Recipients of the 2017 will discuss their award-winning ideas at the University of Louisville and Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in April.
UofL presents the annual prizes for outstanding works in music composition, ideas improving world order, psychology and education and gives a religion prize jointly with . This year鈥檚 awards are $100,000 each.
The schedule for the , which is free and open to the public, is as follows:
- American composer will discuss his award-winning, 47-minute orchestral work, 鈥淧lay,鈥 which explores the relationship of choice and chance, free will and control. It investigates the ways musicians in an orchestra can play with, against, or apart from one another; and maps concepts from the world of video gaming onto traditional symphonic structures. The discussion will be held on April 6 at 3 p.m. in UofL School of Music鈥檚 Bird Hall.
- , an education and political science scholar and former aid worker, will speak April 18 at 1 p.m. in the Ekstrom Library鈥檚 Chao Auditorium. She received the award for ideas improving world order for her book, 鈥淪chools for Conflict or for Peace in Afghanistan,鈥 which examines the influence foreign-backed funding for education has on war-torn countries and how such aid affects humanitarian and peace-building efforts.
- Renowned social ethicist will present 鈥淏reaking White Supremacy: The Black Social Gospel as New Abolitionism鈥 on April 18 at 7 p.m. in the seminary鈥檚 Caldwell Chapel. He will discuss how the Black Social Gospel movement became an important tradition of religious thought and resistance and provided the intellectual underpinnings of the civil rights movement.
- On April 19 at 5 p.m. in the Ekstrom Library鈥檚 Chao Auditorium, education award winners will discuss their book, 鈥淭he Political Classroom: Evidence and Ethics in Democratic 成人直播,鈥 which explores the role of teachers in perpetuating serious, thoughtful political deliberation in schools. The authors, who both work for the University of Wisconsin-Madison鈥檚 School of 成人直播, contend social studies teachers should encourage conversations about difficult political issues.
- , director of the University of Washington鈥檚 Behavioral Research and Therapy Clinics at the Center for Behavioral Technology, will present 鈥淒ialectical Behavior Therapy: Where We Are, Where We Were and Where We鈥檙e Going鈥 on April 20 at 12 noon in Strickler Hall鈥檚 Middleton Auditorium. She was selected for the 2017 psychology award for developing a therapy to treat chronically suicidal patients and extending its power to help people with borderline personality disorder and other behavioral disorders.
UofL graduate and philanthropist Charles Grawemeyer created the awards program in 1984 to pay tribute to the power of creative thought and emphasize the impact a single idea can have on the world. Grawemeyer further distinguished the awards by requiring the selection process involve a lay committee to ensure the winning ideas are comprehensible to a broad audience.
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