Sigma Tau Delta Students, Alum Recognized

Sigma Tau Delta Scranton chapter, Mu Omicron, is recognized for its 45th anniversary. University of Scranton alum Elias Kerr '23 received this year's Creative Works Alumni Award for an original poetry project.
college students sitting in rows of chairs for photo
Ten University of Scranton students and one alum presented their work at the Sigma Tau Delta International Convention in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in April. Shown, bottom row, from left: University of Scranton students Nya Rowe '26, Lauren DeSantis '26, Faith Montagnino '26, Adelle Confer '26, Gabriella Palmer '26 and Gabriella Meditz '26; and faculty co-moderator Madeline B. Gangnes, Ph.D. Top row, from left: University of Scranton student Emily Carey '26; alum Elias Kerr '23; students Allen Stankiewicz '26, Audrey Munley '25, and Brenna Parker '25; faculty co-moderator Dr. Billie Tadros, Ph.D.

Ten University of Scranton students and one alum presented their work at the Sigma Tau Delta International Convention in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in March. Scranton's chapter, Mu Omicron, was recognized for its 45th anniversary, and alum member Elias Kerr '23 won this year's Creative Works Alumni Award for an original poetry project, "trans [re]conciliation."

Emily Carey '26, "Gender and Genre: On Queer Writers Queering Writings," Gabriella Meditz '26, "William Blake's Poetic Illustration of Celestial Ideas," Faith Montagnino '26, "'Unsexing Ourselves': Proto-Feminism in Victoria Cross's 'Theodora' and Sara Grand's 'Woman Question,'" and Audrey Munley '25, "Trauma in Mother-Daughter Relationships" presented critical essays; Allen Stankiewicz '26, "The Tempus" presented an original prose piece; Gabriella Palmer '26,"To the Tune of Chaos: A Ten-Minute Play" presented an original play; Adelle Confer '26, "Must it Have been Akin to a Wife-Swap?", Lauren DeSantis '26, "What the War of Life Taught Me So Far," Benna Parker '25, "Novelty", Nya Rowe '26, "a hunger to belong" presented creative nonfiction pieces; and Kerr, '23 "trans [re]conciliation" presented original poetry.

Additionally, Montagnino, Munley and Parker presented a roundtable on the Common Reader entitled "One of Ours, One for Others: Exploring Jesuit Values Through When My Brother Was an Aztec." The roundtable was moderated by Dr. Billie Tadros, faculty co-moderator, and assisted by the other chapter members. Dr. Tadros and Kerr co-led a LitFest writing workshop for Convention attendees on "Creative Mentorship: Connection, Collaboration, and Craft," and Dr. Tadros co-led a faculty development session entitled "Teaching/Writing/Publishing/Advising: Making it All Work" with a fellow faculty moderator from Friends University. Dr. Madeline B. Gangnes, faculty co-moderator, Dr. Tadros and several students served as panel chairs and moderators.

Current students' travel was supported by the College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Student Research Grant program and funding from the Jesuit Center.

Sigma Tau Delta is the national honor society in English. The honor society recognizes students who major or minor in English, theatre or secondary education/English and maintain a grade point average of 3.4 or better in English, theatre and writing courses and an overall grade point average of 3.4 or higher. English professors Billie Tadros, Ph.D., and Madeline B. Gangnes, Ph.D., serve as co-moderators of Scranton’s chapter of the honor society.

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