Assistant Professor, Environmental Studies Program
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Gupta is an interdisciplinary scholar whose research and teaching interests focus
on development and natural resource governance in the context of global change. Within
this larger context, Gupta explores questions about multi-actor networks and interactions,
grassroots organizations, and other local-level actors in policy learning, adoption,
implementation, and diffusion.
As a Community-Engaged Fellow, Gupta networks and partners with community actors and
organizations in and around the Binghamton area to build mutually beneficial partnerships.
These connections are then extended into the courses on Justice and Sustainable Development,
where Gupta teaches about conducting community-based research on various topics such
as green infrastructure, transportation, food security, flood mitigation, and housing.
Through these initiatives, she hopes students will develop research projects that
not only address relevant socio-ecological and economic questions, but also have relevance
for local community members and contribute to better planning, management, human health,
and sustainability.
Melissa Haller
Melissa Haller
Instructor, Digital and Data Studies
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Melissa received her PhD in Geography from the University of California, Los Angeles.
As an instructor, she teaches courses on data analysis and visualization, mapping
and geospatial analysis, and critical data studies. She is passionate about using
data science tools to make a positive impact on the local community, and her teaching
has a strong emphasis on data ethics and social justice.
As a Community Engaged Teaching Fellow, Melissa is developing a new capstone course
for the DIDA program, DIDA 426: Community Practice, in which students will partner
with community organizations to complete real-world projects using data and digital
methods. DIDA students have already had the opportunity to develop projects with the
Broome County Food Council, Broome-Tioga BOCES, and Harpur Edge, and she looks forward
to both strengthening existing partnerships and developing new ones through her teaching.
Robert Holahan
Robert Holahan
Associate Professor of Political Science
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Holahan received his doctorate in 2011 in Political Science from Indiana University,
under the guidance of Elinor Ostrom. His research investigates environmental policy
from a socio-economic perspective, particularly the production of natural resources
like oil, gas, and renewable energy. In addition to teaching courses on public policy
and environmental policy, he regularly teaches in the first-year research-focused
Source Project and is the Faculty-in-Residence of the undergraduate volunteer research
program, the Dickinson Research Team (DiRT).
As a community-engaged teacher, his Source Project course and DiRT both focus on the
local Binghamton region as a laboratory for exploring social scientific and ecological
research topics. In the Source Project course, for example, students all conduct an
independent and original research topic within the general area of People, Politics,
and the Environment. Holahan plans on incorporating the community-first model he learned
as a CCE Fellow into the course by encouraging students to work with local community
organizations to answer questions of importance to them. In DiRT, future research
projects will similarly follow a community-first commitment to developing questions
and undertaking large-scale analyses of the Binghamton region.
Wendy Martinek
Wendy Martinek
Professor of Political Science
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Wendy鈥檚 research is focused on judicial politics and behavior, with particular interests
in how the group nature of appellate court decision-making structures behavior. Her
current projects include one investigating decision-making in the appellate courts
of Ireland and another examining the off-the-bench appearances of U.S. Supreme Court
justices. As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she has been working to transform
an existing undergraduate judicial process class into one in which community-engaged
learning is a meaningful component. The goal is to create opportunities for students
to partner with organizations such as the Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York and the
Crime Victims Assistance Center. She envisions the class as affording students the
opportunity to broaden their idea of what the law is and how legal systems operate
in the everyday lives of individuals.
Peter McKenney
Peter McKenney
Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Peter is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences and joined
黑料视频 in Fall 2020. He teaches BIOL 425 Molecular Biology Laboratory
every semester. Students in the course isolate the (surprisingly abundant) antibiotic
resistant bacteria present on bagged baby spinach from the grocery store and characterize
their antibiotic resistance genes. He is interested in developing a teaching module
based on this course for high school students.
Nirav Patel
Nirav Patel
Lecturer, Environmental Studies Program
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Professor Nirav S. Patel is a trained natural and social scientist with a PhD from
Cornell University and possesses expertise in human dimensions and dynamics of Coupled
Natural and Human Systems (CNH). As the inaugural Civic Education and Engagement
and Civil Discourse Fellows (2024-25) appointed by the Chancellor of the State University
of New York (SUNY), Dr Patel has engaged local/state and international partners through
research and education initiatives that yield collaborative experience which deepens
engagements on integrative environmental science. He has developed a novel course
at 黑料视频 which utilizes experiential learning to teach civic engagement
that occurs at the confluence of Food-Energy-Water (FEW) nexus, Global Health, and
Urban Ecology in the Anthropocene. His course exploring the nature of place and people
and its larger role in environmental communications and behavioral change, students
investigate how values, attitudes, social structure, and communication affect public
perceptions of environmental risk. He has been successful in creating science-based
community engagement in Broome County to engage in building collaboration for PFAS
testing in food packaging linking consumer preferences and its effect on waste streams
to ecological corridors. Dr Patel utilized state funding to augment neural diverse
youth to work in a sustainable hydroponic lettuce growing facility that bolsters their
economic well-being for local communities. Dr Patel is recipient of multiple fellowship
awards as well as teaching excellence awards over the last decade.
Rachel Samiani
Rachel Samiani
Lecturer, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Samiani's research and teaching interests include linguistic and cultural diversity
in Italy, and Italian American history. For many years she has supervised interns
in planning Romance Languages events which serve to engage and educate both our student
body and the greater Binghamton community. More recently she has taught various culture
courses and has served as Faculty in Residence for the campus Romance Languages Learning
Community.
To further develop her work in community outreach and connectivity, Samiani has both
adapted an existing language course and created a new "Italian Culture and Composition".
Both courses create opportunities for students to partner with an area school district.
They are designed to expose all students involved to the importance of continuing
foreign language education and to learn about Endicott's Italian-American heritage.
BU students have opportunities to learn and practice teaching pedagogy, while Union-Endicott
students are able to learn about University life and Italian studies at Binghamton.
The hope for both of these courses are to foster a mutually beneficial relationship
between the 2 schools, grow our student population, and build research and communication
skills in the target language.
Omid Ghaemmaghami
Omid Ghaemmaghami
Associate Professor, Middle Eastern and Ancient Mediterranean Studies
Undergraduate Director - Arabic Studies
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Omid Ghaemmaghami teaches courses in Arabic, Persian, Quranic, and Islamic Studies
in the Department of Middle Eastern and Ancient Mediterranean Studies (MEAMS). His
research interests includes themes and topics in Islamic intellectual history and
the history and literature of the B谩b铆 and Bah谩鈥櫭 religions. His most recent publications
includes a special issue of Hawwa: Journal of Women of the Middle East and the Islamic
World (Brill Academic Publishers), dedicated to 峁irih (d. 1852), the first Iranian
woman to preach the equality of women and men and religious freedom. His next book,
Exploring the Kit谩b-i-Aqdas: The Laws and Teachings of the Bah谩鈥櫭 Faith, an extensive
study of the most important text in the Bah谩鈥櫭 religion, is scheduled to be published
by I.B. Tauris in early 2025. As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow through the Center
of Civic Engagement, he is building capacity to more effectively offer students the
opportunity to contribute to the betterment of their communities and the development
of their intellectual abilities by partnering with local organizations like the American
Civic Association for language exchanges and volunteer service.
Cl谩udia N. H. Marques
Cl谩udia N. H. Marques
Associate Professor, Department of Biological Sciences
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Cl谩udia She received her PhD in microbial biofilms from the University of the West
of England (UWE), Bristol, UK. Her current research focuses on microbial communities,
interspecies biofilms, microbial control, bacterial persister cells, and how the microorganisms
interact with the host to cause infections or how they can be beneficial to the host.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow she is designing a new course where she intends
to expand the collaboration with local schools to engage the students into how microorganisms
live mostly as microbial communities and how they are present in our day-to-day life,
their role in health and our well-being.
Stacey Pavelko
Stacey Pavelko
Associate Professor, Division of Speech and Language Pathology, School of Rehabilitation
Sciences
Decker College of Nursing and Health
Stacey鈥檚 language disorders research is focused on parent training to increase young
children's speech/language abilities and preschool teacher training through community
partnerships. Her students鈥 community-engaged learning is with children and families
to provide assessment and therapy.
2022鈥23 Fellows cohort
The CCE supports these fellows as they develop innovative applied learning classes
with significant student engagement projects addressing community issues in local
schools and communities.
William Eggleston William Eggleston
Assistant Professor, Pharmacy Practice School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
He received his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Wilkes University and completed a fellowship
in clinical toxicology and emergency medicine at SUNY Upstate Medical University and
with the Upstate New York Poison Center in Syracuse, N.Y. Eggleston is director of
the Opioid Research Center for Central New York (ORCC-NY).
Susan Flynn Susan Flynn
Research Assistant Professor Biomedical Chemistry Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
鈥淚f you are a researcher, you are an educator!鈥 Susan incorporates this philosophy
into her pedagogical and mentorship practice and has been awarded the Harter Family
Mentoring Prize for Harpur College Faculty, the Best Individual Teaching Award in
the Harpur College at BU, as well as the American Chemical Society Binghamton Distinguished
Teaching Award for her mentorship.
As Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow through the Center of Civic Engagement where
she is developing strategies to set first-year students up for success and engage
K-12 students with character building and STEM identity. Specifically she is focused
on inquiry based elementary school discovery with character building though in person
workshops. Development of curriculum support to aid with stem identity and understanding
of protein synthesis for primary school students. As well as expanding to a university
based where students support each other while facing imposter syndrome and developing
a community.
Her lab鈥檚 research focuses on identifying molecular targets and improving delivery
for therapeutic treatment of neurological disorders and cancer. She piloted the biomedical
chemistry track for the First-year and Summer Research Immersion program and is also
a faculty fellow for the External Scholarships and Undergraduate Research Center at
BU where she support students with their applications. She is proud of the accomplishments
of all of her mentees and their impact beyond BU.
Marta Ag眉ero Guerra Marta Ag眉ero Guerra
Lecturer, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
She earned a doctorate in Hispanic applied linguistics (University of Salamanca) and
a PhD in Hispanic literary and cultural studies (University of Iowa). Her research
explores multimodal narratives that comment on sociopolitical issues in the Spanish-speaking
world. She has taught courses in Spanish language, Hispanic cultures, and linguistics.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she co-developed and taught a course titled
鈥淪panish in the Community鈥 (Fall 2022). Through mutually beneficial civic engagement
experiences, students in the course had the opportunity to serve the local Spanish-speaking
communities while they continued improving their communicative and intercultural competence.
For that purpose, students partnered with different organizations in the area, such
as the American Civic Association, Literacy Volunteers of Broome/Tioga Counties, and
CNY Latino Newspaper. Students tutored learners of English as a Second Language, acted
as language conversation partners, helped immigrants prepare for their citizenship
exams, and wrote bilingual articles focused on giving visibility to the Hispanic/Latino
population in the Greater Binghamton area.
Jean Goodheart Jean Goodheart
Lecturer, Lyric Diction & Education Coordinator for Voice & Opera, Department of Music Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
She is very interested in "Social Prescribing of the Arts" which is readily embraced
by medical & arts communities in Europe & Canada and is beginning to gain a foothold
in America. An enthusiastic advocate and ambassador for the arts, she believes they
should be made available to individuals at every stage of their lives. She is currently
overseeing a project with WSKG and 5 BU music graduate students working to address
senior isolation.
Jean is designing a new course entitled "Community Arts Partners" that will create
opportunities for students to partner with area schools, museums, senior communities
& hospitals to increase wellness for individuals in those communities. She envisions
a future where medical & arts institutions work closely together for the benefit of
human health and wellbeing following the broad definition adopted by the World Health
Organization: "Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being
and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity."
Vanessa Ca帽ete Jurado Vanessa Ca帽ete Jurado
Lecturer, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Her research and teaching interests include Hispanic cultural production, audiovisual
translation, transmedia fiction, adaptation studies, and discourse analysis. In her
courses, Ca帽ete Jurado encourages students to actively engage with local communities,
critically analyze discursive practices, and explore the role of language and translation
in social transformation. She has worked closely with local artists, activists, and
grassroots organizations to develop multilingual platforms for expression, including
art exhibitions, film festivals, and multimedia projects.
Her work is dedicated to expanding collaborative and reciprocal partnerships with
local schools, museums, agencies, health and legal clinics, and nonprofit organizations
in order to spark an interest in and appreciation for other languages and cultures.
Hyejung Kim Hyejung Kim
Assistant professor, Department of Teaching, Learning, and Educational Leadership College of Community and Public Affairs
She received her PhD in special education from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Her current research focuses on the intersectionality of autism and other sites of
minoritization and transition from high school to college. She recently teaches special
education teacher preparation courses, such as special education assessment, positive
behavior support, and internship seminar.
Hyejung became interested in community-engaged teaching and research due to the interconnectedness
of teacher education programs and the community. She plans to expand her research
on the educational pathway for autistic students through community-engaged learning
experiences. Working with community partners would enhance the social validity of
educational experiences and help develop broader perspectives on enduring issues in
the local education system.
Fernando Castro Ortiz Fernando Castro Ortiz
Lecturer, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Fernando teaches courses in Spanish language, culture, and linguistics. He holds a
master鈥檚 degree in Teaching Spanish as a Foreign Language and a master鈥檚 degree in
Hispanic Linguistics and is interested in fostering student learning in authentic
contexts beyond the classroom setting. As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, he
has codeveloped a course designed to strengthen the ties between the university community
and the Spanish-speaking population in the area. 鈥淪panish in the Community鈥 was taught
for the first time in the Fall 2022 semester and included several community partnerships
(local government agencies, nonprofits, and media,) which will be refined in future
semesters. This class allowed students to develop their Spanish language skills and
intercultural competence by working with native speakers, as well as drawing attention
to the Hispanic/Latino population.
Naorah Rimkunas Naorah Rimkunas
Assistant Professor, Department of Teaching, Learning and Educational Leadership College of Community and Public Affairs
Her research centers on university-school-community partnerships and the preparation
of the next generation of community school professionals. Naorah leads the University-assisted
Community Schools Regional Training Center for New York and New Jersey for Binghamton
University Community Schools through a grant from the Netter Center for Community
Partnerships at the University of Pennsylvania. She also co-leads the Research Lab
for the 黑料视频 Center for Community Schools, where she and colleague
Amber Simpson connect students to community-engaged research on school mental health,
STEM, and family engagement practices in local community schools. A counselor at heart,
Naorah has a masters degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from the University
of North Florida and her doctorate in Community and Public Affairs from Binghamton
University.
2021鈥22 Fellows cohort
Mary Grace Albanese
Mary Grace Albanese
Assistant professor of English Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Albanese鈥檚 work centers on the transnational Americas in the long 19th century. Her
book project, Prophetic Power: Haiti, the United States and Black Women's Spiritual Labor reveals how African American women, including Marie Laveau, Sojourner Truth, Maria
Stewart, and Pauline Hopkins drew on Afro-Caribbean spiritual energies to reclaim
their right to their own bodies, minds, and kinship structures. She received her PhD
in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia University in 2017 and was a visiting
doctoral student at Sciences Po, Paris from 2015鈥16. She is a 2019鈥20 Cornell Society
for the Humanities Fellow.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she hopes to strengthen ties with local centers
that advocate for survivors of sexual assault and develop a public-facing education
program in which students can engage in community trainings, classroom visits and
public events to raise awareness about intimate partner violence. She believes students,
especially those trained in the historical roots of racial and sexual violence, could
provide a good deal of support to the community, and that engaging with the community
can help students better understand and concretize the real, material, and ethical
stakes of their research.
Bennett Doughty
Bennett Doughty
Clinical assistant professor School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Doughty鈥檚 research interests primarily focus on the engagement of patients in substance
use disorder treatment, particularly within the opioid epidemic. Current projects
examine the integration of opioid use disorder treatment into primary care settings,
patient preferences in deciding treatment as well as increasing treatment options
in rural communities. Doughty earned his PharmD with honors from the University of
Connecticut School of Pharmacy in 2016. Following graduation, he completed two years
of residency training at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System in West Haven, Conn.,
specializing in psychiatric pharmacy. He is a Board-Certified Pharmacotherapy Specialist
(BCPS) and a Board-Certified Psychiatric Pharmacist (BCPP).
Doughty has worked with nursing, medicine, social work, and pharmacy faculty to design
and implement a new, interprofessional co-curricular program called The Rural and
Underserved Service Track (TRUST). Through this program, he has developed programming
for students that focuses on and involves community members working with or from underserved
populations. He has also worked with faculty to develop multiple health education
topics that are designed for student implementation in community member settings,
including affording medications, immunizations, understanding COVID, etc.
BrieAnna Langlie
BrieAnna Langlie
Assistant professor of anthropology Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Langlie's research is focused on the origins and long-term sustainability of agricultural
systems and foodways. She specializes in paleoethnobotany and landscape archaeology
in the Andes Mountains of South America. She received her PhD from Washington University,
St. Louis.
Langlie is involved the development of a 黑料视频 Seed Library, and as
a community-engaged teaching fellow, she hopes to start an Indigenous foods teaching
garden linked to the teaching and research components of this project. She plans to
integrate this work into her existing curriculum and involve community partners locally
and abroad.
Jacqueline McGinley
Jacqueline (Jackie) McGinley
Assistant professor of social work College of Community and Public Affairs
McGinley's program of research grew out of 15 years of experience in the field of
disability. During this time, she was privileged to support seriously ill clients
during some of their most vulnerable moments, witnessing the emergence of a new and
urgent issue: aging and end-of-life care for people with intellectual and developmental
disabilities. Her mission as a social work scholar is to lead translational research
that improves care for people with disabilities as they age, experience serious illness,
and reach life鈥檚 end. As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she hopes to explore
best practice as it relates to harnessing community partnerships to help develop and
implement simulated learning experiences for students.
She earned her MSW (2007) from the Rutgers University School of Social Work and her
PhD (2018) from the University at Buffalo School of Social Work. She also completed
a yearlong fellowship with the University of Rochester, receiving advanced research
and clinical training from the Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities
(LEND) program.
Matthew Uttermark
Assistant professor of public administration College of Community and Public Affairs
As a graduate student, Uttermark was affiliated with a public policy think tank that
issued reports on education policy and state politics in Florida. He would like to
engage MPA students at Binghamton in similar experiences by engaging in partnerships
with local government agencies and nonprofits, particularly those focused on minority
populations.
Yuxin Wang
Yuxin Wang
Research assistant professor and lecturer of Environmental Studies Program, Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Wang鈥檚 research focuses on the risk assessment of contaminants arising from society
and technological development. Her primary research interests are in water quality
challenges arising from human activities, developing laboratory experiments and mechanistic
models, and exposure risk assessment for contaminants in natural and engineered systems
(drinking water and wastewater treatment systems).
Wang and her students have collected water samples from the local community and tested
them to better better understand the quality of our surface water, wastewater and
drinking water. She is also beginning a study on lithium-ion battery recycling and
its impact on our local environment and community, based on a proposed battery recycling
plant in nearby Endicott, N.Y. Students in her fall environmental pollutions: science
and policy class will be interviewing local community groups focusing on different
environmental issues.
Wang was a postdoctoral associate in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
at Cornell University and a visiting instructor in Sustainable Engineering at SUNY
College of Environmental Science and Forestry. She received her PhD in Civil and Environmental
Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University.
Bridget Whearty
Bridget Whearty
Assistant professor of English, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Whearty's research interests include 14th- and 15th-century English Literature; works
of Geoffrey Chaucer, John Lydgate and Thomas Hoccleve; and digitization and medieval
texts. She received her PhD from Stanford University and her BA from the University
of Montana.
Whearty is teaching courses on medieval manuscripts in concert with a traveling "Manuscripts
in the Curriculum" program that brought students unprecedented access to medieval
manuscripts. She would like to find a way to also open up the study of rare books
to the community more broadly. She also teaches an LGBTQ+ Middle Ages course and would
like to build bridges with local LGBTQ+ community groups.
2020鈥21 Fellows cohort
Emrah Akyol
Assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science
Akyol received his PhD in 2011 from the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
at the University of California at Santa Barbara. His research interests include game
theory, communications control, networks, information processing and socio-cyber-physical
systems.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, he plans to develop a program in the context
of the graduate level classes he teaches to introduce less privileged high school
students to game theory and probability.
Jodi Dowthwaite
Research assistant professor, Master of Public Health Program; Community and Global
Public Health, research assistant professor
Dowthwaite received her PhD at the University of Cambridge. Her research centers on
childhood origins of adult disease, particularly prevention of osteoporosis (weak
bone) and sarcopenia (low muscle mass). She has expertise in assessment of the development
of bone, muscle and fat using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and peripheral
quantitative computed tomography (pQCT). Dowthwaite aims to optimize pediatric health,
as it is her belief that a focus on health in childhood and adolescence builds a strong
foundation for individual health throughout the lifespan.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she plans develop one or more long-term programs
to benefit the local community that would allow students from the MPH and FRI programs
to do multiple semesters of experiential learning and research while benefiting the
community in key problem areas. Programs could include: exercise programs in community
schools to benefit executive function and mental/physical health; family health programs
geared towards increasing awareness of health risks that can be addressed via preconception,
prenatal and postnatal behaviors; programs to improve access to healthy foods and
exercise and improve self-efficacy related to associated health behaviors.
George Meindl
Instructor, Environmental Studies Program Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Meindl received his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh. His research integrates
plant ecology, evolution and toxicology with the goal of understanding how the abiotic
environment mediates species interactions. As an educator, his primary goal is to
inspire an appreciation for the natural world to help create responsible global citizens
that support sustainability.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, he hopes to designate a new community-engaged
course: Urban Ecology (ENVI 324). In this class, he wants to find ways for students
to develop independent research projects that not only address a relevant ecological
question, but also have relevance for local community members and that can contribute
to better urban planning, urban management and human health.
David W. Mixter
Research assistant professor, Environmental Studies Program and anthropology Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Mixter received his PhD from Washington University, St. Louis. He is an archeologist
interested in societal collapse and regeneration, social change, collective memory,
resistance, relationality, archaeology of communities, Ancient Maya, geographic Information
Systems (GIS), activity area studies, microartifacts, and soil chemistry.
Sara Velardi
Lecturer, geological sciences and environmental studies Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Velardi received her PhD from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
Her research and teaching interests focus on the human dimensions of agriculture and
natural resources. In her teaching, Velardi incorporates community-engaged research
and learning experiences for students with an interest in understanding how community
engagement impacts learning and development for students and communities alike.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, she would like to figure out effective ways
to include more community engagement opportunities for students in a large class (~70
students). She is also teaching an Environmental Education and Communication class
in that will involve students working with environmental educators in the local area
(Roberson, Waterman Conservation Center, Upper Susquehanna Coalition) to help them
develop and implement environmental education programs.
2019鈥20 Fellows cohort
Lauren Dula
Assistant professor of public administration College of Community and Public Affairs
Dula earned her PhD in public affairs from Indiana University. Dula鈥檚 work concentrates
on management and the voluntary sector, particularly in the areas of philanthropic
board governance, performance, gender diversity and equity. She works to combine traditional
public administration theories such as representative bureaucracy and institutionalism
with social theories through the study of nonprofits and the third sector.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Dula is connecting her students with the Broome
County community by incorporating David Campbell's Philanthropy Incubator into her
Issues in Nonprofits course. The students are responsible for working with the local
nonprofit sector to evaluate and select a recipient for grant funding. The master's
program will be holding an event to raise those funds.
Monica Majors
Assistant dean, Academic Diversity and Inclusive Excellence, Dean鈥檚 Office, Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science
Majors is informed by and conducts practitioner research. Her practice and research
are rooted in connecting academe with community and fostering an inclusive climate
in all spaces. She currently serves as the co-director for the Upward Bound Math-Science
(UBMS) TRIO program and Science Technology Entry Program (STEP) 鈥 two K鈥12 outreach
programs. In concert, she creates and oversees diversity grants and programs, industry
partnerships and serves as a unit-level diversity officer.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Majors is revamping two courses: WTSN 196
and WTSN 396 Sci & Tech Entry Prg Mentors. Each undergraduate student taking the course
is required to work in a dyad or triad focused on supporting local middle school and/or
high school students in Johnson City or Binghamton public schools. The college students
assist the program staff and other stakeholders in building and implementing STEM
modules, serving as a role-model and/or mentor, or building and implementing STEM
career preparation modules. The aim is to create more interest and engagement in STEM
fields and empower high school students to pursue STEM fields by developing a sense
of belonging and STEM identity.
Candace Mulcahy
Associate professor of special education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Educational
Leadership College of Community and Public Affairs
Mulcahy earned her doctorate in special education, behavioral disorders, from the
University of Maryland, College Park. She prepares master's level special educators
and conducts research on education policies and practices for children and adolescents
with high incidence disabilities.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Mulcahy is enhancing the community engagement
component of two courses: Introduction to Special Education and Special Education
Technology. In Introduction to Special Education, students will visit area organizations
that serve students with disabilities, analyze the current services against best practices
and make recommendations on how the organizations support individuals with disabilities
and their families, and how they could improve their practices. In Special Education
Technology, students will spend time in area PK鈥12 classrooms and create a technology
profile for a targeted PK鈥12 student based on that student's identified strengths
and needs.
Christine Podolak
Instructor/field placement coordinator for Master of Public Health program Decker School of Nursing
Podolak received her master of science in community health from SUNY Cortland University.
She is currently the instructor for a sequence of three Master of Public Health (MPH)
experiential education courses. The purpose of these courses is to prepare students
to become public health professionals by providing them with real-world experiences,
addressing public health issues via community engagement and learning to work effectively
in an interprofessional environment.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Podolak will modify the current curriculum
to develop quality community engagement experiences and learning opportunities for
public health students based on the needs of the community. Additionally, she will
partner with new community-based organizations on and off campus to develop mutually
beneficial relationships. Furthermore, community-based and healthcare delivery organizations
are partnering now more than ever to address the health and social determinant needs
of populations. Exposure to these processes by methods of community-engaged learning
will be a meaningful and rich experience for the MPH students.
Deborah Schechter
Visiting assistant professor of anthropology Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Schechter received her PhD in anthropology from the University of Washington, Seattle.
She is a biocultural anthropologist whose research and teaching interests focus on
how dimensions of inequality affect health and well-being.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Schechter is working to develop a new graduate
course, ANTH 572X Community-based Research Methods. The goal of this course is to
provide training and practice in the design and implementation of research in the
setting of a community-based research partnership. As appropriate and effective community
engagement is the cornerstone of successful community research projects, the content
of the course will cover the latest science in community-based research methods and
practice. Activities will focus on initial project development, including ethical
considerations in developing and maintaining community partnerships, and an introduction
to research design, survey methods, interview and focus group techniques, and elementary
quantitative and qualitative data analysis. Students will have the opportunity to
engage directly in field research through collaboration with a local community partner.
Wendy Wall
Associate professor of history Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Wall teaches courses on the political, cultural, and social history of the 20th-century
U.S., and is the associate director of 黑料视频鈥檚 Institute for Advanced
Studies in the Humanities (IASH). A former journalist with a PhD from Stanford University,
she is the author of various scholarly works exploring the intertwined issues of race,
ethnicity, religion, citizenship and politics from the late 19th century through the
1960s.
As a Community Engaged Teaching Fellow, Wall is developing a new seminar on public
history for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students. She will bring in speakers
who have worked as museum curators, county historians, superintendents at national
historic sites, and historical consultants to law firms, corporations, government
agencies and Hollywood filmmakers. She will also help her students develop projects
benefiting local organizations like the Endicott History and Heritage Center, TechWorks!
and 黑料视频 Library鈥檚 Center for the Study of the 1960s.
2018鈥19 Fellows cohort
Congrui Jin
Assistant professor of mechanical engineering Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science
Jin received her Ph.D. degree in mechanical engineering from Cornell University. Her
research group has a long-standing history of extensive outreach activities at local
K-12 schools. She has organized three campus visits for K-12 students aged 8 to 11
to give them the opportunity to visit research laboratories as well as interact with
undergraduate and graduate students. She was also a contributing author for the "Ask
a Scientist" column in Binghamton Press & Sun Bulletin, answering the STEM questions
received from local K-12 classrooms.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Jin will develop two courses into community-engaged
learning courses: ME 577 Mechanics in Energy Applications and ME 572 Big Data Science
in Mechanics. Each graduate student taking the course is required to pair with two
high-school students for the preparation and presentation of a course project. The
aim is to inspire high school students to pursue STEM fields and develop their appreciation
for the role of science and technology in addressing today's energy and sustainability
challenges.
Bryan Kirschen
Assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures; Linguistics Program Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Kirschen holds a joint title in the Department of Romance Languages and the Linguistics
Program. Prior to arriving at 黑料视频, he received his PhD in Hispanic
linguistics at the University of California, Los Angeles.
As a Community-Engaged Teaching Fellow, Kirschen will develop two courses that implement
civic engagement so as to enrich the learning experience of his students, while fostering
connections with local communities. His Language Endangerment and Linguistic Revitalization
course (spring 2019) and Judeo-Spanish course (fall 2019) will include several community
partnerships and visits that will allow students to not only learn about different
languages, cultures, and histories, but also engage in efforts of documentation.
Judith Quaranta
Assistant professor of nursing Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences
Quaranta '79, MS '98, PhD '13, holds certifications in pediatrics and asthma education
with an emphasis in community health nursing. She is also a distinguished fellow in
the National Academy of Practice of Nursing.
As a community-engaged fellow, Quaranta will continue to partner with the community
to provide asthma education to the children and families in the local community. Through
Nursing 499, Asthma-based Research, 黑料视频 students are trained as
asthma educators, become certified facilitators for the American Lung Association,
and implement a variety of asthma programs. Each student is also CITI trained and
participates in the research process, with the realization that unless we measure
outcomes, we don't know the level of our success in effecting change in asthma outcomes.
In spring 2019 students will continue to present vaping education to the Vestal School
District using the curriculum they developed in fall 2018. Learn more about Quaranta's
previous community-based work on the CCE website.
Matthew Sanger
Assistant professor of anthropology; director of the public archaeology program Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Sanger holds a PhD in anthropology from Columbia University and has worked in publicly-faced
institutions, including the American Museum of Natural History, for almost two decades.
He works with indigenous Native American groups and local community members when conducting
research in both the American Northeast (New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania) and
Southeast (South Carolina, Georgia and Florida). His upcoming Community Archaeology
course (spring 2020) will include opportunities for students to engage directly with
community partners as they research and preserve the history of Broome County.
Natesha Smith
Assistant professor, Higher Education and Student Affairs College of Community and Public Affairs
Smith is a military veteran with more than 14 years of combined experience in workforce
analysis, personnel management and higher education settings. As a student affairs
practitioner, she primarily worked in the areas of student transitions, international
service-learning, career counseling, academic advising and student conduct. She received
her PhD from the University of Louisville.
Through her course, SAA 516: Helping Skills in Student Affairs, she will be connecting
with international education organizations, agencies and institutions to enhance community-based
learning. She is also interested in identifying academic journal and publication outlets
for disseminating lessons learned, research and best practices involving community-engaged
student learning.
John Zilvinskis
Assistant professor, Higher Education and Student Affairs College of Community and Public Affairs
Prior to teaching at 黑料视频, Zilvinskis served as a research project
associate with the Center for Postsecondary Research at Indiana University, where
he worked with mostly data from the National Survey of Student Engagement. He received
a PhD in higher education and student affairs. His research has been published in
Research in Higher Education, The Review of Higher Education and the Journal of Diversity
in Higher Education.
His vision is to create a service-learning component aimed at implementing FAFSA counseling
sessions for local families. This experience would be offered within an established
course (SAA 580c Finance in Higher Education), presenting an opportunity for students
to learn, first-hand, the barriers to access represented by the FAFSA while working
with community partners to increase participation in federal aid programs. He plans
to pursue funding to continue and study this project, emulating the work of University
at Buffalo's FAFSA Completion Project.
2015鈥16 Fellows cohort
Elizabeth Anderson
Associate professor, Department of Teaching, Learning and Educational Leadership
The Engaged Fellows program will support Elizabeth Anderson in building the capacity
of early childhood education through interprofessional education and collaboration.
By deepening and expanding her current engagement in the community, Anderson will
refine existing partnerships between local early childhood programs and Binghamton
University students to engage with issues that community members name as important.
She also looks forward to networking with others and learning more about best practices
for promoting and assessing student engagement.
Karen-edis Barzman
Associate professor, art history
Karen-edis Barzman is interested in pursuing civic engagement and community-based
pedagogy given her discipline's concern with architecture, urban studies and questions
of space (including public space) and spatial practice. Previously, Barzman's students
conducted research on Binghamton's Masonic Temple, collaborating with the Office of
Economic Development and the Preservation Association of the Southern Tier (P.A.S.T.)
as well as local Broome County historians. She will be creating a syllabus for a new
interdisciplinary course on public space and "place-making" 鈥 both the history of
place-making and its future in the city of Binghamton.
John Cheng
Assistant professor, Asian and Asian American studies
John Cheng's goal for the Engaged Fellows program is to reconfigure a student digital/social
media project entitled Race-ing Digital Culture which gives students the option to
work with real-world organizations rather than learning as a purely intellectual exercise.
One goal of the course is to counter utopian views of digital and social media that
see new technology overcoming social dynamics and circumstances like race. He would
like to expand the project to include additional racial minority groups and to allow
cross-cultural/cross-racial comparisons. In addition, being a fellow will allow him
to learn how to incorporate similar service-learning components into other courses.
Margaret Decker
Clinical assistant professor, Decker School of Nursing
Margaret Decker will be creating a new community-engaged course for undergraduate
nursing students. Her students will collect oral histories from local residents to
help practice interview skills relevant to future patient interaction. This project
will also engage the community to help recognize and celebrate the rich local history
of Binghamton.
Heather DeHaan
Associate professor of history
As a fellow, Heather DeHaan will create a course designed to encourage students to
think critically about cities 鈥 how cities have changed in the 19th and 20th century,
how people make cities and how cities shape human identity, culture and behavior.
The course will address how cities alter the environment; the economic, ecological
and power relationships that shape relations between cities and hinterlands; and how human attitudes with regard to the "ideal city" have changed over time. Her students
will examine first-hand the world of Greater Binghamton, its environs and the relationship of New York City to the natural and human communities
of the Southern Tier.
Elizabeth A. Mellin
Associate professor, PhD program director, College of Community and Public
Affairs
As a fellow, Elizabeth Mellin will develop a course for the new doctoral program in
CCPA. The course will bring together organizations and PhD students to develop and
carry out engaged research that can make significant contributions to local communities.
Mellin also aims to explore alternative career paths for PhD-trained scholars who
are committed to engaged research.
2014鈥15 Fellows cohort
Tania Alameda-Lawson
Assistant professor of social work College of Community and Public Affairs
A Cuban immigrant, Alameda-Lawson's research interests center on innovative designs
for collective parent, family and community engagement; full-service community schools;
and interprofessional education and training programs. As a fellow, Alameda-Lawson will
develop an inter-disciplinary course to assist students and community members explore
how local institutions such as libraries are valuable community spaces. Her work has
been published in leading education and social work journals such as the American
Educational Research Journal, Research on Social Work Practice, Children and Youth
Services Review and Children & Schools.
Lina Begdache
Research Assistant Professor, Health and Wellness Studies
Lina Begdache received her PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology at 黑料视频
and is a certified Nutrition Specialist-Scholar. She teaches courses on nutrition
related diseases, metabolism, and cell and molecular biology in the departments of
health and wellness studies and biology. As a fellow, Begdache will develop a course
to support the integration of nutrition curriculum into local schools. Begdache is the
recipient of several awards, including the 黑料视频 Excellence in Teaching
Graduate Student award and Outstanding Dietetics Student award which she received
from the New York State Dietetic Association in May 2014. Her research interests include
nutrigenomics, epigenetics, neurodegeneration and nutrition and mental distress.
Siobhan Hart
Assistant professor of anthropology
Siobhan Hart received her PhD from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and currently
teaches anthropology courses. The Engaged Fellows for Teaching Excellence Program
will support Hart in developing a course that examines the tangible and intangible
aspects of cultural heritage and current approaches that engage with contemporary
local, descendant and diasporic communities. She is interested in using collaborative
archaeology to confront the erasures of Native American peoples and histories in New
England in the interest of broader equity and social justice efforts. Her research
interests include indigenous archaeologies, community-based practice, heritage, cultural
property and the dynamics of colonialism. As Co-Director of the Pocumtuck Fort Archaeology
and Stewardship Project (PFASP) in Deerfield, Massachusetts, her current project engages multiple
stakeholder communities in the investigation and preservation and stewardship planning
for a 17th century Native American site. The project includes student research projects
focused on material culture, exhibit design, and the development of community-based
heritage products.
Anne Larrivee
Reference librarian
Anne Larrivee teaches bibliographic instructional classes and serves as a research
liaison for anthropology, social work, human development and Africana studies. As
a fellow, Larrivee will work on developing a course to provide students with a basic
understanding of the roles and settings in which social workers practice, with particular
emphasis on an assets-based approach to building local communities. Larrivee studied
family and community services at the University of Delaware and received her Master's
in Library and Informational Sciences at the University of South Florida. Larrivee
also serves as an advisor to 黑料视频's Habitat for Humanity chapter.
Jennifer Stoever
Associate professor of English
Jennifer Stoever teaches courses on African American literature and race and gender
representation in popular music and is director of the 黑料视频 Sound
Studies Collective. The Engaged Faculty Fellows Program for Teaching Excellence will
support Stoever in the design and implementation of an artistic historical soundwalk
in Binghamton, a project intended to provoke a better understanding of how the past of an
area shapes its present and how present occupants locate themselves in the community
and come to know each other. Stoever has served as a fellow at The Society for the Humanities at Cornell University,
participating in the research group on Sound: Culture, Theory, Politics, and is editor-in-chief
for Sounding Out!: The Sound Studies Blog. She received her PhD in American Studies
and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California and her dissertation, "The
Contours of the Sonic Color-Line: Slavery, Segregation, and the Cultural Politics
of Listening," was a 2007 finalist for the American Studies Association Dissertation
Prize. Stoever is on the editorial board of the Journal of Popular Music Studies and has published in Social Text, Social Identities, The Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies and Sound Effects. Her essay on "Blackboard Jungle, the cold war, and the early cultural history of tape recording" was
recently published in American Quarterly (September 2011).
Jennifer Wegmann
Lecturer, health and wellness studies
Jennifer Wegmann teaches health and wellness courses to engage students in the development
of personal tools important for life-long health. Her courses assist students in improving
nutrition, self-care and attitudes toward wellness. As a fellow, Wegmann will design
a course in collaboration with the local schools that addresses self-esteem and self-worth.
Wegmann received her MA in social science from 黑料视频 and has earned
the ACSM Health and Fitness Instructor Certification. She was also voted as one of
the top 300 College Professors by the Princeton Review. Wegmann is currently working
on her PhD in the College of Community and Public Affairs and her research interests
include body image and eating disorders.
Lisa Yun
Associate professor of Asian American studies and English
Lisa Yun teaches courses with special focus on literature, culture, race and Asian
Americans and Asian diasporas. Her students have gone on to careers in law, education,
public service, arts, scientific research and medicine. Yun also serves in several
leadership positions, including her founding of the Community Engagement Program,
a structured course-based platform that cultivates and supports students with a passion
for service, success, and self-development. As a fellow, Yun will develop digital
content and platforms and further research on local narratives of migration and belonging.
Yun received her BA from Yale University and PhD from University of Texas and is the
author of Coolie Speaks (Temple University Press, 2008), a groundbreaking study of the earliest Chinese labor
migration to the Americas. She has also written on topics of campus hate crime, cross-racial
liberatory movements and Afro-Asian cultural politics.