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14 51精品视频 faculty members won 2023 Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Awards

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Fourteen 51精品视频 faculty members will receive this year鈥檚 Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Awards across three categories.

Each recipient receives a letter from Chancellor Patrick Gallagher, a $2,000 cash prize and a $3,000 grant to support their work. Awardees will be recognized at the Faculty Honors Convocation on March 16 at 3 p.m. in Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall.

Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Research Awards

Senior category

笔别迟别谤听叠谤耻蝉颈濒辞惫蝉办测,听director of the Intelligent Systems Program in the School of Computing and Information, was honored for his leadership and research in adaptive hypermedia and web, user modeling technologies and intelligent education systems. He is considered a pioneer in the field, who, peers wrote, is a leader who consistently produces research at the 鈥渃utting edge of information science鈥 and 鈥渃ontinues to push the field forward by identifying important future directions.鈥

Jeanne Marie Laskas, distinguished professor of English in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, was recognized for her meticulous research and contributions to narrative nonfiction, which have profoundly influenced contemporary long-form journalism and nonfiction. One peer called Laskas 鈥渙ne of the most important and compassionate presences in American literature.鈥

Anuradha Ray, UPMC Endowed Chair in Lung Immunology in the School of Medicine, was honored for her role in developing new approaches to managing asthma and autoimmune diseases. One peer noted that her accomplishments related to the 鈥渇undamentals of immune cell function have been both novel and impactful.鈥 Another wrote that her 鈥渞esearch program has been highly influential in understanding the very complex underlying immune-mediated pathology of asthma.鈥

Junior category

Salah Al-Zaiti, vice chair of research in the School of Nursing, was honored for the quality and early contributions of his analysis of electrocardiographic signals to derive actionable information to support early clinical diagnoses of cardiac conditions. Al-Zaiti鈥檚 peers called him 鈥渙ne of the most productive research contributors in the field鈥 and noted that his scholarly achievements are 鈥渙utstanding by any standard.鈥

Greer Donley, associate professor in the School of Law, was recognized for her research and advocacy work on health law, reproductive justice and bioethics. For her scholarship on reproductive rights, she has been cited as a 鈥渃reative visionary,鈥 a 鈥渟hining light among junior law professors around the country鈥 and 鈥渁 leader among a cohort of [abortion law] scholars.鈥

Aidan Wright, professor in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, was honored for his research on the stability and fluidity in human personality throughout the lifespan. His peers commended him as one of 鈥渢he most influential researchers in any area of psychology at any level [or of his] generation.鈥

Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Teaching Awards

James C. Coons, professor in the School of Pharmacy, was recognized for his efforts in developing simulation-based learning and coursework in scientific discovery. Colleagues and students also praised Coons鈥 leadership of the Pharmacotherapy Scholars Program Area of Concentration and his ability to create an engaging learning environment inside and outside the classroom.

Jeremy Martinson, assistant professor in the School of Public Health, was recognized for his leadership in the Master of Public Health with a concentration in Infectious Disease Pathogenesis, Eradication, and Laboratory Practice (MPH-PEL) program, as well as contributions to the design of the Bachelor of Science in public health curriculum.

Michael Meyer, professor in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences and electus faculty in the David C. Frederick Honors College, was honored for his innovative instruction and dedication to students in 51精品视频鈥檚 Writing Program.

Joanne L. Prasad, assistant dean for academic affairs in the School of Dental Medicine, received the award for advocating for the inclusion of sex and gender health in dental education. Her students have consistently excelled in the national board exams鈥 oral pathology and radiology sections.

Liann Tsoukas, director of undergraduate studies, undergraduate advisor and teaching professor in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences and assistant dean in the Dietrich School's Office of Undergraduate Studies, was honored for her expert approaches to pedagogy, training colleagues and helping student-athletes succeed.

Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Public Service Awards

David A. Harris, Sally Ann Semenko Endowed Chair in the School of Law, was awarded for serving on several important local government committees and task forces and providing his expert perspective in media outlets and testimony at the local, state and federal levels. Additionally, he has taught an Inside-Out Prison Exchange course on criminal justice and law and advocated for fair criminal justice policy in his teaching and scholarship.

Sera Linardi, founding director of the Center for Analytical Approaches to Social Innovation in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, was honored for her efforts in helping students create a program called Grief to Action, which supports community members in their attempts to eliminate systemic racism. She hired and trained students as project managers and served as a bridge between 51精品视频 and the local community.

Esohe Osai, assistant professor in the School of Education, was recognized for creating the Justice Scholars Institute at three local high schools to help students earn college credits, enroll in college and subsequently graduate. Osai has also consistently and seamlessly incorporated community work advocating for children, youth and families in underserved communities in her teaching and scholarship.

鈥 Kara Henderson, photography by Aimee Obidzinski