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COSM Faculty Awarded Piper Professor

COSM Faculty Awarded Piper Professor

“Teaching is about sharing, If you are passionate about your profession then you want to share that passion with others.”

Dr. Daniel Marble

Tarleton State University’s Dr. Daniel Marble has been recognized as a Piper Professor, arguably the most prestigious award for teaching excellence in the state. The award, begun by the Minnie Stevens Piper Foundation in 1958, annually honors 10 outstanding full-time teachers. It recognizes educators for academic, scientific and scholarly achievement and for dedication to the teaching profession.

Dr. Daniel Marble, Regents Professor

Dr. Marble joined the Tarleton faculty in 1998 and has given more than 150 presentations and produced 50 publications in peer-reviewed journals, including Nuclear Instruments and Methods and Physical Review, relating to ion-atom collisions, ion beam characterization of materials, accelerator technology, and science education using accelerators.

“Teaching is about sharing,” he said in the award nomination packet. “If you are passionate about your profession then you want to share that passion with others.

“I tell my students that they need to pursue a career that they are passionate about and pursue excellence in that career. While doing physics is fun, I discovered that my real passion was in the teaching of physics. I was fortunate to have been taught by a nationally recognized physics teacher in college. He spent time with me and cared about my success in and out of the classroom. It was obvious that he enjoyed what he did for a living and was making a difference in the lives of his students. I decided that I wanted to follow his path and switched from going to medical school to pursuing a PhD and a teaching career.”

Prior to Tarleton, Dr. Marble was a physics Assistant Professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a visiting scientist at Materials and Physical Science Directorates of the Army Research Lab.

He earned a bachelor’s in electrical engineering from the University of Houston and both his master’s and PhD degrees in physics and accelerator-based atomic physics from the University of North Texas.

He is the Texas Section Representative for the American

Association of Physics Teachers. He earned the Tarleton Community of Scholars Award and the Mary Todd Monroe Distinguished Service Award from the Texas Section of the American Association of Physics Teachers in 2019.

He also has been honored with the Distinguished Civilian Service Medal by the U.S. Army, Tarleton College of Science and Technology Faculty Award for Student Success, Tarleton’s inaugural Faculty Excellence in Scholarship Award, and the Jack and Louise Arthur Distinguished Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching. He was named a Texas A&M University System Regents Professor for the 2020-21 academic year.

A founding member of The Texas A&M University System, Tarleton transforms generations by inspiring discovery, leadership and inclusion through teaching and research. Degree programs for more than 14,000 students in Stephenville, Fort Worth, Waco, Midlothian, at RELLIS Academic Alliance in Bryan, and online emphasize real-world learning that addresses regional needs while sustaining the values of excellence, integrity and respect.

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