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Topic: Faculty and Staff

Displaying 667 - 684 of 1514
  • App State’s online faculty experts weigh in on advantages, challenges of a virtual classroom
    App State’s online faculty experts weigh in on advantages, challenges of a virtual classroom
    June 2, 2020

    Online faculty experts in Appalachian’s Reich College of Education weigh in on the advantages and challenges of online teaching and learning. Read on to learn their advice about what does — and what doesn’t — work when engaging students in virtual learning spaces.

  • App State business students and faculty reconfigure Bengaluru, India, study abroad
    App State business students and faculty reconfigure Bengaluru, India, study abroad
    June 2, 2020

    A two-week online collaboration marks the first virtual, faculty-led study abroad for students from Appalachian and Kristu Jayanti College (KJC) in Bengaluru, India.

  • App State’s Dr. Paul Wallace is pushing the boundaries of online teaching and learning
    App State’s Dr. Paul Wallace is pushing the boundaries of online teaching and learning
    June 2, 2020

    Appalachian State University professor Dr. Paul Wallace shares his research on social robotics, telepresence and immersive environments — research that may have broader applications due to the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Larimer Field [faculty featured]
    Larimer Field [faculty featured]
    Pittsburgh Quarterly
    June 1, 2020

    Creative writing professor Josepth Bathanti’s poem “Larimer Field,” about Little Leaguers, is this issue's pick for PQ Poem feature. Bathanti is Appalachian State University’s McFarlane Family Distinguished Professor in Interdisciplinary Education and a former North Carolina poet laureate.

  • Taking Steady Steps towards Civic Engagement [staff featured]
    Taking Steady Steps towards Civic Engagement [staff featured]
    Penang Monthly (Malaysia)
    June 1, 2020

    Brian MacHarg, Appalachian’s director of civic engagement, discusses the importance of civic engagement in addressing community issues and how to apply it. This news story covers his talk during a workshop hosted by the Penang Institute and the U.S. embassy in Malaysia called “Learning the Habits of Service: Leading Others in Action.”

  • Rebecca Murray wins App State Staff Shout Out program’s April drawing
    Rebecca Murray wins App State Staff Shout Out program’s April drawing
    May 29, 2020

    Murray, who serves as an academic adviser in Appalachian’s James Center for Student Success and Advising, is one of more than 2,029 staff members who have been recognized to date for their Shout Out-worthy service to the university.

  • App State Staff Shout Out program recognizes Erika Hudspeth as March drawing winner
    App State Staff Shout Out program recognizes Erika Hudspeth as March drawing winner
    May 29, 2020

    Hudspeth, a web designer and content strategy specialist in Appalachian’s University Communications, is one of more than 2,000 Appalachian staff members who have been recognized to date for their Shout Out-worthy service to the university.

  • Perspective | North Carolinians weigh in on high-quality reading instruction [faculty quoted]
    Perspective | North Carolinians weigh in on high-quality reading instruction [faculty quoted]
    EdNC
    May 29, 2020

    Dr. Rebecca Jordan, assistant professor in the Department of Reading Education and Special Education, is among educators quoted in this opinion piece on how to achieve high-quality reading instruction. Jordan says the science of reading indicates there is more than one domain of reading instruction, and a combination of phonics, oral language, vocabulary, fluency and comprehension is needed.

  • Appalachian State University professor’s message is just what we need right now [faculty featured]
    Appalachian State University professor’s message is just what we need right now [faculty featured]
    WRAL
    May 29, 2020

    In this interview, counseling professor Dr. Dominique Hammonds explains why people may feel a variety of emotions during the coronavirus pandemic and how to effectively address them.

  • App State’s Fulbright scholars foster international connections despite global pandemic
    App State’s Fulbright scholars foster international connections despite global pandemic
    May 29, 2020

    Many of Appalachian’s 2019–20 Fulbright scholars were overseas when COVID-19 took hold. Though these faculty members have since returned to the U.S., they have opted to continue their work remotely — demonstrating the importance of fostering international connections, especially during a global pandemic.

  • Task force’s work on improving reading instruction to go before State Board next week [faculty quoted]
    Task force’s work on improving reading instruction to go before State Board next week [faculty quoted]
    EdNC
    May 28, 2020

    Reich College of Education Dean Melba Spooner, a member of the State Board of Education Literacy Task Force, comments on the status of quality reading education — saying she does not think the task force's' recommendation does enough to help districts ensure the selection of high-quality materials.

  • No asteroids needed: ancient mass extinction tied to ozone loss, warming climate [faculty quoted]
    No asteroids needed: ancient mass extinction tied to ozone loss, warming climate [faculty quoted]
    Science
    May 28, 2020

    Appalachian State University geologist Dr. Sarah Carmichael discusses the latest explanation put forth regarding the cause of a mass extinction 252 million years ago — a warming climate that depleted the earth's ozone layer.

  • A passion for the environment: App State Energy Manager Jonathan Pierson
    A passion for the environment: App State Energy Manager Jonathan Pierson
    May 22, 2020

    Meet Appalachian energy manager Jonathan Pierson ’06 ’08 — an alumnus who circled back to campus after a decade of implementing energy efficiency projects in Alaska.

  • World Bee Day [faculty quoted]
    World Bee Day [faculty quoted]
    Colorado Ag Today
    May 22, 2020

    Dr. Joseph Cazier, director of the Center for Analytics Research and Education, discusses the new World Bee Count app released by Appalachian State University and SAS. He describes it as “citizen science” and the first step toward building a global repository of shareable data.

  • An App State staff member and naval veteran reflects on a lifetime of service
    An App State staff member and naval veteran reflects on a lifetime of service
    May 22, 2020

    As a reflection of his military service, App State’s Chuck Ford, director of App Catering and a U.S. Navy veteran, was selected to lay a wreath at Appalachian’s Veterans Memorial to commemorate Memorial Day — a day honoring those who died in service to their country.

  • 7 Tips for Safe Walking During Coronavirus [faculty quoted]
    7 Tips for Safe Walking During Coronavirus [faculty quoted]
    The Healthy
    May 21, 2020

    Dr. David Nieman, a professor of exercise science and director of Appalachian State University's Human Performance Lab, says during moderate exercise such as walking — and for two or three hours after — important immune cells come out at higher rates than normal, making contact with pathogens to get rid of them. Inactive people miss out on this advantage, he adds.

  • World Bee Day 2020: FAO calls for more to be done to safeguard our tiny food heroes, amid alarming decline [faculty mentioned]
    World Bee Day 2020: FAO calls for more to be done to safeguard our tiny food heroes, amid alarming decline [faculty mentioned]
    Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
    May 20, 2020

    Appalachian’s Dr. Joseph Cazier,director of the Center for Analytics Research and Education, is mentioned as having spoken at the UN's virtual celebration for World Bee Day.

  • How to safely run outside amid the coronavirus pandemic [faculty quoted]
    How to safely run outside amid the coronavirus pandemic [faculty quoted]
    CBS News
    May 19, 2020

    Amid COVID-19 concerns, health professor Dr. David Nieman is quoted on his research that shows regular moderate-intensity physical activity can improve one's ability to fight viruses — making lifestyle practices consistent with good immune health a "primary" strategy to prevent the risk posed by COVID-19.

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