College Recognizes Outstanding Faculty Members
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Harvey Kail
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Faculty members in English, Anthropology
and Modern Languages and Classics, and a teaching assistant in History
are the recipients of 2008 awards presented by the University of Maine
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Presented annually to faculty
members nominated by their colleagues and students, the awards honor
overall achievement and particular strengths in teaching, research and
service. The College also honors an outstanding teaching assistant, who
is recognized jointly by the Graduate School.
Harvey Kail, professor of English, will
receive the award for outstanding teaching and advising. Paul (Jim)
Roscoe, professor of anthropology, will receive the award for
outstanding research and creative achievement, and Kathleen March,
professor of Spanish, will receive the outstanding service and outreach
award. Abigail Davis, a graduate student in history, will receive the
teaching assistant award.
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Paul (Jim) Roscoe
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Kail is founding director of the
University of Maine Writing Center housed in the English Department. A
veteran teacher with 30 years on the UMaine faculty, Kail has trained
and supervised hundreds of peer tutors who have worked with thousands of
students in the Center and in teaching jobs after graduation. He is an
expert on collaborative learning recognized nationally and
internationally as an outstanding teacher of teachers. He earned
bachelor's and master's degrees in English from the University of Toledo
and a doctorate from Northern Illinois University.
Roscoe came to the University of Maine
in 1984 with degrees in physics, liberal studies in sciences and
anthropology from Manchester (England) University and a doctorate in
anthropology from the University of Rochester. He has published 32
peer-reviewed articles and book chapters and two of his own edited
volumes. In the last 25 years, he has spent more than two and a half
years in Papua New Guinea, 26 months of that time living with the
Yangoru Boiken of the East Sepik Province. His papers have won national
and international prizes and he received the university's Presidential
Outstanding Teaching Award in 1996.
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Kathleen March
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March came to the University of Maine
in 1984 with bachelor's, master's and doctorate degrees in Spanish from
State University of New York at Buffalo. She also earned a doctorate in
creativity at the University of Maine in 2002. March is a leader in
creating models for service learning, the most dramatic being a class
that travels to Honduras during spring break, where students use
language skills in providing educational and health supplies and
services for residents of the Copan region in Santa Rosa and in the
rural village of Dulce Nombre. March has served on numerous college and
university committees and the Faculty Senate, for which she was
president in 1996-97.
Davis serves as a teaching assistant
for courses Environmental History, Maine History and U.S. History. Her
supervising professors Richard Judd and Howard Segal praise her
dedication, preparation, enthusiasm and ability to communicate with
students, individually, in review sessions and in lectures. Davis earned
a bachelor's degree in American history from Western State College in
Gunnison, Colo., and is creating a history of the Appalachian Trail as
an intellectual concept in her graduate study.
The 2008 awards were presented April
22 at a reception in the McIntire Room of the Buchanan Alumni House on
the Orono campus.
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