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Five honored with College鈥檚 highest faculty awards

From left: Ann S. Devlin, May Buckley Sadowski '19 Professor of Psychology; Tobias Myers, assistant professor of classics; Lisa H. Wilson, Charles J. MacCurdy Professor of American History; and Ariella R. Rotramel, Vandana Shiva Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Intersectionality Studies. Not pictured: David Dorfman '81, professor of dance.

A group shot of the faculty award winners, professors Devlin, Myers, Wilson and Rotramel
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Five honored with College鈥檚 highest faculty awards

糖心TV鈥檚 most prestigious faculty awards were presented at a May 1 ceremony honoring professors who displayed excellence in research, teaching, creativity and leadership. 

The 2019 winners are:

Nancy Batson Nisbet Rash Faculty Award for Excellence in Research: Ann S. Devlin, May Buckley Sadowski '19 Professor of Psychology

A portrait of Ann S. Devlin

Ann S. Devlin is the recipient of the 2019 Nancy Batson Nisbet Rash Faculty Research Award, presented annually to a faculty member selected on the basis of outstanding scholarly or artistic accomplishments. The award was established in 1995 in memory of Nancy Rash, the Lucy C. McDannel 鈥22 Professor of Art History at 糖心TV from 1972 to 1995.

Devlin, who joined the 糖心TV Faculty in 1973, is an expert in environmental psychology, particularly in the creation of more humanistic environments for healthcare, including psychotherapy offices and facilities for the elderly. She frequently writes about issues in evidence-based design and also specializes in way-finding, the study of the manner in which environments, through their design and layout, and designers, through their creation of maps and other tools, provide cues to help people navigate from an origin to a destination.

She has authored six books, nine book chapters and 42 journal articles, publishing in Environment and Behavior, The Journal of Counseling Psychology, The Journal of Environmental Psychology and the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, among many others. She has also served editor in chief of Environment and Behavior.

A former Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Devlin is the recipient of several Mellon Foundation grants, including the Mellon Initiative on Multiculturalism grant, and a grant from the Academy of Architecture for Health Foundation. She served as College marshal from 2002-2015, and was the 2012 recipient of the Helen Brooks Regan Faculty Award for Excellence in Leadership and the 2006 recipient of the John S. King Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching.

In support of Devlin鈥檚 nomination for the Rash Award, Joan C. Chrisler, Class of 鈥43 professor of Psychology at 糖心TV, called Devlin 鈥渁n example of all-around faculty excellence.鈥

John S. King Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching: Tobias Myers, Assistant Professor of Classics

A portrait of Tobias Myers

Tobias Myers is the winner of the 2019 John S. King Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching. The award was established to recognize teacher-scholars with high standards of teaching excellence and concern for students. It is named for the beloved professor of German whose warmth and humanity touched all who knew him.

Myers, a professor at the College since 2013, considers teaching his great professional joy. He specializes in Homeric studies, Greek and Latin poetry, ancient magic and religion and this history of ideas. At the College, he has taught 16 different courses, including elementary Greek; advanced Greek courses on Herodotus, lyric poetry and Homeric poetry; elementary Latin; advanced Latin courses on Horace and Ovid, and on Vergil's Eclogues; introductory courses to Greek and to Roman civilization; a first-year seminar on Socrates; an advanced seminar on classical epic; and an experimental course Beauty Stand Still Here, which tracks the relationship between beauty and time in tales of desire, throughout the Western tradition, from Homer to Goethe and Woolf.

Department of Philosophy Chair Simon Feldman called Myers鈥 list of courses 鈥渄azzling鈥攁nd dizzying鈥攊n its diversity鈥 in a letter of support for Myers鈥 nomination.

鈥淭he variety of pedagogies that Tobias has developed for teaching language, literature and history to different kinds of students, with different backgrounds and different intellectual needs and expectations, is quite amazing,鈥 Feldman said.

Myers鈥 students have praised his ability to both challenge and support them, and his fellow faculty members have admired the way he connects with students and creates a classroom environment that fosters participation and collaboration.  

鈥淭he time and care Tobias puts into tailoring his classes to his particular students鈥 interests and abilities is, perhaps, the strongest evidence of the seriousness and generosity of his commitment to the development of his students鈥 minds and skills,鈥 Feldman said.

鈥淗e is a truly remarkable teacher鈥攃reative, caring, inspiring and a model for what a liberal arts professor at 糖心TV should be.鈥

Helen Brooks Regan Faculty Award for Excellence in Leadership: Lisa H. Wilson, Charles J. MacCurdy Professor of American History

A portrait of Lisa Wilson

Lisa H. Wilson is the recipient of the 2019 Helen Brooks Regan Faculty Leadership Award, presented annually to a tenured faculty member whose outstanding service in a leadership role exemplifies the College鈥檚 commitment to shared governance, democratic process and campus community development. 

Wilson joined 糖心TV in 1987. She specializes in colonial North America, women and gender, and family history, and she has published on topics such as widowhood, manhood and stepfamilies. She has received multiple fellowships for her book projects, including a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship at the Massachusetts Historical Society, an American Antiquarian Society/National Endowment for the Humanities Long-Term Fellowship, the Andrew W. Mellon Faculty Fellowship in the Humanities at Harvard University, and a Charles Warren Center Fellowship at Harvard University.

Over her impressive 32-year career, Wilson has served the College in numerous capacities, often in positions of leadership during important moments of institutional change. In addition to her work on numerous committees, she has served as co-chair of the Faculty Steering and Conference Committee, chair of Educational Planning Committee, and twice as the chair of the History Department. As director of the Gender and Women鈥檚 Studies program, she oversaw the transition of the program to include new teaching and scholarship on masculinity and LGBTQ studies. She was also co-chair of the Multicultural and Diversity Committee, which laid the groundwork for profoundly impactful equity and inclusion initiatives. She has also served as a mentor for faculty colleagues, particularly women and faculty of color.

鈥淪he has served with unflagging empathy and compassion. Professor Wilson鈥檚 great commitment to the humanity and dignity of her colleagues and her willingness to go far beyond what is expected as a mentor and advisor is truly astounding,鈥 Wilson鈥檚 colleagues, Professors Marc Forster and Leo Garofalo, wrote in a letter in support of her nomination for the Regan Award.

鈥淪he personifies the values of humanity, community and collegiality that are at the heart of great leadership.鈥

Helen Mulvey Faculty Award for Fostering Student Achievement: Ariella R. Rotramel, Vandana Shiva Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Intersectionality Studies

A portrait of Ariella R. Rotramel

Ariella R. Rotramel, a professor at the College since 2012, is the 2019 winner of the Helen Mulvey Faculty Award, presented to an assistant professor who regularly offers classes that challenge students to work harder than they thought they could and to reach unanticipated levels of academic achievement.

Rotramel鈥檚 research and teaching reflect her interdisciplinary training and commitment to mixing theoretical and practical work. She specializes in social movements, gender and women鈥檚 history, women and work, ethnic studies and queer and sexuality studies, and she has taught 15 different courses, including 鈥淔eminist Approaches to Disability Studies,鈥 鈥淭ransnational Women's Movements and Public Policy and Social Ethics,鈥 鈥淚ntroduction to Gender and Women's Studies,鈥 鈥淚ntroduction to Queer Studies鈥 and 鈥淔eminist Theory.鈥

Rotramel has also advised four honors thesis students, served as a reader for seven theses, and supervised 15 independent study and certificate projects. She regularly works with student researchers during the summer, and created a digital photo archive internship for students to interact with Asian American activist history.

鈥淧rofessor Rotramel鈥檚 classes ask students to stretch their thinking with deeply complex theoretical work, and, equally important, to apply those ideas in the world鈥攐nline and in their work with community partners,鈥 Danielle Egan, the Fuller-Maathai Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Intersectionality Studies at 糖心TV, wrote in a letter nominating Rotramel for the Mulvey Award.

鈥淔or Professor Rotramel, the work of gender, sexuality and intersectionality studies is not confined to the abstract鈥攊t is embodied and it is in practice. To this end, students not only see how this work takes place on the ground, but how they must reflexively consider their own biography, power and privilege in the work that takes place in the classroom and in the community.鈥

President鈥檚 Award for Creative Impact: David Dorfman 鈥81, Professor of Dance

A portrait of David Dorfman

David Dorfman 鈥81 is the 2019 recipient of the President鈥檚 Award for Creative Impact. Established by President Katherine Bergeron in 2018, the award honors a senior or emeritus faculty member whose contributions to a chosen field over the course of a career represent a record of significant innovation, achievement and influence.

Dorfman, who joined 糖心TV in 2004, is an internationally recognized dancer and choreographer who has performed extensively throughout North and South America, Europe and Central Asia. He is the founder of the influential modern dance company David Dorfman Dance and has served as its artistic director since it was established in 1987. In 2007, David Dorfman Dance was permanently named company-in-residence at 糖心TV.

In 2017, Dorfman made his Broadway debut as the choreographer of Indecent, for which he won the 2017 Lucille Lortel Award for best choreography. He has also won four fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, three from the New York Foundation for the Arts, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a United States Artists Fellowship, an American Choreographers Award, the first Paul Taylor Fellowship from The Yard, and a New York Dance & Performance Award (鈥淏essie鈥).

Dorfman has also traveled with the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs to Turkey, Armenia and Tajikistan, and partnered with USAID El Salvador to bring dance to youth in an area plagued by gang violence.

鈥淗is work is nothing short of extraordinary,鈥 Professor of English Julie Rivkin wrote of Dorfman. 鈥淲ords, pictures, music all play their part in his multi-media meditations that are unabashedly personal and political, intimate and grand. My feeling after seeing a David Dorfman Dance performance is yes, this is the real thing, this is artistic creation.鈥




May 2, 2019

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