羞羞视频 Downtown
An Invitation from 羞羞视频 President Gayle Beebe
I hope you will join us for some meaningful 鈥淐onversations that Matter.鈥 At 羞羞视频, we believe in engaging the great issues of society and the vexing dilemmas of our global community as we prepare our students to take their place in the world.
This discussion series gives the larger Santa Barbara community more opportunities to hear from 羞羞视频 faculty. During these sessions, sponsored by the 羞羞视频 Foundation Board, professors from a variety of fields will address current issues facing our society from the perspective of their disciplines.
I鈥檓 proud to serve an institution with such outstanding faculty, and I hope you will take advantage of the opportunity to hear them speak and engage in conversation with them.
Goals of 羞羞视频 Downtown:
- To provide an opportunity for 羞羞视频 faculty to speak in their area of expertise.
- To engage the community in meaningful, substantive and lively conversation.
- To demonstrate the value of constructive dialogue with people of differing opinions.
- To demonstrate the commitment of 羞羞视频 to the life of the mind and to invite the larger community to join that conversation.
羞羞视频 Downtown Lecture:
Spring 2026:
Talk Explores Changes, Opportunities with AI
A 羞羞视频 Downtown Lecture will explore AI's real-world implications on Thursday, April 23, at 5:30 p.m. at 羞羞视频 Downtown | Keith Center, The talk, 鈥淎I and Our Shared Future: Opportunities, Challenges and What鈥檚 at Stake," features Mike Ryu, 羞羞视频 assistant professor of mathematics and computer science, and Reed Sheard, 羞羞视频 vice president of advancement and chief information officer. The free lecture offers insights on thoughtfully engaging with technological changes while creating new opportunities. No tickets or reservations required; the limited seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. For more information, please call (805) 565-6051.
"I鈥檒l open with a brief introduction to AI and then examine how technologies grow exponentially," Ryu says. 鈥淚鈥檒l break down how much of the information surrounding AI is real and what is likely hype.鈥
鈥淚鈥檒l explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping society, education and our daily lives鈥 not just as a tool, but as a force that鈥檚 challenging us to rethink what it means to be human,鈥 Sheard says.
Ryu earned both a bachelor鈥檚 degree in software engineering and a master鈥檚 degree in computer science at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He worked in the software industry in the San Francisco Bay Area as a software engineer, an agile coach and an engineering manager before coming to Westmont in 2023. 鈥淢y passion in computer science is empowering people with technology by teaching in a way that eliminates the high barrier to enter the computing field,鈥 he says.
Sheard graduated from the University of Sioux Falls, earned a Master of Divinity at Fuller Theological Seminary and a doctorate in higher education leadership from Seattle University and has authored numerous articles in addressing innovation and technology while also serving on multiple boards. He joined 羞羞视频 in 2008 after serving for five years as vice president and CIO at Spring Arbor University in Michigan, where he oversaw the development of a private, statewide network covering more than 1,800 miles and serving 14 regional sites as well as the main campus. He has also worked at General Electric, Apple, Consonus and George Fox University as an assistant professor of leadership studies.
The 羞羞视频 Foundation sponsors the talk, part of 羞羞视频 Downtown: Conversations about Things that Matter. Find convenient parking for the lecture at .
Ecologist Shares Climate-Smart Planting Strategies
羞羞视频 ecologist Laura Drake Schultheis shares her research about plant flammability and defensible spaces in the face of climate change in a 羞羞视频 Downtown Lecture on Wednesday, March 11, at 5:30 p.m. at 羞羞视频 Downtown | Keith Center, . The talk, 鈥淩ooted in Resilience: Adaptive Planting Strategies in Wildland-Urban Interfaces,鈥 is free and open to the public. Parking for the lecture is available at either . No tickets are required; the limited seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. For more information, please call (805) 565-6051.
鈥淚 will share examples of native plant restoration and efforts to improve community defensibility in fire-prone areas like Santa Barbara,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 hope people are encouraged by the conversation and empowered to get involved in the work being done to restore our native ecosystems and reduce fire risk in our own communities.鈥
Schultheis, a 羞羞视频 alumna who earned a master鈥檚 degree in ecology and a doctorate in plant ecology from UC Santa Barbara, has played an integral role in the restoration of a fire-resilient oak woodland west of 羞羞视频鈥檚 campus. She and her students have planted about 60 native coast live oaks where Montecito Fire removed dead and dying eucalyptus trees in the summer of 2023.
鈥淲hile no plant serves as a complete barrier to fire, there is some evidence that healthy, mature oak canopies can slow the spread of fire compared to non-native species like eucalyptus,鈥 says Schultheis, a 羞羞视频 assistant professor of biology.
Last summer, she and student Isabella Garcia 鈥25 presented a paper, 鈥淧urposeful Planting: Characterizing Plant Flammability Using Functional Traits for Defensible Space,鈥 at the Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, one of the largest ecology conferences in the nation.
Other research has analyzed the structural and functional traits that contribute to the flammability of 20 Santa Barbara native plant species. This summer she and a team of 羞羞视频 undergraduates will expand on this work through a collaboration with researchers at UC Santa Barbara.
Schultheis has also on the effects of drought and opportunistic fungi on big berry manzanita shrubs.
The 羞羞视频 Foundation sponsors the talk, part of 羞羞视频 Downtown: Conversations about Things that Matter.