UGA Columns Feb. 22, 2016

Page 1

Periodicals Postage is PAID in Athens, Georgia

News Service University of Georgia 286 Oconee Street Suite 200 North Athens, GA 30602-1999

®

The University of Georgia

New Georgia Museum of Art curator focuses on showcasing African-American art CAMPUS NEWS

7

University Theatre to present ‘The Mandrake’ in Cellar Theatre Feb. 23-27

February 22, 2016

Vol. 43, No. 26

www.columns.uga.edu

jhataway@uga.edu

Kimberly Skobba

Zachary Wood

‘Engage and inspire’

Three faculty members receive Russell Awards for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching By Camie Williams camiew@uga.edu

Three UGA faculty members have been named recipients of the university’s highest early career teaching honor, the Richard B. Russell Awards for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. “The recipients of this year’s Russell Awards demonstrate how innovative teaching can engage and inspire students,” said Pamela Whitten, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, whose office administers the award. “Their exemplary dedication to students helps distinguish the University of Georgia as one of the nation’s leading public research universities.” First presented in the 19911992 academic year, the prize was established by the Russell ­Foundation and named for Richard B. Russell. This spring, and in conjunction with the 15th anniversary of the awards, the Russell Foundation increased the prize amount

4&5

UGA scientists using $5M grant to combat widespread ag weeds By James E. Hataway

Robert Beckstead

UGA GUIDE

to $7,500. The 2016 Russell Award winners are: • Robert Beckstead, an associate professor of poultry science in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences; • Kimberly Skobba, an assistant professor of financial planning, housing and consumer economics in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences; and • Zachary Wood, an associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. Beckstead, who joined UGA’s faculty in 2007, developed three courses to help students understand concepts integral to the modern poultry science industry, including a popular course on the relationship between culture and agriculture that has been accepted into the university’s World Languages and Culture, Humanities and the Arts core curriculum. Beckstead received a 2015 FirstYear Odyssey Seminar Teaching

Award and was selected as his college’s Outstanding Faculty Advisor as well as a UGA Outstanding Faculty Advisor in 2015. He is an advisor to the undergraduate Poultry Science Club and the Poultry Science Graduate Student Organization. He served as a 20102012 Lilly Teaching Fellow and received the 2010 Poultry Science Association Early Career Teaching Award and the 2011 H.L. Marks Award for Teaching Excellence. Skobba has translated her previous experience working in the nonprofit housing sector to engage students in topics such as nonprofit fundraising, program evaluation and policy research. She recently co-taught UGA’s first class on the tiny house movement, and she leads service-learning courses each year that impact her students and the community. Currently a Lilly Teaching Fellow, Skobba previously was a 20122013 Service-Learning Fellow. She is the recipient of the 2014 Early See AWARDS on page 8

FRANKLIN COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

A team of researchers led by faculty at UGA has received a $5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to find new ways of combating Johnsongrass, one of the most widespread and troublesome agricultural weeds in the world. Native to the Mediterranean region, Johnsongrass has spread across every continent except Antarctica. It was introduced to the U.S. in the 1800s as a forage crop, but it quickly spread into surrounding farmland and natural environments, where it continues

to cause millions of dollars in lost agricultural revenue each year, according to the USDA. “ We e d s like JohnAndrew Paterson songrass are a major challenge for agricultural producers around the world,” said Andrew Paterson, Regents Professor, director of UGA’s Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory and principal investigator for the project. “To make matters worse, widespread

See WEEDS on page 8

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

First Distinguished Professor in Resilient Infrastructure named By Mike Wooten

mwooten@uga.edu

Brian P. Bledsoe, a scholar with more than 25 years of experience as an engineer, hydrologist and environmental scientist in the private and public sectors, has been appointed the inaugural Georgia Athletic Association Distinguished Professor in Resilient Infrastructure in the UGA College of Engineering. The Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia made the special appointment at its January meeting. Bledsoe joined the engineering faculty Feb. 1. “Dr. Bledsoe brings a tremendous record of accomplishment

to the University of Georgia College of Engineering, and he will play a major role in the continuing growth of our academic program and Brian Bledsoe our research enterprise,” said Donald J. Leo, dean of the college. “I sincerely thank our partners in the Athletic Association for supporting our mission to educate the next generation of engineers.” Bledsoe’s research is focused on the interface of hydrology, ecology

See PROFESSOR on page 8

FRANKLIN COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

History department launches program in D.C. NIH grants $2.1M award Public history, sometimes re“Washington really is the best extension to UGA researcher By Jessica Luton jluton@uga.edu ferred to as applied history, lends place for this. There are just so A new UGA program in public history is offering students the opportunity to learn about the professional side of their discipline— through archiving artifacts, giving tours of historic sites or curating a historical collection of films—while living in Washington, D.C. The program, offered by the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences’ history department, will consist of a Maymester introduction to public history class followed by a summerlong internship at one of the many institutions, museums, libraries and other cultural institutions based in the nation’s capital. The program is the first of its kind for Franklin College through the UGA in Washington program.

itself to a variety of employment opportunities with museums, institutions and other cultural entities and gives students a first-hand look at history, said Akela Reason, an associate professor of history who is leading the program. “This program will introduce history majors to what they can do with their degree outside of academia,” she said. “So, it’s history in public archives, libraries, parks, public monuments, historic sites and museums. And that’s where they’ll be interning as well.” The Maymester class will be taught primarily on the Washington Mall, with various trips to museums, park sites and monuments as well as field trips to Mount Vernon and the Gettysburg Battlefield.

many institutions, associations and archival materials there,” said Reason, who has experience working at several museums, including the Smithsonian, and lived in D.C. for several years. “The National Trust for Historic Preservation is there. The Red Cross is there. So many institutions have their headquarters there, so it’s a great opportunity to really dig into history.” The addition of the Franklin program to the other programs in Washington provides an example of an experiential learning opportunity in the humanities, said Don DeMaria, director of the UGA Washington Semester Program. “All of UGA’s D.C.-based programs play a vital role, showcasing See HISTORY on page 8

By Alan Flurry

aflurry@uga.edu

The National Institutes of Health Institute of General Medical Sciences has awarded a five-year extension to UGA’s Jorge C. Escalante. He will use the funds in the study of vitamin B-12, looking at the biosynthesis and anaerobic metabolism in salmonella. The MERIT or Method to Extend Research in Time award is an extension of $2.1 million to an initial five-year award announced in 2010. It will support Escalante’s research through 2020. One of the most complex coenzymes in nature, B-12 is an essential human nutrient that is produced by many, but not all, microorganisms. Its impact on human health ranges

from the development of the nervous system in infants to the prevention of diseases related to the metabolism of fats. Human pathogens such Jorge Escalante as salmonella require B-12 to establish intestinal infections. “Our coenzyme B-12 work benefits from important collaborations with structural biologists and spectroscopists,” said Escalante, a UGA Foundation Distinguished Professor in Microbiology in the Franklin College of Arts and

See EXTENSION on page 8


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.