Twenty-two faculty recognized as exceptional mentors
The Exceptional Graduate Faculty Mentor Award recognizes the work that faculty mentors do to improve the graduate student experience
Twenty-two faculty have been recognized with this years Exceptional Graduate Faculty Mentor Award, the Graduate School announced this week.泭泭
These faculty were nominated by students, department or program administrators, faculty or staff for their outstanding contributions either to mentoring individual graduate students, improving the overall climate of graduate education within their program, or improving the graduate program itself.泭泭
The support and enhancement of mentoring is a priority initiative of the Graduate School and that work couldnt be done without faculty support, said Scott Adler, dean of the Graduate School and vice provost for graduate affairs. The faculty members recognized by this award have demonstrated their willingness to go above and beyond as a trusted mentor for their students and were excited to be able to honor these excellent leaders.泭
This years recipients include:
- Hisham Ali, aerospace engineering
- David Boromisza-Habashi, communication
- David Brain, astrophysical and planetary sciences
- Eleanor Browne, chemistry泭
- Theodora Chaspari, computer science泭
- Alison Cool, anthropology泭
- Carolyn Crow, geological sciences泭
- Andrew Grotzinger, psychology and neuroscience泭
- Emily Jensen, robotics泭
- Sungyun Lim, history泭
- Karl Linden, environmental engineering泭
- Mike McDevitt, journalism泭
- Alexis Palmer, linguistics泭
- Nicholas Reinholtz, marketing泭
- Raul Saucedo, philosophy泭
- Anand Sokhey, political science泭
- Sara Staley, education泭
- Katherine Stange, mathematics泭
- Aneesh Subramanian, atmospheric and oceanic sciences泭
- Cara Welker, mechanical engineering泭
- Aaron Whiteley, biochemistry泭
- Erin Willis, advertising, public relations and design泭
More information about the award is available on the Graduate School website.泭