Lancaster Region
LH07-V. MIRA LLOYD DOCK: CONSERVATIONIST AND ADVOCATE FOR WOMEN
The life and work of Mira Lloyd Dock, the first woman to serve in Pennsylvania state government, provides many insights into the Progressive Era conservation movement and women’s roles within that movement. Dock was heavily involved in the conservation movement at the local, state, and federal levels. Her most ardent supporters said she did more for forests than any woman in the United States. As a member of the Pennsylvania State Forest Commission, Dock helped formulate policies that served as models for other, northeastern industrial states. She also worked tirelessly for women's rights to have meaningful careers, enroll in institutions of higher education, and vote.
LH18-V. UNDERSTANDING RACE AND DISMANTLING RACISM
Race is a socially constructed social category based on physical appearance that has been used to put people into separate groups. Racism builds social structures which bring advantage to some groups and disadvantage to others. The most obvious one is slavery, but most every aspect of social structure and the economy is affected. The course will focus on what white people need to know about race in America. We will use videos, lectures, and class discussion to look at ways race has been used in American society historically and currently to build social and legal structures which disadvantage persons of color. Strategies to dismantle racism will be suggested.
LH22-V. EPIGENETICS – HOW ENVIRONMENT SHAPES OUR GENES
The biochemical covering of our chromosomes allows most all external elements and forces to activate or alter our basic DNA, thus shaping and forming our lives individually. This is what we call NURTURE - contrasting it with our internal NATURE, which is structured by our heritable genes. Thus though as humans we’re identical, no two of us are alike. How and why are you unique in the world?