2014 Faculty and Staff Winners
Atwood Research and Teaching Award
Robert Pavlowsky, Professor, Geography, Geology and Planning
Bob Pavlowsky received the Atwood Research and Teaching Award, which is funded by an endowment by Jerry Atwood, a 1964 graduate of MSU and an internationally known chemist.
Bob teaches both undergraduate and graduate level courses related to physical geography. This past year he taught geomorphology, research in geography, fluvial geomorphology and advanced field and laboratory methods. Bob is a master at integrating his research and teaching efforts in many ways. Bob engages students - both undergraduate and graduate - in hands-on applied research projects involving water quality monitoring and aquatic habitat restoration. Bob's publications in 2013 were in physical geography and chemosphere. He also submitted several reports for the many contract projects that he and his students work on. Bob and his students have averaged more than 25 presentations per year over the past two years at conferences across the country. This past year Bob and his students presented at the National Meeting of the Association of American Geographers in Los Angeles, CA; the National Meeting of the Geological Society in America in Denver, CO; and the Upper Midwest Stream Restoration Symposium in La Crosse, WI among several others.
CNAS Excellence in Teaching Award Winners
Melissa Dallas, Professor, Hospitality and Restaurant Administration
Melissa is recognized for her enthusiasm and outstanding teaching ability. Whether she is teaching a large lecture class, a small interactive class or a blended course - she consistently receives exemplary student evaluations. Melissa has taught strategic management, hospitality law, destination development and introduction to hospitality leadership. Students indicate that they appreciate the rigor, breadth, and depth of knowledge that she brings to the classroom. She weaves her industry experience in each class that she teaches to give students "real world" examples. Melissa participates in professional development opportunities and maintains a certification of hospitality educators.
Katye Fichter, Assistant Professor, Chemistry
Katye is in her second year of teaching but these two years have been productive. She has almost completely redesigned the biochemistry laboratory curriculum - developing several new laboratory experiments. She has developed an interesting model in her advanced biochemistry course where students generate oral and poster presentations based on an article from the primary literature. In her advanced courses she significantly improved her initial course evaluations by properly addressing student concerns which highlights her commitment to quality teaching.
Brian Greene, Associate Professor, Biology
Brian not only has a strong teaching record that includes courses with many weekend field trips but he is an exceptional mentor to students. Brian maintains an active research lab with students studying conservation, behavior and physiological ecology. In addition to his own lab, he serves on many graduate student committees in the department. Brian is also academic advisor to over 50 undergraduate students in biology.
Robert Pavlowsky, Professor, Geography, Geology and Planning
Bob teaches courses in geomorphology, geography research methods and fluvial geomorphology. In addition Bob mentors more individual student projects (undergraduate and graduate) than anyone else in the department. It would be easy to supervise projects but Bob expects results and his students are regular presenters both on and off-campus. He has mentored four successful thesis projects in the past two years.
Matthew Siebert, Assistant Professor, Chemistry
Matt is in his second year at Missouri State. He teaches organic chemistry and although this course is considered difficult by many he has obtained outstanding evaluations. Matt has used chemistry lectures on demand (CLODs) which are pre-recorded videos that students can review. Recently Matt received an FCTL grant to obtain a tablet computer for the purpose of generating higher quality CLODS for diverse uses in chemistry. He is mentoring several students in his research lab.
CNAS Excellence in Research Award Winners
Bryan Breyfogle, Associate Professor, Chemistry
Bryan has been active in collaborative research in the areas of electrochemistry and chemical education. He has published one significant research paper in the field of electrochemistry in the past year and obtained a grant from the National Science Foundation for nearly $300,000 in the area of science education in collaboration with Dr. Gigi Saunders (department of biology). Over the past two years Bryan has mentored three graduate students to a successful completion of all degree requirements.
Melida Gutierrez, Professor, Geography, Geology and Planning
Melida has been one of the most productive researchers in the department in recent years. Her research spans the geosciences subdisciplines of hydrogeology, environmental geochemistry, and earth science education. Over the past two years Melida has five full length peer reviewed publications with a sixth under review. Melida involves students in her research work. Melida and her students most recently presented their results at the Geological Society of America Annual Meeting in Denver, CO. One of these studies involved mining related sediment contamination.
Reza Herati, Professor, Chemistry
Reza has been a very active researcher for the past two years. Reza has four peer reviewed publications with highly collaborative research projects. Reza has been working with a productive group that has submitted proposals to National Science Foundation and one to the Petroleum Research Fund. Reza has presented his research results at regional and national meetings of the American Chemical Society. Most importantly Reza includes students in his lab. He serves on graduate student committees and mentors undergraduate students in his lab.
CNAS Excellence in Service Award Winners
Chris Barnhart, Professor, Biology
Chris has dedicated a great deal of time to two community projects. The first event is "Insectorama" which is hosted annually by the Nature Center and the second is the "Butterfly House" located in Nathanael Greene/Close Memorial Park. Chris not only provides expertise to these projects but he provides supplies along with hours and hours of service. These events truly display our public affairs mission and Chris involves students whenever possible. Chris also serves on many committees on campus including the biology scholarship and personnel committees and the university faculty research and grants committee.
Nikolay Gerasimchuk, Professor, Chemistry
Nick has served on numerous committees at the department, college and university level. Over the past two years Nick has chaired a faculty search committee and has been an active recruiter for students in chemistry. Nick is often at recruitment events with displays of his passion for chemistry. He also serves as a reviewer for several chemistry publications - an honor but also a great deal of work. Nick's most significant accomplishment this past year was his work and organization of the 2013 Midwest Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society. This event was held in Springfield and hosted by the local section of the ACS. Nick served as general chair for the conference, which was a remarkable success. Members of the executive council for the conference were even told that it was the best regional meeting in close to ten years. This is a remarkable achievement given the time and effort necessary to organize a meeting of this magnitude.
Diane May, Assistant Professor, Geography, Geology and Planning
Diane is director of the Center for Resource Planning and Management (CRPM). In this role Diane coordinates and personally performs a tremendous amount of professional service as well as applied research. To support the Center's efforts in calendar year 2013 she and her staff secured more than $416,000 in external funding. This funding supported four full-time staff positions, one part-time staff position, three graduate assistantships and three undergraduate internships. Diane also serves as executive director for the Southwest Missouri Council of Governments (SMCOG) and in that role is responsible for representing the organization to the Board of the Missouri Association of Councils of Governments. Diane is also a member of the Missouri Community Recovery Coalition - a committee of the Missouri Department of Economic Development. In addition to this work in the region and state Diane serves as co-faculty sponsor of the planning student organization.
Diann Thomas, Senior Instructor, Chemistry
Diann serves on the department’s committees for safety and facilities; college’s committees for women in science and diversity; and the university ad hoc committee working on a sustainability minor. Diann volunteers time to helping with Science Olympiad and judging at the regional science fair. Her most significant accomplishment has been as faculty advisor for the Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society. During the past two years the student groups have received "Commendable Awards" from the national organization. The student affiliates have also earned the designation of Green Chemistry Chapter for their efforts to promote green chemistry, which includes incorporating more environmentally friendly lab experiments in courses and demonstrations and organizing a green chemistry conference.
CNAS Excellence Award - Staff
Linda Allen, Academic Administrative Assistant II, Chemistry
Linda is a long-time administrative assistant for the chemistry department. Her duties include organizing and assigning class schedules in consultation with the department head, administering most p-cards in the chemistry department, keeping a budget log for the department, hiring and directing student workers, and helping to maintain a Blackboard site for graduate students that tracks safety certifications and other key documentation for the students. Linda also provides a great deal of scheduling support to the department head, individual faculty and departmental committees. Linda rises to challenges and goes above and beyond to ensure that all is running smoothly in the department.
Tina Hopper, Laboratory Supervisor, Biology
Tina Hopper’s position as a laboratory supervisor in the biology department includes a variety of duties. These duties include supervision of TA's and lab preps for the labs of general biology I and II. She provides curriculum support and development for these labs as well as academic advising. Tina also teaches laboratories for BIO 121, 122 and 361 (physiology) as well as taking on the challenge of teaching a large section of BIO 102. Tina's strengths include organization, time management, communication and leadership. Tina has a strong work ethic and does a consistently outstanding job.
Robin Powell, Academic Administrative Assistant II Computer Science
Robin displays outstanding professional attitude, helpfulness and ability. Robin's awareness of institutional process and her habit of maintaining commonly-used information is priceless. She has provided support to new staff in the mathematics department regarding the details of the many Missouri State University procedures. In a period of rapid enrollment growth in computer science in recent semesters, Robin has cheerfully supported the increased needs of students and faculty in the department.
Faculty Excellence Awards (nominated/awarded by CNAS students)
Dean Cuebas, Associate Professor, Chemistry
Kyoungtae Kim, Associate Professor, Biology
Gary Meints, Associate Professor, Chemistry
Tricia Yarckow, Academic Administrative Assistant II, Hospitality and Restaurant Administration
2015 CNAS Faculty and Staff Awards
CNAS recognized outstanding faculty and staff on April 27, 2015. The award winners were nominated by departmental personnel committees, department heads or students. The nominations were then reviewed by a faculty committee for the faculty/staff awards and by a student committee for the student nominated award. We are proud to announce the following award winners for 2015! The award winners receive a certificate and a small monetary award.
Atwood Research and Teaching Award
The Atwood Research and Teaching Award was endowed by Dr. Jerry Atwood a 1964 graduate of MSU and now an internationally known chemist. He started his career at University of Alabama in 1967 but has been the department head at University of Missouri-Columbia since 1994. In addition he was appointed a Curators Professor starting in 1999. The award winner receives a certificate and $1500 to be spent over the next year on students, research supplies, summer salary or travel.
The 2015 recipient of the Atwood Research and Teaching Award is Dr. Paul Durham, Biology department. Dr. Durham’s research group studies the neurobiology of pain, particularly pain associated with migraines. In 2014 Paul’s research group had two papers published in international journals, six others accepted for publication and another submitted. In addition the group made a number of conference presentations. Dr. Durham has research funding from a variety of sources – private and public – with a 3-year total of over $800,000. Dr. Durham’s research students know that in addition to doing lab experiments they are being mentored at all times. Paul’s passion for teaching and mentoring is strong and enduring. He teaches everything from BIO121, to 320 cell biology to 755 developmental biology. For the last two years an additional 20 students from Qingdao, China joined the cell biology class.
CNAS Excellence Award – Staff
Brian Grindstaff – CNAS Machinist
Tara Herring – Biology Laboratory Supervisor
Gale Lininger – CNAS Executive Assistant
Brian Grindstaff, CNAS Machinist, supports each department in the college and provides quality service, always with a positive attitude. He does not shy away from difficult projects or the more routine projects. Most importantly, he responds with grace to all sorts of requests. He always helps to set up and take down poster boards for research days. This year he helped to set up the new CNAS lab at JVIC.
Tara Herring, lab supervisor for the biology department, has primary responsibility for supervision of TA’s and laboratories for the BIO111 course. This includes lab preparation, curriculum support and development, and teaching lab sections. Tara also teaches lecture sections of BIO100 and helps with academic advising. Tara’s greatest strength is in working closely with graduate students to ensure that they are well-trained and effective as instructors. Based on feedback from TAs and students, she completed a revision of the BIO111 lab manual this past year.
Gale Lininger, CNAS executive assistant, keeps the office functioning on a day-to-day basis. Gale keeps track of schedules and deadlines so that we do not miss anything. She is also an event planner - planning the scholarship reception, emeritus faculty dinner, graduate receptions, undergraduate research day and so much more! All of these events have been done professionally and Gale always thinks of ways to improve them for the next year. One of the things that I really appreciate about Gale is her attention to detail, her method of prioritizing projects and the constant smile on her face.
CNAS Faculty Excellence in Service Awards
Paul Durham – Biology
John Heywood – Biology
Bryan Breyfogle – Chemistry
Abbe Ehlers – Hospitality and Restaurant Administration
Paul Durham, Distinguished Professor of Biology, has a long list of service and leadership for his department, college, university and profession. Paul has chaired search committees in his department as well as the tenure/promotion committee. In the college he has been a long-time chair of the scholarship committee. He does not shy away from university committees and has been an active member of the graduate dean search committee, public affairs advisory committee, and provost committee on promotion and tenure. Paul has done presentations for the English Language Institute, served as an event leader for Science Olympiad and organizes tours of JVIC for OTC students. Professionally Paul reviews many journal articles each year and serves on two editorial boards.
John Heywood, Professor of Biology also has a list of service to the campus community that is significant. He chairs several department committees including scholarship committee and budget committee. He has served on search committees and helped with major’s fair. This past year he wrote a major revision of the department’s tenure and promotion guidelines as well as analyzing assessment data for the department. John has chaired the college IT committee for several years and leads that group with integrity. John is a member of the university’s premedical committee – a group that interviews all premed students and helps them gain admission to medical schools. He has also been a member of Faculty Senate.
Bryan Breyfogle, Professor of Chemistry, has list of service that is also long. Bryan has chaired the department’s assessment committee and served as dual credit coordinator. Bryan serves on the college MNAS committee and STEM Education committee. He has served on Faculty Senate and the Professional Education Committee. Bryan coordinates and leads departmental tours, classroom visits related to community college recruitment, dual credit classes and weeklong visits from the Springfield Public School gifted program. These tours/visits often include chemical demonstrations or hands-on learning. He regularly serves as an event leader for Science Olympiad. Professionally Bryan has served as chair of the local section of the American Chemical Society, reviewer of journal articles and AP chemistry exam grader.
Abbe Ehlers, Senior Instructor of Hospitality and Restaurant Administration has a service record that has been consistent, relevant and meaningful. On campus Abbe has served as a faculty leader for a living learning community, the co-advisor for Hospitality Leaders of Tomorrow and a mentor to first year students. She has also been an active member of the college diversity committee – serving as chair for one year. She is a board member of the Missouri Restaurant Association and Ozark Greenways. Abbe has coordinated golf tournaments, dinners and yoga on the trail to raise funds for hospitality students and Ozark Greenways. Abbe is compassionate and purposeful in her service.
CNAS Faculty Excellence in Research Awards
Nikolay Gerasimchuk – Chemistry
Kevin Mickus – Geography, Geology and Planning
Eric Bosch - Chemistry
Nikolay Gerasimchuk, Professor of Chemistry, has an active research group In 2014 he published two peer-reviewed articles in prestigious journals, including one review article in the European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry. He and his students presented at multiple professional conferences and he gave invited seminars at several regional universities. In 2013, he published a total of 7 peer-reviewed papers, while he and his students made a total of 8 presentations at various regional and national conferences. Nick was an invited speaker at the International Zing Conference on Coordination Chemistry in Mexico. this is very impressive 2 year total: 9 publications and over 10 presentations. He was awarded a supplement to his National Institute of Health (NIH) R15 AREA award "Antimicrobial effect of a new class of light resistant silver(l) complexes. Adhesion and biofilms study."
Kevin Mickus, Professor of Geology is, without a doubt, the most productive researcher in the Department of Geography, Geology and Planning. Every single year he produces multiple peer-reviewed research publications in top-tier journals. Since 2012 he has published 18 peer reviewed articles. Many of these research articles include student co-authors, and many involve multi-institution collaborations. In this same three-year period, Dr. Mickus and his students gave a total of fifty-one research presentations at international, national, and regional scientific meetings. Dr. Mickus’ research is supported financially by grants from the U.S. Geological Survey, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the government of Ethiopia, as well as numerous private petroleum and mineral exploration companies.
Eric Bosch, Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, has an active research group. He published one peer-reviewed research manuscript in 2013, four in 2014, and two have been accepted in 2015 with a third undergoing minor revision. He has a current external grant with the National Science Foundation. He presented a research poster at a Gordon Conference on Crystal Engineering (June 2014). He made an oral presentation and was coauthor on a different poster presentation at the 1st International Symposium on Halogen Bonding in Porto Cesareo, Italy, June 2014 and was an invited speaker at Midwest ACS meeting Columbia in November 2014.
CNAS Faculty Excellence in Teaching Awards
Rich Biagioni – Chemistry
Janice Greene - Biology
Melida Gutierrez – Geography, Geology and Planning
Paul Schweiger – Biology
Jill Black – Geography, Geology and Planning
Rich Biagioni, Professor of Chemistry, is an extremely hard-working, respected teacher in the chemistry department. He has developed a large number of online videos that he refers to as mini-lectures and has shared them with other faculty teaching the same courses in the department, a testament to his productivity and collegiality. He has also made his lectures more interactive by incorporating clickers and modifying his approach to using clickers to better fit the needs of his students. In addition, he has been actively troubleshooting a number of labs in the general chemistry lab sequence that he authored and is developing a forensic science class.
Janice Greene, Professor of Biology, teaches lower and upper division courses that are important components of the wildlife biology and biology education curricula – ornithology, introduction to the diversity of life, and introduction to science and research. During this past year Janice mentored six graduate students and six undergraduate research students in either biology education or bird field research. Dr. Greene is a statewide leader in the area of environmental education. Each summer she teaches workshops for current teachers at Bull Shoals Field Station including – Project Wet, Project Learning Tree and Flying Wild.
Melida Gutierrez, Professor of Geology, is one of the most effective and respected teachers in the department. She teaches courses at every level – GLG110 and 171 (general education) to GLG 680 and 697. Melida continues to develop innovative new curriculum. Her latest effort in this regard is the development (with Dr. John Havel) of a new multi-disciplinary course in Water Resources (GLG547/647). This course is offered in a blended modality, meeting on campus only one day/week with the remainder of the instruction conducted online. Dr. Gutierrez mentored three successful graduate student thesis projects in 2014. In addition she had several other students in her research group during this time period.
Paul Schweiger, Assistant Professor of Biology, teaches rigorous courses in the area of microbiology (300, 500 and 600 levels). While teaching microbial physiology and metabolism, Paul updated the lab manual and designed new lab exercises. He has written a "how to succeed" guide for the 300 level microbiology course as it is a challenge to students. Last year Paul served as major advisor to three graduate students and five undergraduate students. He also mentored two high school students who worked on projects in his laboratory.
Jill Black, Associate Professor of Geography, Geology and Planning. Dr. Black is one of the most dedicated, hard-working teachers in the department. She has embraced the pedagogical style called "experiential learning" to design and develop a very hands-on course in Earth Science for Elementary Teachers (GRY240). She also offers her students the opportunity to add a service learning component to their experience. During alternating summers Jill teachers Geography of the Ozarks. The past several summers Jill has also taught a workshop for current earth science teachers as part of a grant funded project. She received a new grant to work with more science teachers in the next two years.
CNAS Student Nominated Awards for Faculty/Staff Excellence
Seven faculty were nominated by students for this award. The nominees included Debbie Corcoran (GGP), Melissa Dallas (HRA), Kyoungtae Kim (BIO), Jorge Rebaza (MTH), Gigi Saunders (BIO), Vera Stanojevic (MTH) and Nick Gerasimchuk (CHM). In the words of the students, these faculty/staff truly understand the power of knowledge and they are always willing to help. They provide a learning environment where every student has the potential to succeed. One student also said that the nominee was the most effective teacher that he had ever had! The students chose four award winners this year.
Debbie Corcoran
Jorge Rebaza
Gigi Saunders
Vera Stanojevic