Posts tagged with “Kudos” (All posts)
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Ryan Terrien, Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy, has been granted support from NASA to work with Eric Ford at Penn State on research that advances knowledge of the effectiveness of multiple strategies for mitigating the effects of stellar variability and instrumental effects on the measurement of extremely precise radial velocities (EPRVs) in the search for extrasolar planets. Prof. Terrien’s contribution involves diagnosing instrumental effects, and analyzing the effects of magnetic fields on Solar spectra obtained with the NEID spectrograph.
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SPIE Education Outreach Grant to Marty Baylor
20 April 2021Marty Baylor, Associate Professor of Physics, has been awarded an SPIE (The international society for optics and photonics) Education Outreach Grant for her project, “Understanding Interferometry with LEGO.” The funds, enabling purchase of a travel-ready interferometer, support outreach to middle and high school students underrepresented in STEM. The new interferometer along with simple landscapes made from LEGO will be used to teach about how light can be used to make precision measurements at BLAST (Northfield), STEAM (Faribault), and TORCH (Northfield).
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Lori Pearson, Professor of Religion, is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Stipend for her project, “Marianne Weber and the Origins of Religious Studies.” Prof. Pearson’s book, Sexuality and Secularization, uses the work of Marianne Weber (wife of Max Weber) to explore how debates about women’s rights informed early 20th-century theories of religion, and this grant will support her summer work to draft the final book chapter.
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Layla Oesper awarded prestigious NSF CAREER grant
31 March 2021Layla Oesper, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, has been awarded a National Science Foundation CAREER grant for her project, “Algorithmic Approaches for Phylogenetic Analysis of Tumor Evolution.” Her work will contribute to computational genomics and cancer research through the development of methods for comparison, summarization, and communication of clonal trees that reveal how tumors acquire mutations leading to uncontrolled cell growth. Additionally, Prof. Oesper’s research involves undergraduate researchers in computational biology through workshops, innovative classroom experiences, and cutting-edge research. CAREER grants are NSF’s most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty and support those with the “potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.”
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Michael McNally is recipient of a Luce/ACLS Fellowship in Religion, Journalism & International Affairs
23 March 2021Michael McNally, John M. and Elizabeth W. Musser Professor of Religious Studies, has been awarded a fellowship from the Luce/ACLS Program in Religion, Journalism & International Affairs. This prestigious program aims to deepen public understanding of religion by advancing innovative scholarship on religion in international contexts and by equipping individual scholars and institutions of higher education with the capacities to connect their work to journalism and the media and to engage audiences beyond the academy. This support will enable Professor McNally to complete a book exploring Native American religions through the lens of their engagement with contested sacred lands and other current issues, rethinking the definitional conundrum of Native “religion” with the international possibilities of the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
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Andrea Mazzariello, Assistant Professor of Music, is the recipient of a Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council (SEMAC) Artistic Support for Individuals grant for his project Music for Bridging. SEMAC’s funding will support the participation of Northfield musicians JC Sanford and Brady Lenzen in the improvisation, collaboration, and recording processes.
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Gao Hong, Director of the Chinese Music Ensemble and Senior Lecturer in Chinese Musical Instruments, is the recipient of a Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council (SEMAC) Artistic Support for Culture Bearers grant for her new work.
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Asuka Sango, Associate Professor of Religion and Director of Asian Studies, organized two transdisciplinary workshops with the support of a grant from the Japan Foundation, New York. Held in January and February, the online workshops featured presentations by professors, independent researchers, and curators from Japan, Europe, and North America.
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Jake Morton, Assistant Professor of Classics, has been awarded a Loeb Classical Library Foundation Fellowship for the 2021-2022 academic year. This grant will support work on his upcoming monograph, “The First Roman Invasion of Greece: Where they went, who they were, and why it matters,” which explores a groundbreaking interpretation of Roman actions in Greece between Rome’s initial invasion in 200 BC and the peace terms imposed in 167 BC. Novel methodology – a combination of topographic study, philology, and comparative history and anthropology – will be employed to argue for a new understanding of both Rome’s shifting foreign policy and developing cultural identity in this key period in Mediterranean history.
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Noboru Tomonari, Professor of Japanese and Chair of Asian Languages and Literature, received a grant from the Japan Foundation, Los Angeles, to purchase Japanese-language teaching materials. The grant enabled the purchase of 54 volumes, which are now available to students and faculty.
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