Posts tagged with “Kudos” (All posts)

  • Juliane B. Shibata,Juliane Shibata who has been a visiting assistant professor in ceramics, received a Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Initiative Visual Arts grant to create three new installations that integrate living flowers with her ceramic ones. She will unite floriography, a language of flowers that has traditionally been rooted in the female experience, with her ceramic practice to produce works that combine specific cultural and historical themes in ways that widen Minnesota’s artistic heritage. MSAB logoMSAB funds will also allow Shibata to professionally document her work and approach exhibition venues in Minnesota about displaying her installations.

  • Laurence Cooper, Laurence CooperProfessor of Political Science, has been awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship to support work on a book-length study of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s crowning work, The Reveries of the Solitary Walker. Rousseau’s Reveries articulate the meaning, requirements, and expressions of the philosophic life, a life that Rousseau deemed the most choiceworthy life for a human being but also a deeply problematic one. The most daunting demand of the philosophic life, and the focus of the Reveries‘ dramatic narrative, is the need to overcome certain fiercely held moral passions and prejudices. NEH logoThe provisional title of Cooper’s book is Dreaming of Justice, Waking to Wisdom. Cooper’s fellowship is one of just 74 awarded this year, only twelve of which went to faculty at liberal arts colleges. The NEH received approximately 1,100 applications.

  • Sarah Titus,Sarah Titus Associate Professor of Geology, has received an Undergraduate Research grant from the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund. Her project, “Making laboratory deformation bands in sandstones for comparison with natural field data from the San Andreas fault system,” will enable the interpretation of some enigmatic small-scale faults from central California. The three-year grant will support Prof. Titus and six Carleton students, with undergraduate researchers participating in field work in California and laboratory deformation experiments with a colleague at Rice University.

  • Kimberly Smith, Kimberly SmithProfessor of Environmental Studies and Political Science, has been awarded a William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Grant to support archival research for her book project “The Conservation Constitution: The Conservation Movement and Constitutional Change, 1870-1930.” Professor Smith’s book examines the impact of the Progressive Era conservation movement on constitutional doctrine, explaining the role of the judiciary in creating the constitutional foundations of the modern environmental regulatory regime.

  • Matt Whited, Matt WhitedAssociate Professor of Chemistry, has been awarded a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to conduct a “Chemistry Early Career Investigator Workshop” (NSF#1762479). This two-day event near NSF headquarters, organized with Gordana Dukovic at University of Colorado-Boulder, will provide early career chemists with opportunities to network with: each other, funded mid-career NSF researchers from a variety of institutions, and program officers from NSF CHE and other organizations supporting chemistry research.

  • Deborah Gross, Deborah GrossProfessor of Chemistry, and Tsegaye Nega, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, have received a “U.S.-Ethiopian University Linkages Seed Grant” from the American embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Working with colleagues at Addis Ababa University (AAU), Prof. Gross and Prof. Nega will develop an environmental-science course that will be taught simultaneously to both Carleton undergraduates and AAU master’s students.

    Professor Tsegaye NegaThis collaborative project “A Student-Centered Educational Collaboration Focusing on Sustainable Environments: Carleton College and Addis Ababa University Linkage” is an innovative effort to foster pedagogical connections between a liberal arts college and a foreign research university. Gross and Nega hope that the pilot project will serve as a basis for equipping a new generation of students (and professionals) to confront the interconnected ecological and social issues underpinning environmental crises, especially in developing countries like Ethiopia. The project will also cultivate future collaborations between Carleton and AAU, with individual classes, with academic departments and programs, or with off-campus study opportunities.

  • Anna Rafferty, Anna RaffertyAssistant Professor of Computer Science, was the recipient of a Schloss Dagstuhl – NSF Support Grant to attend and present her research at a seminar in Germany. Financed by National Science Foundation CNS-1257011, her grant covered travel and accommodations for the Machine Learning and Formal Methods seminar held August 27-September 1, 2017.

  • On August 11, Fred Rogers, Vice President and Treasurer, Paula Lackie, Academic Technologist, and Andy Christensen, Assistant Director of Disability Services, were named to the Fulbright Specialist Roster. 

  • Pamela Feldman-Savelsberg,Pamela Feldman-Savelsberg Broom Professor of Social Demography and Anthropology and Director of Africana Studies, has been awarded a STIAS (Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study) Fellowship for her project “Rethinking Immigrant Integration in a Mass-Migration Era: Migrant Families in Comparative Perspective.” As a visiting scholar in residence in Stellenbosch, South Africa, Prof. Feldman-Savelsberg will study transnational family obligations and belonging.

  • Cam Davidson, Professor of Geology, has been awarded a National Science Foundation Tectonics grant (#1727991) for a collaborative four-year project onCam Davidson Alaskan geology with John Garver at Union College. Their project “Collaborative Research: RUI: Translation and Accretion of the Yakutat Microplate and Prince William Terrane, Alaska” will further their study of the geology of southern Alaska, and involves training of ~25 undergraduate students.

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