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Five named LAS Master Teachers
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Five faculty members in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (LAS)
at Iowa State University have been named Master Teachers for 2004-05.
The LAS Master Teachers are Clifford Bergman, professor of mathematics
and computer science; William Gallus, associate professor of geological
and atmospheric sciences; Michael Mendelson, professor of English; Jill
Pruetz, assistant professor of anthropology; and Mark Rectanus, professor
of foreign languages and literatures.
This year's award recognizes individuals who have been successful in a
range of teaching activities that inspire and encourage connections to
other disciplines or courses, to civic engagements and communities, to
research, and to real world problems and solutions to those problems.
This is the sixth year of the LAS Master Teacher program, which recognizes
teachers who have a reputation for using unique methods to enhance student
learning. Previous LAS Master Teacher classes have focused on technology
use in the classroom, large lecture classroom instruction, undergraduate
research, off-campus learning opportunities and multicultural teaching
activities.
The five LAS Master Teachers will plan teaching methods seminars and in-class
demonstrations throughout the academic year.
While at Iowa State, Clifford
Bergman has received several teaching awards including the Vinograde
Award for outstanding teaching and advising in 2001 and 2004, an award
given by graduate students in mathematics. Bergman is also the recipient
of a 1989 ISU University Teaching Award. A founding member of the Information
Assurance Center (IAC), Bergman has developed a cryptography course that
is a central part of the Information Assurance program, an interdisciplinary
program involving five academic departments on campus. Bergman has also
organized a two-day workshop for faculty at colleges in surrounding states
to start their own information assurance program or courses.
Over the past decade at Iowa State, William
Gallus has redesigned three meteorology courses to utilize real-world
applications in the classroom. He has added lecture hours to expand the
focus of the courses to cover the full range of topics that organizations
like the National Weather Service expect their new forecasters to understand.
To continue to help students with their understanding of meteorology he
has resurrected Iowa State's participation in the National Collegiate
Weather Forecasting Contest and created several different forecasting
contests that are used in the courses he teaches. With other Iowa State
colleagues, Gallus has developed a virtual storm, which enables students
to experience in a virtual world what severe weather researchers experience.
Gallus has also guided students through a real storm chase, allowing them
to safely monitor a fast-moving tornado.
Michael
Mendelson received the Louis B. Thompson award for distinguished undergraduate
teaching from Iowa State in 1998 and has been nominated by student groups
for teaching recognition six of the last ten years. He has also played
a vital leadership role in the development of Iowa State's learning community
and ISUComm pedagogical and curricular initiatives. As coordinator of
the Department of English's learning community efforts, Mendelson helped
increase the department's participation from 20 English sections linked
to nine other academic departments to 64 class sections linked to 21 departments
across campus.
Despite heavy teaching loads as the sole biological anthropologist at
Iowa State, Jill
Pruetz has developed two new courses since coming to campus in 2001.
"Primate Evolutionary Ecology and Behavior" and "Biological
Anthropology Field School" are both direct extensions of her current
research program in primate ecology in Senegal and Costa Rica. Both courses
provide hands-on, participatory experiences for students that reflect
the Department of Anthropology's curricular emphasis on experiential learning.
In the course of his 20-year career at Iowa State, Mark
Rectanus, professor of German, has provided department-wide leadership
in connected learning for the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures.
As the director of the Languages and Cultures for Professions (LCP) program,
Rectanus has forged cooperative agreements with both the College of Engineering
and the College of Agriculture to offer a secondary major in foreign languages
for students majoring in these professional colleges. Rectanus has also
been instrumental in strengthening and expanding the Department of Foreign
Languages and Literatures study abroad and internship opportunities. For
German students, he has created second and third year courses in business
German and established an area studies course ("German Today")
that focuses on contemporary issues in culture, industry, media and politics.
Clifford Bergman
William Gallus

Michael Mendelson

Jill Pruetz

Mark Rectanus
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