With the inaugural class of Teaching Fellows, ýýs Faculty Center is building upon its strong foundation to become a major hub for interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation at Pace.
Finding Their Voice

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When Christine Suddeth ý21 enrolled in the Pace School of Performing Arts as a musical theater student, she was in the midst of recovering from a voice injuryýone that her voice teacher, PPA Professor Amanda Flynn, helped her recover from. Her injury and subsequent recovery lead her down a path of research and investigation.
When Christine Suddeth ý21 enrolled in the Pace School of Performing Arts as a musical theater student, she was in the midst of recovering from a voice injuryýone that her voice teacher, PPA Professor Amanda Flynn, helped her recover from.
ýI suffered a voice injury in high school and went through a hard recovery process. When I came to Pace, Amanda helped me rehabilitate and get me back to where I wasýand further,ý said Christine.
Several years later, as she began to conduct her honors thesis, an opportunity came around for Christine to channel that experience for the betterýFlynn had emailed a select group of students inviting them to apply to the Provostýs Undergraduate Student Faculty Research program. Sensing an opportunity to broaden her undergraduate experience, Christine immediately went for itýone email later, and Flynn and Christine started brainstorming potential topics.
ýI have a published paper in the Journal of Voice looking at vocal health in undergraduate performing arts training programsýlooking at how we teach vocal health, is it effective, are students able to navigate through their performing careersýthis survey study left a lot of questions,ý said Flynn. ýChristine got excited at looking at the student experience going through a very intense, fast-paced BFA program coming in injured. We crafted this survey study looking at the student experienceýwhat was it actually like to be injured in school. Christine is also a psychology minor, so this was a nice tie-in.ý
Flynn and Christine developed a thorough survey study, and with considerable effort to find an adequate sample size of individuals who fit into the research category, were able to analyze and synthesize the responses to the study. The duo hopes that their findingsýwhich will be more widely displayed through presentations at both the NCUR and the Voice Foundation, and potentially a published paperýwill be used to better educate voice teachers, universities, students, and faculty as to how to best manage a vocal injury.
ýDoing this research opened my mind a bit moreýas a performing arts major, you can get tunnel vision,ý said Christine. ýIt was liberating in a way that I could expand my breadth of study.ý
ýIým grateful that Pace has such an initiative to get undergraduate involved in research because I think itýs a really fulfilling experience,ý said Flynn. ýYou learn a lot, and it opens peopleýs minds that thereýs more out their than what theyýve been doing for the last four years.ý
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