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DTSTAMP:20241021T141107
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20241209T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20241209T130000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:ESDM Parent Training Group – Fall 2024
DESCRIPTION:The Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) is an evidence-based treatment model for young children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). The group is designed for parents and caregivers with children ages 5 and under who have diagnosed or suspected Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) or a Developmental Delay.\n\nThe virtual parenting training group will meet weekly on Mondays from 12 – 1 p.m. via Zoom\, with a planned start date of October 28th.\n\nFall 2024 ESDM Group Details\n+ When: 12 – 1 p.m. Mondays\, beginning October 28 (10 weeks).\n+ Where: Online via Zoom\n+ Who: Parents and caregivers with children under the age of 5 who have diagnosed or suspected ASD/Developmental Delay\n+ Cost: Some insurances accepted\; self-pay also accepted and is $45 per weekly session.\n+ Register: Complete our secure\, online registration form to get started or call (734) 615-7853 for more information.\n\nAbout the Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) Group\nThe ESDM group is a naturalistic treatment that represents a fusion between behavioral treatment methods and developmental theory. Treatment goals will focus on building strong social communication skills in young children with ASD/Developmental Delays and reducing problematic behaviors. The parent training group is designed to teach parents these strategies to increase the number of intervention hours that young children receive. \n\nA secondary goal is to support parents of children with ASD/Developmental Delays and help them develop a community of parents in a similar life stage. Since it is a parent training group\, children are welcome but not required to attend.
UID:128138-21860224@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/128138
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Autism,Workshop,Well-being,parenting,mental health,Children
LOCATION:Off Campus Location
CONTACT:
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DTSTAMP:20241205T174831
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20241209T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20241209T130000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:FoRMS December Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Listen to three students present some work from upcoming term papers:\n\nBevin Killen (History): \"The Turning of the Year: Time and Devotion in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe\"\n\nLooking at three books of hours from France and the Netherlands from the 14th\, 15th\, and 16th centuries (respectively)\, this paper seeks to investigate how notions of time shaped personal devotion in late medieval and early modern Europe. Specifically\, the calendar portions of books of hours have often been seen as auxiliary to the books' central purpose: to structure time and prayer within a 24-hour cycle. However\, by examining the patterns of wear on these three books and their place in the larger collections of their owners\, I hope to demonstrate that these calendars also served a sacral purpose\, as focal points for devotion as well as temporal structures.\n\nYueling Li (History of Art): \"Microcosm through Tea: Liquescent and Mimetic Materiality of Song Black Glazed Tea Bowls\":\n\nKnown as Jian zhan or Tenmoku\, black glaze tea bowls are cherished for their surface resemblance of hare’s fur\, mottled feather and oil drops. Praised for their ideal physical property as container for tea\, black glazed bowls make their appearance into poems and classics by Su Shi\, Cai Xiang\, and Emperor Huizong. Focusing on the surface aesthetics of black glazed tea containers in Song Dynasty\, the phenomenological approaches of this essay is framed by the material force of water and the transmateriality of liquescence. Primarily\, it examines the physical firing transformation inside the kiln\, and the transformative power of the finished surface to evoke in its beholder a mimesis of animate creatures and weather phenomenon in nature. This discussion of the container is followed by a discussion of the liquid being contained within—tea—as a popular commodity that traveled along land\, river and sea routes and as an index of social status and literati culture. Examining textual and visual depiction of tea production and appreciation\, this essay argues that tea culture in Song dynasty involved innovation on many levels\, from technological apparatus such as hydraulic mills to a heightened multisensory perception of not only seeing but hearing water. This essay concludes with tea bowls as an itinerant object that went with the flow from rivers to the sea\, and traveled from Fujian to Zhejiang to Japan. By doing so\, this essay attempts an ecocritical case study of East Asian art history.\n\nDoyun Kim (History of Art): \"Ecoaesthetics of the Sacred Landscape: The Virgin of Valvanera in colonial Mexico\":\n\nAbstract: In this essay\, I argue that the Virgin of Valvanera at the Denver Art Museum offers a reimagined vision of the Marian apparition inspired by the ecological conditions of colonial Mexico. The Virgin of Valvanera\, attributed to Juan Correa (1646–1716)\, features the miraculous discovery of the Marian statue in La Rioja\, Spain. The painting is noteworthy for its distinctive ecoaesthetics. Allocating more than half of the picture plane to a landscape\, it integrates the Marian image with sylvan surroundings and the architectural complex into an organic whole. To explain this perception of interconnectivity\, I examine the visual elements of the painting with various other factors\, including arboreal subjectivity\, the cave’s association with water and meteorological phenomena\, and the pluvial landscapes of Mesoamerica. I conclude that the Virgin of Valvanera presents the potential of forging a different relationship with nature in eighteenth-century colonial Mexico.
UID:129733-21864491@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/129733
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Temporality,Medieval,Material Culture,Latin America,Europe,China
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
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