The Office of the Provost and Academic Affairs is pleased to congratulate our Stetson teacher-scholar faculty on the submission of proposals for innovative scholarship, research and creative inquiry. The following Summer Grants Program projects were recommended by the Professional Development Committee to the Provost for their outstanding potential and dedication to Stetson’s mission of teaching, research, and artistic development:
Carol Azab, “Towards a better understanding of binge-watching behavior- because almost everybody is doing it“
Sean Beckmann, “The presence of tick-borne pathogens and the prevalence of co-infection in prairie dwelling rodents”
Judith Burnett, “Inua Partners in Hope: Curriculum Development and Expansion of Psychosocial services in Naivasha, Kenya – Evaluation and Post-Graduate Programming“
Dengke Chen,“Animation Encapsulates Art Form Progression of Ancient Chinese Art in Mo Gao Caves,China“
Terence Farrell,“The Effects of an Invasive Pentastome Parasite on Snake Health“
Thomas Farrell, “Scribal Responses to Dialect Features in the Reeve’s Tale”
Jesse Fox, “Spirituality and Avoiding Difficult Emotions: Working With Spiritual Bypass”
Melissa Gibbs, “Nutrient contributions of armored catfish in Volusia Blue Spring”
Juanne Greene, “To Tweet or Not to Tweet: Understanding Executives Propensity to Utilize Social Media as a Strategic Disclosure Tool”
Kelly Hall, “The Effectiveness of Artificial Intelligence in Employee Feedback Processes”
Sidra Hamidi, “Constructing Distinctions: Nuclear and Non-Nuclear States in Global Politics”
Matthew Imes, “Corporate Boards,Gender Diversity, and Debt Maturity”
Luca Molnar, “Complicating Victimhood Narratives: Three Women as Symbols in Obstetrics“
Nicole Mottier, “TBA”
Timothy Murphy, “Business-based Information Literacy: Undergraduate Perceptions of Concepts and Practice in Library Instruction Sessions“
Erin Nickell, “Show and Tell: Juror Perceptions of Audit Partner Characteristics and the Role of Visual Aids in Courtroom Testimony”
Yohann Ripert, “Decolonizing Diplomacy: West Africa and The United States: 1960-81“
Tara Schuwerk, “Making Sense of Nature: Communication and Sustainability in the Food System“
Rajni Shankar-Brown, “Examining Turnover and Supporting the Wellbeing of PreK-12 Educators in High-Poverty Public Schools”
Jean Smith, “Investigating Protein Aggregation Evolution in Fungal Species”
Joseph Woodside, “Healthcare Robotics: Autonomous Learning Models for Clinical Decision-Making“
Petros Xanthopoulos, “A minimum variance ensemble clustering algorithm based on modern portfolio theory“
John York, “Computational Modeling of Ethylene Binding to the Copper Ion in the Ethylene Receptor Protein (ETR1)”
Daniil Zavlunov, “Opera in Russia during the Reign of Nicholas I (1825-1855): A Cultural History [Phase III]“
Walk into Alan Green’s International Economics class this fall and students will be geeked out in goggle-like, headset contraptions, looking as if they stepped out of some sci-fi film.
But Green’s students actually will be stepping into the world of virtual reality, thanks to a grant awarded to the Stetson Chair of Economics.
Alan Green, assistant professor of economics, receives VR Grant from Nearpod.
Green, Ph.D., assistant professor and chair of Stetson’s Economics Department, is one of just 50 instructors at elementary, secondary and post-secondary schools around the world to be awarded as part of the inaugural Virtual Reality Grant Program founded by Nearpod. The education technology company develops digital learning tools, virtual reality and interactive content for use in classrooms.
Green, who also is director of Africana Studies at Stetson, will have access to Nearpod VR headsets and more than 25 VR-based lesson plans. The grant also includes professional development, one-on-one support services and a Nearpod license for the university.
As a teacher and research economist, Green focuses on international development, trade and poverty, but he also conducts research on effective pedagogy. That research led him to use a Nearpod teaching app this past year.
“I can use their app and put questions in it and build in presentations, quizzes, activities, all sorts of things,” Green said. “During class I’ll be lecturing, but then I’ll mix in questions that students answer on their phones, laptops or whatever. Rather than them passively sitting there, they’re being forced to hear something and answer a question about it. So they have to think about it, process it and hopefully understand it.”
When Nearpod announced it was accepting applications for its new virtual reality grant program, Green readily saw the potential for use in his International Economics and Essentials of Economics II classes.
“Nearpod is pushing what they call virtual reality field trips,” Green said. The goggle-like VR headsets use video, audio and even interactive capabilities so that “you can take a virtual trip somewhere. My field research is in economic development, studying poor countries around the world and how they can grow. So we can take a trip to a country in sub-Saharan Africa and get a really strong visual of a village, what people live like, what their houses are like. That makes a lot stronger impression than me just giving students numbers on GDP per capita.”
Along with the benefits of virtual reality field trips, Green’s grant application also proposed that VR technology could vastly enhance online teaching.
“I’ve done some online teaching and didn’t particularly enjoy it because there’s a separation,” Green said. “You’re not interacting with students in real time. With virtual reality, we could have a class and physically be anywhere in the world, but then we all put on our headsets and we come into a virtual classroom and we can teach and learn that way.
“One of the valuable things Stetson offers is small classes and interaction with professors. Virtual reality online learning could be a lot closer to the classroom experience.”
Green said he will “get to play around with the headsets this summer and see what we can do. This fall it’s not going to be in every class, it’s not going to be full time.” But he plans to “find instances where students can take a virtual trip during class.”
More than 300 schools applied for the Nearpod grants, which were awarded to schools across the United States as well as in Nigeria, Japan and Spain.
The Stetson Community Education Project was awarded a $210,000 grant and will expand classes for incarcerated men in Tomoka Correctional Institution, as well as begin offering college credit for courses this fall.
Assistant Professor Pamela Cappas-Toro is a co-founder of Stetson’s Community Education Project at Tomoka Correctional Institution in Daytona Beach.
The Laughing Gull Foundation approved a grant for $70,000 a year for three years for the Community Education Project (CEP), which has offered classes in the Daytona Beach prison since 2015, said Pamela Cappas-Toro, Ph.D., assistant professor of World Languages and Cultures (Spanish) at Stetson.
Beginning this fall, the project will offer one course each semester for non-degree-bearing college credit. Twenty students are expected to enroll this fall and that number will grow to 30 men next fall.
The grant will pay to hire a project coordinator, who will tutor incarcerated students and serve as a liaison with the state Department of Corrections, Cappas-Toro said. The grant also will provide textbooks and school supplies, support students’ emerging scholarship and creative course projects, and add a computer lab for the men, who currently do the coursework by hand.
Andrew Eisen, adjunct professor of history at Stetson, teaches a class on the Cuban Missile Crisis in Tomoka Correctional Institution.
“This is going to mean an expansion of our program at Tomoka,” said Andrew Eisen, Ph.D., adjunct professor of history at Stetson and one of the founders of the program. “It will be small, incremental growth to ensure the quality of our program.”
Eisen and Cappas-Toro were involved in a similar prison-education program at the University of Illinois when they were graduate students there. After the married couple arrived at Stetson, they started the program at Tomoka Correctional Institution with Jelena Petrovic, Ph.D., Stetson assistant professor of Communication and Media Studies. The following year, Melinda Hall, Ph.D., assistant professor of Philosophy at Stetson, joined the effort. Currently, the four professors co-direct the project.
Since then, more than 25 Stetson professors have taught classes, led workshops and provided guest lectures to the students in the prison. Subjects have included history, Spanish, philosophy, mathematics, communication, computer sciences and English. They have been supported in part by the Nina B. Hollis Institute for Educational Reform and its Research Impact Award.
The program received its original seed funding through the Hollis Renaissance Fund, which supports new programs in hopes that their success would then be further supported with grants from outside organizations. This is exactly what happened with CEP, said Stetson President Wendy B. Libby, Ph.D.
Stetson President Wendy B. Libby has given a guest lecture at Tomoka Correctional Institution.
“Teaching at the Tomoka Correctional Institution fits squarely into our mission,” said Libby, who has been a guest lecturer at the prison. “That our faculty have been so enormously supportive underscores how clearly this work aligns with Stetson’s values.”
Stetson’s undergraduate students do not visit the prison but have been involved in the program, interning in the CEP office on the DeLand campus and designing proposed logos for the project. Students in a Digital Arts class, taught by Brown Visiting Teacher Scholar Madison Creech, M.F.A., came up with the logos and sent videos of their presentations to the incarcerated students, who then provided feedback on the designs.
Assistant Professor Jelena Petrovic
“It is wonderful to see the academic efforts of Stetson students align with the work and community of our students at Tomoka. Stetson students in Creech’s class emphasized that the incarcerated men are part of the Stetson community, and this is precisely what we hope for,” said Hall.
“These programs are very much needed, especially in a state like Florida that has one of the highest prison populations in the country,” said Petrovic.
The Laughing Gull Foundation provides grants to increase access to credit-bearing college courses for incarcerated students, primarily in the South, according to its website. The Foundation awarded the grant to Stetson’s Community Education Project this month after visiting the DeLand campus and the prison classroom in February.
Assistant Professor Melinda Hall
“We are very excited to partner with Stetson University and we appreciate the inspiring work of the Community Education Program!” wrote Hez Norton, interim executive director of the Laughing Gull Foundation, in an email announcing the grant on June 12.
The Stetson organizers hope other faculty members continue to join the project. Already, Joshua Eckroth, Ph.D., assistant professor of Computer Science, has expressed interest in helping with setting up the prison computer lab.
“We’re able to draw on the expertise and the willingness and dedication of faculty members who have from day 1 helped us build this program, all as volunteers,” Eisen said.
Principal investigators: top left, Roslyn Crowder, PhD, associate professor of biology; top right, Holley Lynch, PhD, assistant professor of physics; bottom left, Heather Evans-Anderson, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Health Sciences; bottom right: Lynn Kee, PhD, assistant professor of biology. Photo: Stetson University/Ciara Ocasio
By virtue of a Major Resource Instrumentation Grant from the National Science Foundation, Stetson is receiving $266,000 in funding to purchase an inverted fluorescent microscope system — capable of imaging over a wide range of living biological samples from subcellular structures to small organisms.
The microscope system will be used to engage undergraduate students across biology, health sciences and physics in superior training through faculty-mentored research projects, and promote the implementation of inquiry-based lab experiences for students in upper-level biology and physics courses.
Also, the system will provide a substantial foundation to support and enable fundamental pioneering research by junior faculty members, and foster sophisticated capstone research for seniors under the mentorship of faculty members committed to student training and advancing the participation of underrepresented and minority undergraduates in the sciences.
Microscopic image of HeLa cancer cells stained with chemical dyes to visualize the internal structures (red and green) and DNA (blue). Photo: Stetson University
Collectively, these invaluable experiences will promote scientific competency in students as they achieve a comprehensive range of career goals and contribute to the development of the next generation of scientists.
Highlights of the anticipated research: 1) tracking migrating cells in living tissues to link cellular and subcellular mechanisms to tissue-scale movements; 2) examining improperly located cell death proteins in malignant cells; 3) dissecting communication pathways that regulate cardiac myocyte cell proliferation and regeneration in Ciona intestinalis; 4) examining spatial organization and dynamics of iridescent marine bacteria; and 5) promoting education through use of CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology by undergraduates in a Genetics course to manipulate and label genes in order to visualize effects in living organisms.
“This really opens up new avenues of research at the cell and, especially, the subcell level at Stetson. We have a growing number of researchers who work with that scale in three departments. And it will allow students to use a research-grade microscope.”
Principal Investigator Holley Lynch, PhD, assistant professor of physics
Stetson’s Principal Investigator is Holley Lynch, PhD, assistant professor of physics. Co-Principal Investigators are Lynn Kee, PhD, assistant professor of biology; Roslyn Crowder, PhD, associate professor of biology; and Heather Evans-Anderson, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Health Sciences.
“This really opens up new avenues of research at the cell and, especially, the subcell level at Stetson,” Lynch said. “We have a growing number of researchers who work with that scale in three departments. And it will allow students to use a research-grade microscope.”
Lynch noted that while some of Stetson’s science faculty/researchers need to see “very small things, such as look inside cells,” others need to see how cells behave over time. The new system, which is expected to arrive on campus later this fall, is “flexible,” she said.
Evans-Anderson agreed, commenting, “This kind of imaging will help all of us.”
In 2018, Kresge Foundation funds led to Stetson’s acquisition of an advanced stereo microscope, which effectively aids in the visualization of tissue layers and development of organisms. The new microscope system will deliver even greater power of magnification and capability to see inside cells, Evans-Anderson said, adding that extensive interdepartmental collaboration will result.
“I see this as a really good steppingstone. Having this equipment here enables us to apply for other kinds of grants that will fund our research and take our students to the next level,” Evans-Anderson concluded.
Notably, the NSF, with an annual budget of $8.1 billion (FY 2019), is the funding source for approximately 27% of the total federal budget for basic research conducted at U.S. colleges and universities.
Congratulations to the recipient of the 2017-2018 Sabbatical Awards:
Mark Bauer, Professor of Law: Anti Trust by Design
Jason Bent, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law: The Statistics of Discrimination
Paul Boudreaux, Professor of Law: Tales of the Suburbs
Catherine Cameron, Professor of Law: Reinvigorating US copyright Law with Attribution
Joe Morrissey, Professor of Law
Susan Rozelle, Professor of Law: Rolling the Dice for Death: Structural Problems in Capital Punishment
J. Anthony Abbott, Professor of Environmental Science and Studies: Modernly Mapping Bartram
Shahram Amiri, Professor of Decision and Information Sciences: The Impact of Information Technology on Rehabilitation in the United States Justice System
Cynthia Bennington, Professor of Biology: Restoring and managing an ecosystem fragment on Stetson’s campus
Diane Everett(Spring), Professor of Sociology: A Theoretical Model for Analyzing Gender Inclusion, Exclusion, and Being Ignored within Gendered Work Organizations
Kandy Queen-Sutherland, Professor of Religious Studies: Writing Project – Book Title: If Not for a Woman …
John Rasp, Associate Professor of Decision and Information Sciences: Assessing Win Probabilities in Tournaments
Ekaterina Kudryavtseva, Associate Professor of Art History: The Afterlife of Kazimir Malevich’s Suprematism
Paul Sibbald, Assistant Professor of Chemistry: Study of Organic Chemical Reaction Mechanisms Using Computational Methods
Congratulations to the following recipients of the 2018 Hand Awards for Distinguished Faculty Achievement.
The Hand Award for Community Impact celebrates the achievements of faculty serving the needs of the Stetson community and the community beyond the campus.
Terrence Farrell, Ph.D., Professor of Biology Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity
Pamela Cappas-Toro, Ph.D., Associate Professor of World Languages and Cultures (Spanish) Hand Award for Community Impact
Faculty service to our neighbors not only links the University with the broader community, but serves as an example to inspire our students who, we hope, become inspired to make the world better. It therefore gives me great pleasure to acknowledge the extraordinary work of DR. PAMELA CAPPAS-TORO, assistant professor of World Languages and Cultures. Upon joining the faculty in 2013, she immediately set out to answer the question “Who is my neighbor?” more generously than most of us ever dream. Her scholarship and service are dedicated to those marginalized by race, class, nation, and legal status.
In 2013, Pamela founded La Casita Cultural Latina, a cultural center for our community, dedicated to providing “education and leadership development opportunities” to our under-served Hispanic neighbors. The very next year, Dr. Cappas-Toro founded the Community Engagement Project, offering classes to incarcerated populations in the high-security Tomoka Correctional Facility. She collaborates with Stetson colleagues in both endeavors, building a broad community for education, and demonstrating Stetson’s mission beyond our campuses. One nominator wrote “Her impact on the campus and local community is undeniable, and her national influence through the Community Engagement Project is now an established fact.” Professor Cappas-Toro embodies the essence and spirit of the purpose of higher education by recognizing and nurturing the cultural wealth of forgotten and minortized communities. This year, we are honored to present Professor Pamela Cappas-Toro with the Hand Award for Community Impact.
Presented by Provost Noel Painteron May 11, 2018 at the 132rd annual Undergraduate Commencement
Congratulations to the recipient of the 2017-2018 Sabbatical Awards:
Jesus Alfonzo, Associate Professor of Music: Artistic Studies and Special Exercises for Viola: Preparing for Walton, Bartok and Hindemith Viola Concertos
Jon Carrick, Associate Professor of Management, Associate Chair of Management: Global Private Equity Investment Database
Chris Colwell, Associate Professor and Chair of Education: Understanding the Role of Charisma in K-12 Leadership
Manuel de Murga, Associate Professor of Music; Composition; Director of Composition: Compositions for Soloists and Ensembles
Michelle DeMoss, Dennis C. McNamara Sr. Professor of Marketing: Investigating Sustainable Marketing in the U.S. Food Industry: A Case Method Approach
Ana Eire, Professor of Spanish: Contemporary Spanish Poetry and Poetics: Eloy Sánchez Rosillo and Carlos Marzal
Richard Medlin, Professor of Psychology: Performance Training in an Avant-Garde Style
Julia Schmitt, Professor of Theatre Arts and Chair of the Creative Arts Department: Performance Training in an Avant-Garde Style
Terry Farrell, Professor of Biology: Snake Fungal Disease in Florida Snake Populations
Leander Seah, Associate Professor of History: Conceptualizing Chinese Identity: Chine, the Nanyang, and Trans-Regionalism