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HONOR DUTY RESPECT - The Citadel

HONOR DUTY RESPECT - The Citadel

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In addition to the quality of the research presented, I must givesome credit to Charleston and the typically beautiful weatherwe have here in early March. A special feature for 2012 was aroundtable of experts who provided analysis on what theysaw as possibilities for the 2012 presidential election. <strong>The</strong>consensus... well, there was no consensus on who would winthe presidential contest, although the experts all agreed thatPresident Obama is unlikely to make any gains in the South, andhe most likely will lose North Carolina, which he narrowly won in2008. <strong>The</strong> experts also felt the president’s ability to carry Virginiaand Florida will be more of a challenge for him this time around.<strong>The</strong> symposium helps generate the kindof positive publicity for <strong>The</strong> <strong>Citadel</strong>that money cannot buy. One previoussymposium was even partially broadcaston C-SPAN.For nearly the entire history of the symposium, the directorshave edited special volumes of research journals in whichpapers presented at the symposium are published. As of 2012,eight books have been written that have first developed as a resultof the symposium, and a book focusing on the 2012 presidentialelection is slated for publication in 2013.<strong>The</strong> Oxford Handbook of Southern Politics bestows high praiseupon the symposium: “the biennial <strong>Citadel</strong> Symposium onSouthern Politics, first organized in 1978 by Robert Steed,Laurence Moreland and the late Todd Baker, has producedinvaluable research on Southern politics.”As a result of the symposium, many political scientists andhistorians from around the nation during the last 30 yearsassociate <strong>The</strong> <strong>Citadel</strong> with the pursuit of academic excellence.<strong>The</strong> symposium’s other benefit for me is that every otherspring semester I have the opportunity to teach my favoriteclass: Southern Politics. Based upon the enrollment andstudent comments, it seems to be one of the cadets’ favoritecourses as well. As I am teaching the course, I am able torelate many of the assigned readings to the students by pointingout that the authors of the research will be on campus for thesymposium. While my students would be quick to tell you thatmy policy on extra credit is “there is no such thing,” I make anexception for the symposium. I offer students in my SouthernPolitics course extra points if they assist in registration forthe conference. While the extra credit is optional, I requirethem to attend at least one panel session at which professorsare presenting their research. It is rare that undergraduateshave such opportunities to see first-hand research beingpresented, as research conferences are typically not held on acollege campus.In the afterglow of the symposium, I ask my students whatthey learned and am always surprised at how much theytake away from the conference. In fact, I wish that I had suchopportunities as an undergraduate to see political sciencebeing practiced and applied. Matthew Selmasska, ’12, whoattended sessions of the symposium, wrote this about hisexperience:<strong>The</strong> <strong>Citadel</strong>’s Symposium on Southern Politics is an unparalleledacademic enterprise that fosters enlightened discourse24

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