Fellows Directory

Displaying 1 - 25 of 30
Headshot of Samy Ayoub.

Samy Ayoub

Current Fellow
Middle Eastern Studies
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College of Liberal Arts
Azam headshot

Hina Azam

Alumni
Middle Eastern Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Student Success
Skill-Building

Dr. Hina Azam teaches courses in Islamic Studies such as Islamic theology, Islamic law, the Qur'an, Qur'an interpretation, and Islamic feminism, as well as a course on comparative religions of the Middle East. Her research focuses on women/gender/sexuality in Islam, ethics, and pedagogy. She supervises or serves as reader for undergraduate and graduate theses and dissertations across the University.

Deborah Beck

Deborah Beck

Current Fellow
Classics
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning

Deborah Beck has won various awards for both teaching and research, including the 2021 Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Classics at the College and University Level from the Society for Classical Studies and a prize for Excellence in Faculty Teaching from the Gamma Sigma chapter of the national Classics undergraduate honors society Eta Sigma Phi (2019) and two Plumer Visiting Research Fellowships at St Anne’s College, Oxford (2017 and 2019). Her main research interest is ancient Greek and Roman epic poetry, especially Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey.

Photo of Daniel Birkholz

Daniel Birkholz

Alumni
English
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning

Carl Blyth

Alumni
French and Italian
|
College of Liberal Arts
Bremen headshot

Brian Bremen

PTF Emeritus
English
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Graduate Student Education

Project Title: Graduate Student Training and Support in Lower-Division Literature Classes 

 

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Erika Bsumek

Alumni
History
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Undergraduate Research

Bsumek is an Associate Professor of History in the College of Liberal Arts, a recipient of the Dad’s Teaching Award, the President’s Associates Teaching Excellence Award, and she is currently a 2nd-year Provost’s Teaching Fellow. Her areas of research include Native American history, environmental history/studies, the history of the built environment, and the history of the U.S. West. Her current research explores the social and environmental history of the area surrounding Glen Canyon on the Utah/Arizona border from the 1840s to the present.

person in blue shirt

Tanya Clement

Current Fellow
English
Information
|
College of Liberal Arts
School of Information
Initiative Focus
Inclusive Teaching and Learning
Digital Humanities

Tanya E Clement is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Texas at Austin. Her primary areas of research are textual studies, sound studies, and infrastructure studies as these concerns impact academic research, research libraries, and the creation of research tools and resources in Digital Humanities (DH).

Janet Davis

Alumni
American Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Experiential Learning
De Lozanne headshot

Arturo De Lozanne

Alumni
Molecular Biosciences
|
College of Natural Sciences
Initiative Focus
Active Learning

Juan Dominguez

Alumni
Psychology
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Skill-Building
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Jen Ebbeler

Alumni
Classics
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Online and Blended Learning

Project Title: Identifying Successful Learning Strategies in Online and Blended Classrooms 

 

Mike Findley

Michael Findley

Current Fellow
Government
Public Affairs
|
College of Liberal Arts
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
Initiative Focus
Mentorship
Student Success
A headshot of Steve Finkelstein, a white man with a dark brown mustache and beard, in a blue button up dress shirt.

Steven Finkelstein

Current Fellow
Astronomy
|
College of Natural Sciences
Initiative Focus
Student Success

Steven Finkelstein is an Associate Professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Washington in 2003, his PhD in 2008 from Arizona State University, and from there he took a postdoctoral position at Texas A&M University. In 2011 he earned a Hubble Postdoctoral Fellowship which he took to the University of Texas in Austin, where he was hired on as faculty in 2012. His research focuses on the formation and evolution of galaxies in the early universe, and the interplay of these sources with reionization.

Vernita Gordon

Vernita Gordon

Current Fellow
Physics
|
College of Natural Sciences
Initiative Focus
Inclusive Teaching and Learning
Skill-Building

I did my undergraduate work at Vanderbilt, with a double major in physics and math, and my Ph.D. work in physics at Harvard. At both institutions, I saw and experienced the positive difference that caring, committed instructors and a nurturing university community can make in students' lives. I have been a faculty member in the Physics department at UT Austin since 2010. I have taught introductory calculus-based mechanics for Physics majors, a Plan II Physics course for liberal arts honors students, and an upper-division course on Biological Physics.

Sam Gosling

Alumni
Psychology
|
College of Liberal Arts
Headshot of Lars Hinrich.

Lars Hinrichs

Alumni
English
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Digital Humanities
Peniel Joseph

Peniel Joseph

Current Fellow
Public Affairs
History
|
College of Liberal Arts
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
Initiative Focus
Mentorship

Peniel Joseph is the First-Year Representative on the 2020 PTF Steering Committee.

Photo of Calvin Lin

Calvin Lin

Alumni
Computer Science
|
College of Natural Sciences

Calvin Lin is a computer science professor at the University of Texas. He does research in compilers, with a current focus on security and scalable and precise analysis, including pointer analysis. He also has interests in microarchitecture, and he has written a textbook with Larry Snyder called Principles of Parallel Programming. His research also includes increasing programmer productivity by improving system performance, correctness, and ease of programming. He is a member of the UT Academy of Distinguished Teachers and received the UT Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award in 2011.

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Christina Markert

Alumni
Physics
|
College of Natural Sciences
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Active Learning
Phot of Julia Mickenberg

Julia Mickenberg

Current Fellow
American Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Skill-Building

Julia Mickenberg is Professor of American Studies and an affiliate in the Center for Women and Gender Studies, the Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, and the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies. She is the author of American Girls in Red Russia: Chasing the Soviet Dream (Chicago, 2017) and Learning from the Left: Children's Literature, the Cold War, and Radical Politics (Oxford, 2006) and editor or co-editor of several other books, along with articles in journals ranging from the Journal of American History to Radical Teacher.

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Mary Neuburger

Alumni
Slavic and Eurasian Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Digital Humanities

Dr. Mary Neuburger is a Professor of history, the Director of the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies (CREEES), and the Chair of Slavic and Eurasian Studies at the University of Texas of Austin. Dr.

Rabinowitz headshot

Adam Rabinowitz

Alumni
Classics
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Undergraduate Research
Digital Humanities

I'm an Associate Professor in the Department of Classics. My research focuses on the archaeology of Greek colonization, culture-contact, and ancient food and drink, and I have an active field project at the ancient site of Histria in Romania, near the Danube delta. In my teaching, I try to find ways to engage students with primary sources and involve them in research inside and outside the classroom as part of the learning process. I am particularly interested in digital tools and platforms that allow students in the Humanities to carry out public-facing research projects.

Photo of Michael Starbird

Michael Starbird

Alumni
Mathematics
|
College of Natural Sciences

Michael Starbird is a University Distinguished Teaching Professor of Mathematics at The University of Texas at Austin. He has been at UT his whole career except for leaves, including to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. He has received more than fifteen teaching awards including the Mathematical Association of America's 2007 national teaching award, the Minnie Stevens Piper Professor statewide award, the UT Regents' Outstanding Teaching Award, and most of the UT-wide teaching awards.

strong

Pauline Strong

Current Fellow
Anthropology
Humanities Institute
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Collaborative Learning
Inclusive Teaching and Learning

Dr. Pauline Strong is a Professor of Anthropology and served as director of the Humanities Institute and its Difficult Dialogues Program from 2009 until 2022. She is also affiliated with American Studies, Native American and Indigenous Studies, Women’s and Gender Studies, and Human Dimensions of Organizations. Her research focuses on representations and self-representations of indigenous people in the US, and her teaching areas include cultural anthropology, feminist anthropology, culture and health, museum studies, youth organizations, and indigenous cultures and histories.