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Faculty Awards Sabbatical

2013-2014 Sabbatical Awards

Congratulations to the recipient of the 2013-2014 Sabbatical Awards:

Yves-Antoine Clemmen, Professor and Chair of World Languages and Cultures (French): Amélie Nothomb, Fictionalized Writer, Living Character : the inner life of a growing corpus

Kimberly Flint-Hamilton, Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology: To Be Both Black and Catholic Before, During, and After the Civil Rights Movement

Dan Gunderson, Professor of Art

David Hill, Professor of Political Science

Jamil Khader, Professor of English

Mike King, Professor of Biology

Emily Mieras, Chair of History; Associate Professor of History and American Studies: “Marketing Nostalgia: Constructing Historical Memory and Community through Imagined Pasts.”

William Nylen, Chair of Political Science, Professor of Political Science

Leila Roach, Associate Professor of Counselor Education, Chair of Counselor Education: An Exploration of LGBT Couples Sexual Identity and Spiritual and Religious Experiences

Joshua Rust, Associate Professor of Philosophy: Social Ontology and the Charismatic Leader

Michele Skelton, Associate Professor of Health Sciences

Debra Touchton, Professor of Education

Margaret Venzke, Associate Professor of History

Becky Watts: Personhood on the Plantation: Interpreting Slaves and Slavery at Public Plantation Sites

Fred K. Augustine Jr., Professor of Information Systems; Chair of Business Systems and Analytics

Jim Mallett, Professor of Finance

Carolyn Mueller, Professor of Strategic Management: Entrepreneurship: Theory & Practice, Case Research Journal, or the Business Case Journal

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Faculty Awards McEniry Awards

2014 William Hugh McEniry Award for Excellence in Teaching

Congratulations to the recipient of the 2014 William Hugh McEniry Award for Excellence in Teaching

Dr. Eric Kurlander, Professor of History

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Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2013

We congratulate our winner of the 2013 Willa Dean Lowery Awards:

Alicia (Schultheis) Slater

Multilocus Phylogeography of a Montane Great Basin Stonefly

Categories
Faculty Awards Hand Awards

2013 Hand Awards for Distinguished Faculty Achievement

Congratulations to the following recipients of the 2013 Hand Awards for Distinguished Faculty Achievement.

Elen Podgor, Ph.D., Professor of Law
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

Mark Powell, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

Michael Rickman, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

Robert Sitler, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Languages and Literatures
Hand Award for Community Impact

Categories
Faculty Awards Sabbatical

2012-2013 Sabbatical Awards

Congratulations to the recipient of the 2012-2013 Sabbatical Awards:

Judy Burnett, Associate Professor of Counselor Education: Reproductive Health and Infertility Counseling: An Investigation of Issues and Challenges Created by Advances in Assisted Reproductive Technology

Erich Friedman, Associate Professor of Mathematics: An Introductory Graph Theory Text Appropriate For Freshmen Non-Majors

Phillip Lucas, Professor of Religious Studies: We Have Transcended the Constraints of Tradition: Neo-Advaitin Teachers Answer Their Traditionalist Critics

Megan O’Neill, Associate Professor of English: Immersion Writing Experiences in the First Year: Developmental Writers and Academic Success Profiles

Dan Plante, Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science: Automated Design and Testing in Software Development

Mary Pollock, Professor of English: Gerald Durrell and the Zookeeper’s Dilemma

Mitchell Reddish, O.L. Walker Professor of Christian Studies, Chair of Religious Studies: Apocalypticism in the New Testament

Greg Sapp, Professor of Religious Studies and Hal S. Marchman Chair of Civic and Social Responsibility: The Imitatio Naturae Christi in Kierkegaard: A Study of Søren Kierkegaard’s Christology

Lori Snook, Associate Professor and Co-Chair of English: The Orange Grove: a full-length play

Nathan Wolek, Professor of Digital Arts and Music Technology: Merging, Enhancing and Extended Software Tools for Computer Music

Bobby Adams, Professor of Music Education: The Art of Interpreting Music Taught as a Development Skill

Lloyd Linney, Professor of music: A Study of Selected French Mélodies with Susan Manoff, Pianist and Vocal Coach, Paris Conservatory

Stephen Robinson, Professor of Music: A Compact Disc Recording of “Chamber Music with Guitar”

Becky Oliphant, Associate Professor of Marketing: Measuring Student Reaction with MBTI Scores to Teaching Effectiveness in International Settings

Gary Oliphant, Professor of Business: Uses of Group Projects in the Business Curricula

Barbara Costello, Associate Professor; Government Documents and Research Librarian: Politics, Policies, and Practices: Factors Affecting the Online Availability of Congressional Hearings Transcripts, 110th- 112th Congresses

Categories
Faculty Awards McEniry Awards

2013 William Hugh McEniry Award for Excellence in Teaching

Congratulations to the recipient of the 2013 William Hugh McEniry Award for Excellence in Teaching

Dr. Harry Price, Associate Professor of Chemistry

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2012

We congratulate our winners of the 2012 Willa Dean Lowery Awards:

Tony Abbott

Dr. J. Anthony Abbott, Department of Geography and Environmental Science

McEniry Award Winner Hala ElAarag, PhD, Teaches Students “to Be the Best  They Can Be” - Stetson Today

Dr. Hala ElAarag, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science

Dr. Chelsea Embry, Department of Integrative Health Science

Dr. Danielle Morel, Department of Physics

Categories
Faculty Awards Fulbright Scholars International Awards

Croce, Nylen, Wolek Are Fulbright Scholars

https://www.stetson.edu/today/2012/06/croce-nylen-wolek-are-fulbright-scholars/

Categories
Faculty Awards Hand Awards

2012 Hand Awards for Distinguished Faculty Achievement

Congratulations to the following recipients of the 2012 Hand Awards for Distinguished Faculty Achievement.

Joel Davis, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

Luz Nagle, Ph.D., Professor of Law
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

John York, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Hand Award for Research, Creative and Professional Activity

Anne Hallum, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science
Hand Award for Community Impact

Categories
Faculty Awards

NSF Grants Strengthen Foundation

Over the past few years, Stetson faculty members, including Dr. John T. York, Dr. Michael King and Dr. Tandy Grubbs, have been hard at work writing and securing much-needed grants through the National Science Foundation (NSF) to benefit the science departments. Most recently, the NSF has awarded the university a $200,000 grant to purchase a state-of-the-art 400 MHz nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometer, which will better allow Stetson’s science professors to develop a new chemistry and biochemistry curriculum centered around hands-on labs and research. Through the NSF’s Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science (TUES), and its Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs, Stetson will develop new ways to use NMR instrumentation in a broad range of chemistry courses.

“We’re very thrilled,” said Assistant Professor of Chemistry Dr. John York, the Co-Principal Investigator for the grant. “With this piece of equipment, our goal is to expose students to world-class instrumentation and give ourstudents hands-on access and exposure to a cutting-edge research tool.”

Jacob Geri, a senior majoring in Chemistry, also expressed excitement about the update to the department, saying “I’m very excited to be able to work with this vital piece of equipment. We’ll be able to go beyond mere simulation and see and use our results. There’s really no limit.” The instrument, which has been installed, was also made possible thanks to the Marshall E. Rinker, Sr. Foundation, Inc. of West Palm Beach, which contributed $100,000 toward the purchase.

The NSF is also currently funding a $610,000 renovation of five science research labs in Sage Hall – three for Chemistry and two for Biology. Funded by a NSF grant made available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the renovations started about one year ago this fall and are now almost completely finished.

Dr. Michael King, Professor of Biology, has worked as the Principal Investigator overseeing the grant writing and working with fellow faculty members including Dr. Grubbs, Dr. Melissa Gibbs, Dr. York and Dr. Camille King. “The rooms were outdated and almost unusable, so it was time for some changes,” said Dr. King. “It’s all about having safe and modern spaces within which teachers and students can collaborate.”

In 2012, the university will complete a five-year program in which the NSF is providing scholarships for students majoring in Chemistry or Physics. Grubbs composed the grant with the assistance of Co-Principal Investigators Drs. George S. Glander III and Michael King. Currently, about 300 students per year are enrolled in Chemistry and Biochemistry from at least 12 different majors.

“President Obama is depending on the NSF to help lead the nation to a new era of discovery and innovation,” said NSF Director Arden L. Bement, Jr.,“ Investments in research and education build a stronger economic foundation for the country.”

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) was signed into law by President Obama in 2009, and is an unprecedented effort to jump-start our economy, create or save millions of jobs and address long-neglected challenges so our country can thrive in the 21st century. The U.S. Department of Education states that the Recovery Act is an extraordinary response to a crisis and includes measures to modernize our nation’s infrastructure, enhance energy independence, expand educational opportunities, preserve and improve affordable health care, provide tax relief and protect those in greatest need.

By Elizabeth Bogart ’12 

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