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Six@Six Lectures Moves to

Virtual Series


 
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The Parker Academy

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April 14, 2020— Northern Kentucky University’s Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement is continuing its Six@Six Lecture Series as virtual events—showcasing the scholarship and creative work at NKU through May. 

“Normally, we are live at venues around the region, like the Behringer-Crawford Museum and the Mercantile Library,” said Mark Neikirk, executive director of NKU’s Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement “COVID-19 has grounded us, but not stopped us. Tune in to Engage@NKU and connect with the world beyond our doorsteps—even as we all stay healthy at home.”

students at parker academy
NKU Students at the Parker Academy Project 
The virtual series kicks off with History Professor Dr. Brian Hackett and his graduate student Chelsea Hauer discussing NKU’s excavation and interpretation of the Parker Academy site in New Richmond, Ohio. NKU faculty and students are studying the Parker Academy, the first school in Ohio to offer a fully integrated education—anyone who wanted to be student, regardless of race or gender, learned in the same classroom. The school was founded in 1839. The discussion will begin at 6 p.m. with a live discussion to follow.

Future topics include:

  • April 21 | ‘Let Our Loss Be Heard’ – The Margaret Garner Story
  • April 28 | Our Money is Legal Tender – A Constitutional Tale
  • May 12 | When the Zombie Apocalypse was Fiction 
  • May 19 | The Historical Poetry of Frank X Walker
  • May 29 | Organizing for Action: Women’s Suffrage in Northern Kentucky

Since 2010, NKU’s Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement has held the Six@Six lecture series to connect community members with the research expertise of our faculty and their students. The series is free and can be joined via Zoom or through its Facebook page


Visit the Six@Six website for tickets and more information. 

About NKU: Founded in 1968, we are a growing metropolitan university of more than 14,000 students served by more than 2,000 faculty and staff on a thriving suburban campus near Cincinnati. Located in the quiet suburb of Highland Heights, Kentucky—just seven miles southeast of Cincinnati—we have become a leader in Greater Cincinnati and Kentucky by providing a private school education for a fraction of the cost. While we are one of the fastest growing universities in Kentucky, our professors still know our students' names. For more information, visit nku.edu.

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