes in history and related fields for Parkland College and the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian in Evanston.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Mondays 10:00 am -11:30 am
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 15
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Instructor: W. David Kay is professor emeritus in the Department of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The author of Ben Jonson: A Literary Life and of essays on Erasmus, Jonson, and Shakespeare, he has taught at the graduate and undergraduate level, with courses in British and world drama, Renaissance literature and culture, and the works of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Wednesdays, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 17.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Detailed course schedule
Instructor: Donald J. Wuebbles, coordinator of the class, is Director of the School of Earth, Society, and Environment at the University of Illinois and Professor in the Department of Atmospheric Sciences. Professor Wuebbles is an expert in the physics and chemistry affecting global warming. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and shared in the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Mondays, 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 15.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Schedule:
Week one: A Primer on the Earth’s Climate System
Week two: The Evidence for a Human Effect on Climate
Week three: The Future Climate
Week four: Potential Societal Impacts of Global Warming
Week five: Potential Ecological Impacts of Global Warming
Week six: A focus on Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Chicago area
Week seven: Resolution, Solutions, and Sustainability (part 1)
Week eight: Resolution, Solutions, and Sustainability (part 2)
Questions like these have been hotly disputed in recent years. Theologians and philosophers who comprise “the new traditionalism” suggest that modern democratic societies lack a common unifying framework and are morally and spiritually empty. More secular, liberal philosophers argue that political deliberation should take place independent of any reliance on religious tradition. This course will explore the debate between these two positions, as well as a third possibility, that democracy is itself a tradition, encouraging certain attitudes, a love for certain virtues, and a disposition to respond to certain types of actions, events, or persons with admiration, pity or horror.
The course begins as the presidential campaign has reached its height and concludes with its aftermath, affording us an opportunity to observe numerous “real life” examples of some of the contrasting positions and the abstract principles of democracy, tradition, justice, liberty, self-interest and “right” and “good” that we will be discussing.
Instructor: Robert Alun Jones, Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, History, and Sociology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Professor Jones, a popular fall 2007 OLLI instructor, is a member of the Campus Honors faculty and also has appointments in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. His major research interests include Durkheim and his intellectual context, the methodology of the history of ideas, and the scholarly use of electronic documents and networked information systems. He teaches courses on the history of religious thought and social theory.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Wednesdays, 10:00 am - 11:30 am
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 17.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Coordinator: Inga Karliner, coordinator of the class, is a physicist who has worked in elementary particle theory and experiment, and observational cosmology. She has initiated and coordinated the Physics Outreach program at the University of Illinois Physics Department that includes the Saturday Physics Honors Program.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Tuesdays, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 16. (Note: There is no class on November 4; the last class will be on November 11.)
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Schedule details:
Instructor: Robert F. Rich, Director of the Institute of Government and Public Affairs; Professor of Law, Political Science, Medicine, and Public Health, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Before joining the faculty of the University of Illinois in 1986, he served on the faculties of the University of Michigan, Princeton University, and Carnegie-Mellon University.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Mondays, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 22. (One week later than other Monday classes so that the last class is after the election.)
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Join us as we roll up our shirtsleeves and examine works of art from a variety of genres including literature and poetry, painting and sculpture, architecture, music, photography, cinema and drama. What can we learn about the heart and mind of the creator by looking and listening attentively? What can we learn about ourselves in the process?
Instructor: John Lansingh Bennett teaches humanities and arts appreciation courses at Lake Land College and works as a freelance writer and editor. He is the former Associate Editor of Highlights for Children and Senior Editor for publications at the National Council of Teachers of English. He has a passion for sharing all forms of art, and was a popular presenter in OLLI’s Exploring the Arts course in the fall of 2007.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Tuesdays, 10:00 am – 11:30 am
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 16.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Download course schedule (PDF)
The Chinese believe that the ancient wellness exercises of Taiji and Qigong produce the elixir of longevity. Two recent U of I research studies have proven their health benefits for older adults. Qigong (chee-kung) and Taiji - or Tai Chi, as it is more commonly known in the U.S. - combine simple, graceful movements and meditation. Qigong is a series of integrated exercises believed to have positive, relaxing effects on a person's mind, body and spirit. Taiji is a holistic form of exercise, and a type of Qigong that melds Chinese philosophy with martial and healing arts.
In a report released in 2006, the U of I research studies found that healthy seniors who practiced a combination of Qigong and Taiji three times a week for six months experienced significant physical benefits after only two months. In addition, many participants gained noticeable improvements in tests of balance and lower body strength, as well as enhanced sleep quality, concentration, memory, self-esteem, and overall energy levels. These results mirror those found in numerous other studies, including research commissioned by the National Council on Aging and the American Society on Aging. Now students of Professor Yang Yang, the lead researcher in the UI studies, will lead this class in exercises.
Instructors: Michael Reed began studying Taiji with Master Yang at Center for Taiji Studies in 1999. He began working as an assistant teacher in 2001 and currently leads a class at the Center. He was directly involved in Master Yang's research with seniors at the University of Illinois. He has participated in a leadership role at numerous conferences and workshops.
David Skadden has studied Taiji from Master Yang through the Center for Taiji Studies since 2001. He has lead several research classes and currently teaches a class at the Center. He has presented at a variety Taiji workshops and conferences over the years through his affiliation with the Center.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Tuesdays, 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm
Duration: September 16 through November 4
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
The western generally relies on the conventional conflicts of good vs. bad or criminal and virtue vs. malevolence or corruption, and these conflicts are manifested through oppositions such as new arrivals/settlers vs. Native Americans (often portrayed as savage Indians), civilization vs. wilderness or lawlessness, the rugged individualist vs. the community, and the urbane, industrial East vs. the uncouth, rural West, polarities that with a bit of tweaking were convincingly reversed in later films.
The principled, physically adept and coolly confident protagonist helps to establish or restore an order of which he frequently cannot be a part. His resolute independence and patent restlessness in confined spaces make him eager (after he has fought valiantly and violently for the claims of civilization) to light out for the territory.
In this course, we will examine the narrative premises, social constructions, and visual strategies of westerns, assessing their historical significance as well as the versions of gender and race that have often been thought accurate and, not coincidentally, that reflect and corroborate traditional American values.
Course Films
Instructor: Pat Gill, Associate Professor, Department of Speech Communication and the Gender and Women’s Studies Program, University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign. Professor Gill studies gender and film, popular culture, and interpretive and psychoanalytic theories. She has taught numerous courses in and written extensively on media, film and cultural studies, and comes back to OLLI by popular demand, after the success of the “Film Noir” and “Hitchcock” courses.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Wednesdays, 5:15 to 8:30pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning on September 17
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Visual presentations and discussions will focus on using historical, cultural, technical, ethical, and critical perspectives as well as semiotics (the study of signs), in interpreting works of art, design, film, and other visual forms.
Topics include the principles of visual perception and basics of visual composition, the process of visual persuasion in advertising and politics, the drama of visual time and space, visual humor, the art of information design, and body language.
Instructor: Tom Kovacs taught at the University of Minnesota Duluth and is Professor Emeritus of Art and Design at the University of Illinois and a member of the Campus Honors faculty. He is a practicing professional artist and designer of books, posters and magazines. While at Illinois, Professor Kovacs was recipient of a UIUC Undergraduate Instructional Award for course development; appointed to the UIUC Center for Advanced Study for research in computer imaging, and received the UIUC Campus Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Thursdays, 10:00 am - 11:30 am
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 18.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Beethoven’s life coincided with the rise of a middle class in Europe, which shifted the locus of musical activity from an exclusively court setting, and created the modern concept of a public concert. This social development is mirrored in the growth of the orchestra from what we would call a chamber ensemble to the larger orchestra of the 19th century. It required works of longer duration to justify the larger forces, and it fostered the role of virtuosic performance for large audiences. All of this is mirrored in Beethoven’s music. At the same time, Beethoven became more reclusive and personally isolated as time went on, particularly from around 1812. His music correspondingly became more personal and inward-looking. We will return several times in this class to the dynamics of the world of the large and the world of the small.
Instructor: Peter Michalove holds a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Composition from the University of Illinois, and has composed extensively for orchestra and chamber and vocal ensembles. He is particularly interested in music of the classical period (Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven), and the 20th century. He has given numerous lectures on various aspects of music
Semester: Fall 2008
Day and Time: Thursdays 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm
Duration: 8 weeks, beginning September 18.
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Download detailed schedule
To appreciate contemporary dance, it helps if we understand its language.
In this combination of Lecture, Concert Performance and Talk Back with the Artists, we will gain insight into the processes of dance making as practiced by some of UIUC Dance Department faculty members and degree candidates. Kate Kuper, Lecturer in the Department of Dance, will guide us as we learn to look for the elements of dance and historical precedents in the context of choreography and performance. Kuper will focus on background information specific to the work we will be seeing, in order to frame each concert experience. Participants will learn how dance artists think about their work and the audience/performer relationship. Join us in this unique adventure!
Instructor: Kate Kuper has been recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts for her choreography and by the Illinois Alliance for Arts Education for her contribution to the field of education. She is a Visiting Lecturer in the Department of Dance where she focuses on educational outreach, a Kennedy Center Workshop Presenter, and a Teaching Artist in Illinois schools. Visit her at www.katekuper.com.
Semester: Fall 2008/Spring 2009
Lecture Dates:
Friday, Nov. 7, 2008, 1-2:30pm
Wednesday, January 21, 2009, 1-2:30pm
Friday, March 6, 2009, 1-2:30pm
Thursday, April 23, 2009, 1-2:30pm
Location: OLLI at the Research Park, 2021 South First Street, Champaign
Course Fee: $25
Performance Dates:
November Dance: Re-Imagining the Proscenium, Friday, Nov. 14 2008, 7:30 p.m.
February Dance: White Out, Friday, February 6, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
Studio I, Friday, March 13, 2009, 9:00 p.m.
Studio II, Friday, April 24, 2009, 9:00 p.m.
Talk Back with the choreographers immediately following the performances
Location: Krannert Center for the Performing Arts, 500 South Goodwin Ave., Urbana
Cost: $13 - $16 per performance; each performance limited to 250 people.