College welcomes first Career Development Fellow for Academic Skills Support

Jesus College is delighted to welcome Dr Luisa Ostacchini as its inaugural Nelson J Carr Career Development Fellow for Academic Skills Support.

The new post has been created to support Jesus students in the development of their academic skills, and has been generously funded by alumnus Mr Christopher Richey (1984, MPhil Management Studies) and the Richey Family Foundation.

Female with dark wavy hair wears grey suit. standing infront on building back lit by sunshine

Dr Luisa Ostacchini, Nelson J Carr Career Development Fellow for Academic Skills Support.

 

Luisa will be responsible for developing and delivering a programme of skills-based training for both undergraduate and graduate students, and especially for those who join the College from disadvantaged backgrounds or without English as a first language. She will offer a range of one-to-one, group study, and workshop sessions on topics such as time-management, academic writing, revision techniques, effective reading, and how to approach assessed work. Students will be able to self-refer for support, or can be referred by their tutor.

Luisa says, “I am delighted to have been appointed as Jesus College’s first Career Development Fellow for Academic Skills Support. In my years lecturing in English Literature I have seen first-hand how important it is for students to develop not just subject knowledge and understanding, but also the skills to gain that newfound knowledge and understanding efficiently, and to be able to communicate it effectively. I am really excited to have the opportunity to develop a dedicated programme of workshops and materials to support our students in all aspects of their university studies, and greatly look forward to working with our students to develop the types of skills that will not only help them to succeed, and thrive during their time at Jesus, but also when they leave College to pursue careers or further educational opportunities.”

The post is a four-year Fellowship, which will also enable Luisa to continue her postdoctoral research in medieval English literature. She says, “I am predominantly interested in how English writers and scholars were thinking about places outside of England before the year 1000, and in English connections with the global world during this time. Over the course of my fellowship I will be writing my second monograph, about English imaginings of the global world in a remarkable encyclopaedia known as the Old English Martyrology — the ‘Wikipedia’ of ninth-century England.”

She will also work closely with the Academic Director and Academic Registrar to establish new learning development initiatives in College.

In naming the new post, Mr Richey acknowledged the vital role family history and benefaction have played in his own achievements. Nelson J Carr was the business partner and brother-in-law of his grandfather, Early Richey. Carr, who was of Osage, Cherokee, and European descent, provided the capital for Earl and himself to open ‘Richey and Carr’s Rexall’, a pharmacy and general store in Erie, Kansa, back in the 1920s.

B&W photo os tall man wearing glasses, a cowboy hat and cowboy boots

Nelson J Carr

 

In an article published earlier this year, he explained, “That Richey and Carr store provided the income that put my own father, and three of his brothers, through college during the 1930s and 1940s, which were hard times to raise, educate, and provide for children.

The store finally closed in the early 2000s, having provided three generations of Richeys with a good base from which to start. Its longevity is a testament to the value that Earle placed upon education and family. He was a very bright man who just lacked the opportunity in terms of formal education to hone his intelligence. Ultimately, it was Nelson’s generosity, and Earle’s hard work, that meant my father got his college education, and provided me with the opportunity to attend and obtain a degree from Oxford University”.

Luisa joins Jesus from St John’s College, where she was a College Lecturer in medieval English literature. For more information, visit her page on the College website.

 

 

College announces transformational gift towards academic priorities

Jesus College is delighted to announce that alumnus Mr Christopher Richey (1984, MPhil Management Studies) and the Richey Family Foundation has made a new significant gift to College to support its academic priorities.

The $480k (£380k) gift will enable to the College to fund the creation of several new spend-down posts:

This gift builds on Mr Richey’s previous generous support to College, which includes a £1m gift to endow of a graduate studentship at Jesus in any subject, and the naming of the Buchanan Tower Room in honour of alumnus and First World War hero Captain Angus Buchanan VC.

The provision of funding for additional early career fellowships, academic skills training for students, research associations and graduate studentships, will support key academic priorities for the College. In addition to continuing their research while at Jesus, the Nelson J. Carr CDF in Academic Skills Support will be responsible for developing and delivering a programme of skills-based training for both undergraduate and graduate students, and especially for those who join the College from disadvantaged backgrounds or without English as a first language. Training will include topics such as time-management, writing, giving presentations, reading and note-taking, and how to approach assessed work. The establishment of the Earle J. Richey Digital Access Officer post will enable Jesus’ Access and Outreach team to enhance its production of digital content to reach more prospective students from disadvantaged backgrounds.

Three students sit on a bench chatting

Jesus students will benefit hugely from Mr Richey’s new gift to College.
Photo credit: Andrew Ogilvy

 

In naming the new posts, Mr Richey wishes to acknowledge the vital role family history and benefaction has played in his own achievements. Richey explains, “I owe a huge debt of gratitude to my grandfather, Earle Jacob Richey, and his business partner and brother-in-law, Nelson J. Carr. These gifts are a way of expressing that gratitude. Nelson J. Carr, of Osage, Cherokee, and European descent, provided the capital to start Richey and Carr’s Rexall, a local pharmacy and general store in Erie, Kansas, in the 1920’s, while my grandfather provided the knowledge and labor. While his formal education ended at age 12 when his family was left bereft, having been abandoned by their husband and father, Earle was apprenticed out as a shop boy in a nearby town, and studied on his own time and became a licensed pharmacist. That Richey and Carr store provided the income that put my own father and three of his brothers through college during the 1930s and 1940s, which were hard times to raise, educate, and provide for children.

The store finally closed in the early 2000s, having provided three generations of Richeys a good base from which to start. Its longevity is a testament to the value that Earle placed upon education and family. He was a very bright man who just lacked the opportunity in terms of formal education to hone his intelligence. Ultimately, it was Nelson’s generosity and Earle’s hard work that meant my father got his college education, and provided me with the opportunity to attend and obtain a degree from Oxford University. It is my hope that these gifts likewise provide a path of opportunity to others.”

He adds, “I also want to honor those two men because of the emphasis they placed on family; having held families together through the Great Depression, as well as the Osage murders, though each came from less than ideal family upbringings.”    

Nelson J Carr

 

The creation of ten new Dr Sara Hope Browne Research Associates in Medical Sciences will be available to scholars at Oxford without a specific College affiliation, and are named in honour of Mr Richey’s wife. Dr Browne M.D. is an Emeritus Professor of Clinical Medicine in the Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). She received her undergraduate education at the University of Cape Town, RSA and her medical degree from the University of Oxford School of Medicine. She has a Master’s in Public Health from the Harvard University School of Public Health, where she was a Fulbright Scholar. She completed her UK license at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, and has also founded a charity, Specialists in Global Health, which is dedicated to training doctors in developing countries, in specialties of medicine. Mr Richey says, “Sara’s main focus is on Global Health. The named Research Associates at Jesus are a meaningful way to connect her medical legacy and Oxford training to College.”

The match-funded four-year DPhil Studentship in Computer Science is given in the name of Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt FRS, who has been Jesus College Principal since 2015, and is a world-leading expert in computer and data sciences. Mr Richey also noted, “It is important to acknowledge Sir Nigel’s monumental contribution to both the physical and intellectual expansion of the College. His tenure as Principal has firmly placed Jesus College at the center of the future of the University. I am honored to be able to attach his name to this DPhil scholarship in Computer Science.”

Dr Brittany Wellner-James, Jesus College Director of Development, reflected, “We are enormously grateful to Chris and the Richey Family Foundation for their continued generosity to College, and for this transformational gift to further support our academic priorities”.

The new posts will commence in Michaelmas 2024.