Professor Melissa Kosinski-Collins is an Associate Professor of Biology at Brandeis University. Professor Kosinski-Collins received her PhD from MIT studying protein folding and aggregation in the laboratory of Jonathan King. Professor Kosinski-Collins completed a post doc in Graham Walker‘s HHMI Education Group contributing to the development of tools, such as StarBiochem, for teaching undergraduate biology courses and interactive exercises for Experimental Biology (MIT course 7.02) and Introductory Biology (MIT course 7.01). Professor Kosinski-Col lins was the United States Academic Coordinator of the Biology Olympiad program for three years and is currently the editor-in-chief of the Atlas Journal of Science Education. At Brandeis, Professor Kosinski-Collins has redesigned and taught a variety of courses including the introductory biology laboratory series, non-majors courses on protein folding diseases, graduate classes in protein structure and molecular biology and education courses on assessment and learning in science education. Professor Kosinski-Collins received the Louis Dembitz Brandeis Prize for Excellence in Teaching in 2011 and is currently the MRSEC Director of Education and Outreach.
Submitted by Charles Dorn on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Charles Dorn Education Bowdoin College
Chuck Dorn teaches in the Bowdoin College Education Department. The department's "Bowdoin Teacher Scholars" teacher education program offers certification in secondary school English, Math, Science, Social Studies, and Foreign Language. Students participate in the program in the spring semester of their senior year (undergraduate pathway) or in a spring semester within two years following graduation (postgraduate pathway). The Department has just implemented an Interdisciplinary Major in Mathematics and Education.
Submitted by Steve Swoap on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Steve Swoap Biology Williams College
I am a metabolic / cardiovascular physiologist and currently chair of the biology department at Williams College. I am interested in filling our void of STEM preparation for our majors. We have numerous opportunities for teaching science at elementary schools, but currently no formal training from our department.
Submitted by Heather Johnson on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Heather Johnson Director, Teacher Education Program, Education Department College of the Holy Cross
Heather Johnson recently joined the Education Department at the College of the Holy Cross as the Director of the Teacher Education Program (TEP). She previously worked as a mathematics specialist at the Rhode Island Department of Education and as a mathematics teacher in the middle grades at The Learning Community, a K-8 charter school in Central Falls, RI. Her interests are in mathematics instruction and in the preparation of all teachers through meaningful field-based experiences and coaching.
Submitted by Jack Dougherty on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Jack Dougherty Education Trinity College
Jack Dougherty is Associate Professor and Director of the Educational Studies Program at Trinity College in Hartford CT. He graduated from Swarthmore College (philosophy, with secondary teaching certification in social studies in New Jersey), taught at the high school level for four years in Newark NJ, and completed his doctoral degree in educational policy studies from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Trinity College currently offers an interdisciplinary major in Educational Studies that integrates social sciences, history, and policy with participant-observation learning in urban public schools around our campus, located in Connecticut's capital city. Trinity also graduates several students from our well-respected science, engineering, and mathematics departments (including some who double-majored with Ed Studies), and our institution helped to create a math and science public magnet school adjacent to our campus. Yet we have no teacher preparation program on our campus, and we spend considerable time advising Trinity students from various departments on different pathways toward teaching, usually outside our city. I am attending the CETE conference to explore new opportunities with other liberal arts colleges. Given our setting, with about 20 public schools within a one-mile radius of our campus border, Trinity is ideally positioned to cooperate with other CETE institutions to help create the next generation of teacher-leaders in urban education and STEM content areas.
Submitted by Ruthanne Kurth-Schai on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Ruthanne Kurth-Schai Education Macalester College
I currently serve as Professor and Chair of the Educational Studies Department at Macalester College. I hold a bachelor’s degree in Science Education (concentrations in biology and geology) from the University of Minnesota, masters degree in Alternative Education (emphasizing educational psychology, curriculum design, and school organization) from Indiana University, and Ph.D. in Social & Philosophic Foundations of Education (emphasizing the design of future cultural and educational systems) also from the University of Minnesota. Prior to coming to Macalester I taught science and math for eight years in alternative program within a public junior high school designed to meet the needs of “at-risk” students. At Macalester I directed our teaching certification program from the mid 1990s until we phased out full licensing in 2006.
My current teaching responsibilities include courses in educational policy, educational philosophy and learning theory, and courses exploring relationships between public education and social reform, particularly in response to the challenges posed by globalization. Current research projects include philosophic and policy analyses of the role of public education in promoting the public good (educational equity, cultural pluralism, environmental sustainability) and both national and international studies on education for democracy.
Submitted by Anne Catena on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Anne Catena Education Princeton University
Anne N. Catena, Ed.D. is the director of Professional Development Initiatives and a lecturer and program associate with Princeton University Program in Teacher Preparation. Dr. Catena enjoys advising and supervising student teachers pursuing certification in mathematics and the sciences, and teaches the Seminar in Education that is taken concurrently with student teaching, as well as the Seminar on Student Learning and Methods of Teaching. As director of Professional Development Initiatives, Anne works with Princeton faculty across the liberal arts departments and K-12 teachers in over 20 area schools and school districts.. In addition, Dr. Catena has developed the Teacher Preparation Alumni Network to better support teachers and educators in the field.
Prior to joining Princeton University in 1998, Anne worked with the National Research Council and the National Science Resources Center in Washington, D.C. to engage scientists in education. Dr. Catena earned her doctorate in Education Leadership at the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education. Her dissertation, "An Analysis of Career Choices among Teachers of High Academic Ability” examined the employment positions and influences on career choices among 1970-2007 graduates of teacher preparation programs at Princeton University, Barnard College, Bryn Mawr/Haverford College, Swarthmore College and Vassar College.
Submitted by Wallace Meyer III on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Wallace M Meyer III Assistant Professor of Biology Pomona College
In a world that is growing increasingly complex, the ability to apply scientific thinking (or at least to understand what it is) to information evaluation and decision making can give meaning of one’s life and inspire greater responsibility in citizenship. As such, my goal as a science educator is not only to teach the history, facts and theories of science, but also, to build the critical thinking skills required for lifelong learning. I have worked with students in elementary school, high school, and college, and have found that providing interactive and inquiry-based opportunities are the most effective ways to create engaging learning experiences. I have attended many pedagogy courses offered by NSF and NASA and I was extensively trained to teach science as a National Science Foundation GK-12 fellow. Although the focus of the NSF GK-12 program was on educating students in grades K-12, many of the concepts that I learned from this program I have successfully applied to teaching students at the college level. As a fellow, I attended bi-monthly classes focused on science education, participated in scientific teaching workshops, worked with teachers and students in Hawaii to develop appropriate science curriculum, and traveled to Palau to work with teachers on constructing scientific curriculum based on the concept of scientific inquiry (learning the process of science by doing science). I apply the knowledge I learned from this and other programs to try to engage as many students as I can, effectively teach students with different learning styles, and create unique curriculum.
Submitted by Karen Topp on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Karen Topp Senior Lecturer in Physics Bowdoin
I am a physicist by training, and have become very interested in education through my experience in teaching at Bowdoin. I often teach introductory physics classes where students arrive with diverse backgrounds and preparation, and although I find it an interesting challenge to meet the variety of needs in my classes, I have become very aware of the necessity for better math and science teaching in high schools (and earlier).
Although I have no official education credentials (other than auditing an Education 101 class a year ago) I hope to work with our Education department in encouraging some of our physics majors to consider becoming high school physics teachers. My hope, in attending this conference, is to gather ideas about how to effectively recruit and train these students, so that they will enjoy, succeed, and remain teaching in a high school science classroom.
Submitted by Katharyn Nottis on Thu, 05/24/2012 - 10:36am
Katheryn Nottis Education Bucknell Universtity
Katharyn E. K. Nottis has a B.S. and M.S. in Education from SUNY Buffalo and a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from SUNY Buffalo. She has both elementary and special education teacher certification. Dr. Nottis joined the Education department at Bucknell University in 1995. Prior to that, she was the Education Specialist at the National Center for Earthquake Engineering Research at SUNY Buffalo.
Dr. Nottis has regularly taught courses in Bucknell’s teacher certification program and developed a course for her department on Teaching Science in the Elementary School. An ecosystem project assignment in that course led to the design of still another course, Teaching in Diverse Environments, where Bucknell students teach a topic in environmental science to Old Order Mennonite and New Order Amish students in one-room buggy schools. In 2004, Dr. Nottis received the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching at Bucknell University.
Dr. Nottis’s research has primarily concentrated on meaningful learning in science and engineering education from the perspective of Human Constructivism. She is committed to collaborative research projects and has partnered with researchers in seismology, chemistry and chemical engineering. Currently, she is involved in an examination of the learning of concepts in heat transfer and thermodynamics in chemical engineering. One of her research publications won the Hutchison Medal for Best Educational Paper of 2009 from the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE) with Professors M. E. Vigeant and M. J. Prince.