Centennial Teaching Assistant Awards honor 41 for outstanding contributions
Scholars from the schools of Humanities and Sciences, Earth Sciences, Engineering to receive certificate, $500
Forty-one teaching assistants in disciplines ranging from art and art history to sociology will receive Centennial Teaching Assistant (CTA) Awards during a ceremony June 17. The awards honor outstanding instruction by teaching assistants in the schools of Humanities and Sciences, Earth Sciences, and Engineering. Each recipient will receive a certificate and $500 prize.
In 1989, psychology Professor Ewart Thomas launched the program when he was dean of the School of Humanities and Sciences to recognize the important role that teaching assistants play at Stanford. Each year, half of the departments in the School of Humanities and Sciences are invited to choose from one to three graduate student teachers (depending on the size of the department) to receive the CTA honor. All departments in the schools of Engineering and Earth Sciences may nominate teaching assistants, from which two to seven awardees are chosen, said Linda Salser, program manager at the Center for Teaching and Learning. The selection is regarded as a process, not a competition, that recognizes outstanding teaching assistants over time, Salser said. The CTA program in the School of Humanities and Sciences is endowed by gifts from university supporters and alumni. The new Centennial Teaching Assistants are:
School of Humanities and SciencesArt and Art History: Karen Rapp and Soyoung Yoon
Chemistry: Jon Camden, Thomas Pillow and Ignacio Zuleta
Classics: Kathryn Balsley
German: Per Urlaub and Andrew Utter
History: Jehangir Malegam and Tamara Venit
Human Biology: Victoria Parikh
Music: Juan Pablo Caceres, Erinn Losness and Hiroko Terasawa
Philosophy: Sarah Darby and Ryo Kikuchi
Physics: Mustafa Amin, Asimina Arvanitaki and Navin Sivanandam
Political Science: Matthew Carnes, James Morrison and Jessica Weeks
Psychology: Christopher Bryan, Sapna Cheryan, Hal Ersner-Hershfield and MarYam Hamedani
Slavic Languages and Literatures: Thomas Roberts
Sociology: Brian Colwell and Stefanie Mollborn
School of Earth SciencesEarth Systems Program: Jill Bible and Lynda Browning
Geological and Environmental Sciences: Jim Metcalf
Geophysics: Benjamin Saenz
Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources: Becca Goldman and Joshua Goldstein
Petroleum Engineering: Alexandre Boucher
School of EngineeringChemical Engineering: Steve Abel
Civil and Environmental Engineering: Curtis Haselton
Computer Science: Björn Hartmann
Electrical Engineering: Kivanc Ozonat
Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering: Kathy Lora Jensen