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University Annual Faculty Teaching, Scholar, and Service Awards
Nineteen
of Ohio State's leading faculty members were honored during the Annual
Distinguished Teaching, Service and Scholar Awards Wednesday night,
May 9, at the Faculty Club.
Ten Ohio
State faculty members received the 2000-2001 Alumni Award for Distinguished
Teaching, which honors faculty members who have done a superior job
in teaching. The recipients were nominated by students and colleagues,
and were chosen by a committee comprised of alumni, students and faculty.
They each receive a cash award of $3,000 and a $1,200 increase in their
base salaries. This years recipients join an elite group of more
than 300 faculty members who have received this award since its inception
in 1960.
The awards
recipients also are inducted into Academy of Teaching, which provides
leadership on improving teaching at Ohio State. The awards are supported
by the offices of Academic Affairs and Research, The Ohio State University
Alumni Association and private donations to the university.
Six faculty
members received the Distinguished Scholar Award, which recognizes extraordinary
scholarly accomplishments by senior professors who have compiled a substantial
body of research, as well as the work of younger faculty members who
have demonstrated great scholarly potential. Recipients are nominated
by their departments and chosen by a committee of senior faculty, including
several past recipients of the award. Distinguished scholars receive
a $3,000 honorarium and a $20,000 research grant to be used during the
next three years.
The Faculty
Award for Distinguished University Service was given to three faculty
members this year who have made extensive contributions to the development
and implementation of university policies and programs through non-administrative
roles. They are nominated by members of the university community and
selected by a committee of faculty, administrators and previous recipients.
They receive a $3,000 cash award and an increase of $1,200 to their
base salaries.
Alumni
Award for Distinguished Teaching
Javad
Abdalkhani
Associate Professor Department of Mathematics (Lima Campus)
Professor Abdalkhani has taught at Ohio States Lima campus since
1988, teaching everything from remedial sections to statistics to calculus.
He also serves as a resource person for local educators in the Lima
area, offering workshops for teachers and principals. Professor Abdalkhani
is active in curriculum design and the use of creative teaching methods.
He successfully implemented cooperative learning at the campus by emphasizing
reading and writing in elementary mathematics classes, incorporating
textbook reading skills and journal writing to connect mathematics theory
with everyday practice. He serves on the Teaching Effectiveness Committee
and is president of Limas Faculty Assembly. His doctorate is from
Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Neeli M. Bendapudi
Assistant Professor Department of Marketing
Students speak of Professor Bendapudis strong interest in their
welfare and her knowledge of the subject matter. In addition to her
classroom teaching, she acts as an informal adviser and mentor to many
undergraduates and has participated on her departments Ph.D. coordinating
committee. She has won numerous awards within the Fisher College of
Business for her teaching, including the MBA programs Outstanding
Elective Professor Award from the class of 2000. Business Week magazine
mentioned a course she developed and taught as one of the Fisher Colleges
most recommended courses. A faculty member at Ohio State since 1996,
Professor Bendapudi holds a doctoral degree from the University of Kansas
and previously taught at Texas A&M University.
Julia
F. Guy
Assistant Professor Department of Anatomy and Medical Education
Professor Guy is an exemplary teacher, a wonderful role model, and is
dedicated to her students. She goes beyond the normal call of professorial
duty and is developing a World Wide Web-based course for nontraditional
students who cannot attend class on campus. An innovative teacher, she
also is also the author of Learning Human Anatomy: A Laboratory Text
and Workbook and the developer of the multimedia tool Anatlab: The Anatomy
Lab. A member of the Ohio State faculty since 1986, she earned her Ph.D.
at Ohio State, previously worked as an anatomy instructor at the university,
and also taught junior high and elementary school in Flint, Michigan.
David
J. Hart
Professor Department of Chemistry
Professor Hart has left his mark on undergraduate chemistry. First,
he overhauled the Honors Organic Laboratory to make it one of the most
demanding -- yet most popular -- courses. He designed an innovative
program of small-scale experiments so the department could afford to
offer undergraduates sophisticated new laboratory equipment. Professor
Hart earned his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley, and
worked at the California Institute of Technology before joining Ohio
States faculty in 1978. Since then, he has graduated 21 masters
and 36 Ph.D. students, while shepherding numerous undergraduates --
and even high school students -- in his research group.
Timothy
E. Heron
Professor School of Physical Activity and Educational Services
A member of Ohio States faculty for 25 years, Professor Heron
is renowned for his research in special education and is considered
a major contributor to the programs high national ranking. Colleagues
say he serves as a role model to students in three ways: by showing
how teaching and research are linked, providing them with applied examples,
and offering a variety of instructional arrangements. In just four years
in the late 1990s, he produced more than 20 publications in top-ranking
journals. Professor Heron earned his Ed.D. from Temple University. His
publication The Educational Consultant is adopted widely for classes
in special education across the nation.
Randy
D. Hodson
Professor Department of Sociology
Students who have taken classes with Professor Hodson say that he is
interested in teaching, well-organized, a clear communicator, and well-prepared.
. In the past three years, he has taught a large introductory course
in sociology that involves supervising seven to eight teaching assistants,
handling testing and grading, and assisting students in learning. He
has also taught the required graduate methods course for M.A. and Ph.D.
students, as well as graduate and undergraduate courses in his area
of expertise, the sociology of work. A faculty member at Ohio State
since 1996, Professor Hodson holds a doctoral degree from the University
of Wisconsin.
Keith
Merrill Irvin
Professor Department of Animal Sciences
Because he is an outstanding teacher, scholar, and adviser, students
and faculty alike seek advice from Professor Irvin. In addition to developing
several classes in the department, he has also designed a new model
for teaching that incorporates student-centered and student-guided activities.
He developed the Sow Productivity Index, a computer program widely recognized
by the industry as a standard for genetic selection. In 2000, Professor
Irvin received the College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental
Sciences Outstanding Student Adviser Award. A member of the Ohio State
faculty since 1975, he earned his Ph.D. at Ohio State.
Ralf
G. Rahwan
Professor College of Pharmacy, Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Professor Rahwan is a gifted communicator, a passionate teacher, and
an able researcher. He has written no fewer than 13 study manuals to
assist students in comprehending course material. He has also developed
a popular elective course in toxicology to help students better understand
the subject. To date, Professor Rahwan has received the colleges
prestigious Miriam R. Balshone Memorial Award for Distinguished Teaching
an unprecedented six times, as faculty are eligible to receive the award
only once every three years. A member of the Ohio State faculty since
1972, he earned his Ph.D. from Purdue University and previously worked
at both Dow Chemical and Hoechst Pharmaceutical companies.
Barbara
L. Seidl
Assistant Professor School of Teaching and Learning
Recognized by colleagues with the 2000 School of Teaching and Learning
Teaching Award, Professor Seidl is actively engaged in advising students
and has taken a leadership role in a cohort of students pursuing their
teacher preparation program in elementary education. She teaches courses
primarily focused on issues of equity and diversity, the foundations
of elementary education, and teacher education, and maintains a research
program that provides new understandings to inform the preparation of
teachers. She also has been active in programs offered by the College
of Educations Office of Diversity and Outreach. Professor Seidl
received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She joined
the Ohio State faculty in 1996.
Ian
M. Sheldon
Professor Department of Agricultural, Environmental, and Development
Economics
Professor Sheldon teaches courses in industrial organization, international
trade, and policy analysis. In addition to his regular teaching load
and research work, he advises both undergraduate and graduate students
and is deeply involved in outreach teaching to agribusiness leaders
around the state. Professor Sheldon was one of the first faculty members
in his department to place all of his course materials on the Web, and
recently chaired a department committee that significantly revised the
doctoral program. A member of Ohio States faculty since 1989,
Professor Sheldon earned his doctorate from the University of Salford,
UK. He also taught at the University of Exeter, UK.
Distinguished
Scholar Award
Brian
D. Joseph
Professor Department of Linguistics
Professor Joseph is the worlds leading specialist in the linguistic
structure and history of the Greek language. In addition, he has made
significant contributions in the fields of Balkan linguistics and in
general historical linguistics. His research in these three areas is
published in more than 100 sole-authored articles, two monographs, and
a widely used graduate textbook. As chair of the Department of Linguistics
from 1987 to 1997, he is credited with developing the department into
one of the top in the country. A faculty member since 1979, Professor
Joseph received his doctoral degree from Harvard.
John
N. King
Professor Department of English
Professor King is a Renaissance Man whose research and writings
have earned him an international reputation in the field of English
Renaissance literature, history, and culture. He is the author or editor
of seven books and has published more than 100 essays and reviews. His
scholarship has been recognized with five long-term research fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Humanities
Center. A member of the Ohio State faculty since 1989, Professor King
earned his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, and previously taught
at Bates College, Brown University, Oxford University, and Abdullahi
Bayero University in Nigeria.
Henri
Moscovici
Professor Department of Mathematics
Professor Moscovici pioneered a new form of geometry, known as noncommutative
geometry -- an emerging field that synthesizes ideas from geometry,
topology, mathematical analysis and quantum physics. He received his
Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Bucharest in 1971. In 1978,
he was invited to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where
he spent two years as a visiting member before joining the Ohio State
faculty in 1980. In 1995, Professor Moscovici was appointed a fellow
of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and in 1997, he was
appointed as a scholar to the Clay Mathematics Institute at Harvard
University, where he spent the 1999-2000 academic year.
J.
William Rich
Ralph W. Kurtz Professor Department of Mechanical Engineering
Professor Richs work with gas and plasma flows has led to advances
in high-power lasers, high-speed flight, and rocketry, as well as industrial
chemical processes. He invented a carbon monoxide gas laser, which remains
the most efficient laser known that can produce powers exceeding 1 million
watts. In 1965, Professor Rich earned his Ph.D. in aeronautical engineering
at Princeton University, where he was a Daniel and Florence Guggenheim
Fellow in Jet Propulsion. Since joining the Ohio State faculty in 1986,
he has created new research programs in physical gas dynamics and nonequilibrium
thermodynamics. Nominators cited not only his scientific and engineering
accomplishments, but also his extensive knowledge of history and literature.
Leila
J. Rupp
Professor and Chair Department of History
An extraordinarily productive and distinguished scholar, Professor Rupp
has made cutting-edge contributions to womens history, the history
of social movements, and the history of sexuality, as well as other
fields. Her work combines extensive archival research in multiple languages
with theoretical and analytical rigor. She has completed five books
and has made substantial contributions in the journals of both history
and womens studies. She has written on a broad range of topics,
from Nazi ideology to contemporary lesbian feminist communities. Professor
Rupp earned a doctoral degree from Bryn Mawr College in 1976 before
joining the Ohio State faculty in 1977.
Lonnie
G. Thompson
Professor Department of Geological Sciences
Professor Thompsons nomination for this award labels him the
international pioneer in acquisition and interpretation of tropical
and subtropical ice core histories. In short, he is the worlds
expert in deciphering clues to ancient climate trapped inside ice from
some of the Earths harshest environments. He has led 35 expeditions
to remote ice caps in Peru, Bolivia, China, Antarctica, Russia, Kenya
and other regions. He has authored, or co-authored, 109 papers published
in refereed journals, including 10 in the prestigious journal Science.
In addition, his predictions about the growing impact of global warming
have been sought by the U.S. Congress, the vice president, and colleagues
around the world. Professor Thompson earned his Ph.D. at Ohio State
and joined the University as a research scientist in 1986.
Faculty
Award for Distinguished University Service
Robert
J. Perry
Professor Department of Physics
Colleagues say Professor Perry has served on essentially all of the
important committees in the Department of Physics. He helped select
the dean of the College of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, currently
chairs University Senates Rules Committee, and is a member of
the OSURF Board of Trustees. He was vice chair of the Research Commission
and, over the past 10 years, has served on 13 organizing committees
for national and international conferences. Professor Perry is an active
scholar, focusing on problems involving the strong interaction, and
recently was named a fellow of the American Physical Society. He joined
the Ohio State faculty in 1987, and earned his Ph.D. from the University
of Maryland, College Park.
Sally
V. Rudmann
Professor and Director Medical Technology
School of Allied Medical Professions Professor Rudmanns list of
service on university, college, and school committees is long and impressive.
She currently serves on University Senates Athletic Council and
is a past chair of Faculty Council and the Senate Steering Committee.
She was a member of the Presidential Search Committee that selected
President Kirwan and has served on numerous panels examining issues
ranging from health care to budget restructuring. Professor Rudmann
maintains this high level of service while carrying on an active research
program, earning positive teaching evaluations, and providing administrative
leadership for the medical technology program. An Ohio State Ph.D. recipient,
she joined the faculty in 1987.
Caroline
C. Whitacre
Professor and Chair Department of Molecular Virology, Immunology,
and Medical Genetics
Important university activities over the past 10 years are likely to
show evidence of Professor Whitacres involvement. She has served
on numerous University Senate committees, and chaired the Senate Oversight
Committee on Restructuring and the Presidential Commission on University
Governance. Searches for top administrative positions over the years
have reflected her input. Professor Whitacre also is a significant contributor
to her academic department, having served as chair since 1994. Funded
extensively by the National Institutes of Health and an international
authority on autoimmune diseases, Professor Whitacre also has been recognized
in her college several times for her teaching. She earned a Ph.D. from
Ohio State, and joined the faculty in 1981.
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