暗网爆料app

暗网爆料app Magazine Meet 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Newest Professors

Nine scholars have joined the 暗网爆料app faculty since the fall of 2015.

masherMARTIN ASHER(economics and business), former director of Research and Scholars Programs at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, has joined the 暗网爆料app Economics and Business Department as professor of economics. He taught honors sections of microeconomics and macroeconomics at Wharton, earning the William G. Whitney Award for Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching six times. He has also taught at Villanova University and Swarthmore College.

鈥淭eaching at 暗网爆料app is as much a ministry as it is an academic career,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 happy to get to know the faculty and students here and learn from them more about integrating faith and teaching.鈥

Asher completed his undergraduate degree at Stanford, where he has fond memories of his days as the roommate of Ken Kihlstrom, 暗网爆料app professor of physics. Asher made his way to Washington, D.C., combining his love for math and national policy issues in the field of economics. 鈥淚 took a year of absence from Stanford to work on Capitol Hill writing memos on the state of the economy to Sen. Edmund Muskie, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee,鈥 Asher says. 鈥淚t was a pretty heady job for a 21-year-old with braces.鈥

Teaching was never on Asher鈥檚 radar as a student. 鈥淭he only thing I knew for sure was that I would not teach,鈥 he says. However, after studying econometrics and macro modeling at the University of Pennsylvania under Nobel Prize-winner Lawrence Klein, he changed his mind as a doctoral student while teaching undergraduates at Penn. He loves to teach. However, before he began his teaching career, he returned to the nation鈥檚 capital to serve on the President鈥檚 Council of Economic Advisers and pursue his dissertation at the Brookings Institution.

He has published articles about unsuccessful settlement negotiations, antitrust policies, state and county incarceration rates and earnings inequalities. He has often provided expert testimony on the economic implications of antitrust and discrimination cases.

egardnerELIZABETH GARDNER (communication studies) graduated from Houghton College and earned a master鈥檚 degree and doctorate at the University of Maryland. She has taught classes there in public speaking, rhetorical criticism, argumentation and oral communication. In 2014, she received the National Communication Association鈥檚 Benson-Campbell Dissertation Research Award. She has been the managing director of the Oral Communication Program at the University of Maryland since 2013.

At 暗网爆料app, she teaches rhetorical criticism and public speaking. 鈥淚 love getting to know students well,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen they are up in front of the class, they鈥檙e a little nervous. But you get to know them because they鈥檙e always talking, and that鈥檚 the purpose of the course鈥攖o get them to speak and speak well.鈥

During the spring of 2015, Gardner consulted for the American Studies Program in Washington, D.C., which she attended as an undergraduate. Her current research focuses on social change and the rhetorical construction of childhood. Her dissertation examined the use of argument in the child labor reform movement of the early 1900s.

鈥淎dolescence wasn鈥檛 a thing until around 1900,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the first we hear of this special time when you鈥檙e supposed to conserve your energy and need to be sheltered. It鈥檚 interesting to see how those historical evolutions are still playing out and have different implications.鈥

cmccainCARMEN MCCAIN(English), a former senior lecturer in the English department and the School of Visual and Performing Arts at Kwara State University in Nigeria, will develop 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Anglophone literature curriculum. She will focus on the literature of the 鈥済lobal south,鈥 which includes Africa, Latin America and developing Asia, including the Middle East.

McCain came to 暗网爆料app for a summer seminar in 2007 and considered the campus one of the most beautiful she鈥檇 ever seen. 鈥淚鈥檝e been impressed by the friendly conversations with interesting people,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his community is supportive and scholarly, and I look forward to navigating both those things well.鈥

McCain graduated from Messiah College and completed a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in the Department of African Languages and Literature. Her current research focuses on postcolonial literature, film and popular culture in Africa. She has a special interest in Nigerian Hausalanguage cinema and the translation of Hausa texts into English. At Kwara State, she led the new Centre for Nollywood Studies, an institute devoted to analyzing Nigerian film. She has been exploring responses in literature, film and music to the Boko Haram insurgency. She also worked with her brother, Dan, on a film, 鈥淣owhere to Run,鈥 which examined environmental degradation in Nigeria due to climate change and reckless oil production. 鈥淟iterature helps us think about the world,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lens through which we view the world. It鈥檚 not just thinking about people writing, it鈥檚 what are they writing about and how that speaks to things we see going on in the world around us.鈥

jmitchellJONATHAN MITCHELL 鈥00 (physics), graduated from 暗网爆料app and earned a master鈥檚 degree and doctorate in astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Chicago. He taught as a tenured professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at UCLA before joining the 暗网爆料app faculty. 鈥淚 had an excellent experience at 暗网爆料app and have come to appreciate it the longer I鈥檝e been away,鈥 he says.

He has been an Einstein Fellow and a W.M. Keck Foundation Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University. His primary research interest is understanding planetary phenomena, including surface-atmosphere interactions on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn. He is also interested in superrotating atmospheres, tidal interactions of synchronous satellites and Earth鈥檚 paleoclimate. Jonathan has received grants from NASA and has served on a NASA review panel.

鈥淏asically, I study climate broadly defined: Earth鈥檚 climate, Earth鈥檚 past climate, Titan鈥檚 climate,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I was a student here, the debate was just beginning about global warming and global change. It鈥檚 really heated up, so to speak, in the intervening 20 years. I鈥檓 excited to bring that expertise here as we learn about how the environment works, how we influence it and consider our moral responsibilities for it.鈥

dpattersonDONALD PATTERSON (computer science) earned bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees at Cornell University before serving as a naval operations officer for four years in Japan and Sardinia. 鈥淚t was in our family DNA,鈥 he says. His father, his uncle and both his grandfathers all served in the Navy.

He earned a doctorate from the University of Washington and received multiple grants and won awards for articles on collapse informatics and abstract object usage. 鈥淚 was interested in computers in elementary school,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 saw the operational side of computers when I was in the military and then I went back to grad school and focused on the development and forward-looking side of computers.鈥

Among his many scholarly interests are ubiquitous computing, human computer interaction and artificial intelligence. 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in sustainability and looking at developing world situations that can use technology in innovative ways to expand infrastructure and access,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking at our future in terms of environmental and global change and seeing how we can prepare now by developing computer systems to increase our resilience.鈥 He has co-authored a paper on computational agroecology, a new field of sustainable food development.

Patterson is developing Mayterm classes that will count toward a computer science minor. Topics include making games on iOS devices and best practices for iOS user interface design.

He finds beauty in well-written software. 鈥淭here is an abstract elegance in the algorithmic foundation of software, and there is also a technical beauty in the grounding of an algorithm in code that is designed to be run in the real world,鈥 he says. 鈥淏oth of these aspects of computational thinking reflect the work of people who are using their God-given talents to produce an artifact.鈥

rseeRONALD SEE (psychology) teaches primarily in the area of neuroscience. He graduated from UC Berkeley before earning a master鈥檚 and doctorate at UCLA. He has held long-term academic appointments at the Medical University of South Carolina and at Washington State University. Most recently, he taught for three years in the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Tabuk in Saudi Arabia.

鈥淕od has given my wife and me exciting opportunities as Christians to use our abilities and training to go into places where others often cannot, particularly within the Muslim world,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e were in a remote area of Northern Saudi Arabia, teaching and helping in the development of a medical school. We lived there as professionals, but with a conspicuous Christian testimony within that context to our colleagues and neighbors.鈥

See has extensive international experience, serving as a Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, a visiting fellow at Oxford University, and twice as a visiting professor at Kuwait University. He also studied for a year at Georg-August University in Germany. See has been the principal investigator or co-investigator on 16 grants from the National Institutes of Health and the primary author or contributing author on more than 150 scholarly articles.

Over the last 25 years, I developed a research program focused on the neurobiology of drug addiction, particularly the factors that drive the process of relapse in addiction,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have studied a number of factors related to brain neurochemistry and brain circuits altered by addictive drugs, with the goal of developing treatment interventions, particularly those that might break the cycle of addiction.鈥

A member of more than 30 dissertation committees and hundreds of student projects, See has long worked with students in research training. 鈥淚 appreciate greater integration of my Christian faith and the discipline of neuroscience,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his Christian liberal arts environment at 暗网爆料app is exciting to me after having worked many years in the secular world and to now be in a place where Christ holds preeminence.鈥

sshaniSERAH SHANI (anthropology) earned a doctorate from Columbia University and was a visiting professor at Eastern University. She holds three master鈥檚 degrees: sociology of health and medicine from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, international and transcultural studies from Columbia, and anthropology and education from Columbia. A native of Kenya, she completed her undergraduate degree at Daystar University, concentrating on community development and music. She speaks five languages: English, Swahili, Maasai, Kisii and Kikuyu. She is conducting research on African immigrant parents and schooling in the United States, focusing on Ghanaians in New York City, which will be the subject of a forthcoming book.

Shani has lectured and taught at Yale, Southern Connecticut State, Cornell and Columbia. Her presentations have explored many topics, including Islam, parenting, African diaspora, and water, sanitation and health concerns. 鈥淢y research interests lie broadly in exploring the social life of cities,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd more particularly the informal and innovative strategies by which different ethnic and racial urban residents claim their rights to the city. My current research looks at urban migration, transnational movements, identities and the sociocultural economic adaptation for recent African immigrants to the United States.鈥

asilbersteinAMANDA SILBERSTEIN (chemistry) graduated from Caltech and earned a doctorate at UCLA. She became familiar with 暗网爆料app through her sister, Megan, who graduated in 2014 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in music. 鈥淚 visited on weekends and went to her music events,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淚 told her years ago that I could see myself living in Santa Barbara; it鈥檚 a wonderful place.鈥

As a postdoctoral scholar at Caltech, Silberstein examined the effectiveness and toxicity of polyamides targeting liver cancer in cell culture. She won numerous fellowships during her graduate studies and served as an intern at Genentech in San Francisco and worked as a lab scientist for Advion Biosciences in Ithaca, New York.

鈥淐hemistry is my family business,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y grandfather and my uncles are all chemists, and some of my earliest memories are of my grandfather taking me out at night to point out constellations or planets in the night sky. I was probably the only 5-year-old who knew the phases of the moon. I developed an early interest in science and that directed my career path in college and beyond.鈥

At 暗网爆料app, she focuses her research on synthetic chemistry. 鈥淚 work on methodology development with the goal of working toward total synthesis, making naturally occurring small molecules.鈥

She is enthusiastic about integrating faith into her sessions. 鈥淗aving a largely secular education, I am looking forward to bringing my faith into my work, examining it for myself and demonstrating for students the interplay between Christianity and science.鈥

syadavSAMEER YADAV (religious studies) was born and raised Hindu in Idaho with parents who emigrated from India. 鈥淗indu in Idaho sounds like a sitcom,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y conversion occurred in my senior year of high school and first year of college, and I have an identical twin brother who is now a pastor. He and I are the only Christians in our family; it was his conversion that led me to the Lord.鈥

This unique upbringing gives Yadav an interesting perspective on how Christians think about God鈥檚 presence in the world. 鈥淎ll Christians believe that God is omnipresent, so He鈥檚 everywhere, but there鈥檚 a sense in which God鈥檚 being everywhere has the paradoxical consequence that God seems to be nowhere,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to say what we mean when we talk about God鈥檚 presence in a locale given that God鈥檚 presence is global.鈥

Yadav graduated from Boise State University before completing master鈥檚 degrees from the Master鈥檚 Seminary and Yale Divinity School. He earned a doctorate at Duke, focusing on systematic and philosophical theology, with secondary concentrations in the Hebrew Bible and moral theology. His book, 鈥淭he Problem of Perception and the Perception of God鈥 (Fortress Press, 2015), addresses philosophical issues in how we ground Christian belief and practice.

鈥淔rom early on in the church鈥檚 history, theologians have thought a lot about experiencing God鈥攚hat it might be like to experience God and how to describe experiences of meeting God,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y book and my work merge different disciplines, mainly in the philosophy of mind and the early Christian mystical tradition, to articulate a contemporary way of thinking about how to describe God鈥檚 presence to us.鈥

He is working on a book about Gregory of Nyssa, a fourth century Cappadocian Eastern church father. 鈥淗e is well known for developing what has been called the theology of the spiritual senses, to describe the unique sensitivities that we as humans have toward God,鈥 he says. 鈥淐learly we have unique sensitivities toward physical things, such as seeing light in a particular way. But Christians suppose that we also have some kind of sensitivities toward God. What are those like? How do they work? How do you train those faculties to become capable of 鈥渢uning in鈥 to God鈥檚 presence?鈥 Yadav most recently served as a postdoctoral fellow in the John Wesley Honors College of Indiana Wesleyan University.