Knapp, Jacobson, Westerberg Receive Education Awards English Professor Peggy Knapp, Principal Chemical Engineering Lecturer Annette Jacobson and Arthur W. Westerberg, the Swearingen University Professor of Chemical Engineering are this year's recipients of the university's prestigious education awards. Knapp earned the William H. and Frances S. Ryan Award for Meritorious Teaching. Jacobson received the Undergraduate Advising Award, and Westerberg garnered the Robert E. Doherty Award for Sustained Contributions to Excellence in Education. The awards were presented at an April 9 ceremony in Kresge Recital Hall.
Peggy Knapp In a supporting letter, one freshman who had Knapp as a teacher during his first semester describes her as "one of those rare jewels in the academic worldan individual whose attention and caring for her students is only matched by her stature as a serious scholar.... In class she treated us like distinguished colleagues rather than mere students." Another student lauded her for making a lasting impression on her intellectual, professional and personal life. "I feel that the Ryan Award might be one way in which to express to Professor Knapp the indelible impression she has left on me, and undoubtedly many other students at Carnegie Mellon.... I am very fortunate to be a product of my education, when one of my most memorable professors is Professor Peggy Knapp," she said. A first-year student said she felt so uncertain of her own abilities that she decided ahead of time not to raise her hand in any of her classes. She soon changed her mind. "I became so inspired by her sincere love for the literature, I felt free to express my own enthusiasm for the readings by asking questions and sharing ideas. The class... taught me new ways to approach, comprehend and analyze literature, but the most important lesson was one in self-assurance. Professor Knapp supported me...by providing me with a class where I felt safe, challenged and ultimately inspired." In her nomination letter Professor Kristina Straub, associate head of the English Department, said, "The quality that stands out over the 14 and a half years that I have taught and worked with Peggy in the English Department is the sheer and unflagging intensity of her concern for the quality of education afforded to Carnegie Mellon students.... Working with her on committees that range from hiring to the curriculum, I have observed that her first priority is always, 'what would be best for our students?'"
Annette Jacobson "Her classroom teaching is superb," adds John L. Anderson, dean of the College of Engineering, "but more relevant to this award is her advising and mentoring of undergraduates through the Colloids Polymers Surfaces (CPS) option, which she has done brilliantly. "She takes a sincere interest in each student and helps to tailor their elective choices in CPS to their major.... Annette never fails to sit down with the student to explain the pluses (and minuses) of entering this program and how best to complete it within the framework of the student's major." "Her contributions in education have been outstanding, including her coordination of the CPS program option for undergraduates," adds Cristina Amon, director of the Institute for Complex Engineered Systems (ICES). "These students are in high demand by companies like Bayer, PPG, and Procter & Gamble. The major reasons for this demand is the five different CPS courses taught by Annette that involve extensive laboratory involvement." A former student summed up the feelings of many alumni when she wrote: "Dr. Jacobson's genuine interest in the goals and achievements of her students, her ability to network resources and to create a rich and productive academic environment are all factors that make her an outstanding adviser, and place her among the very best at 一本道无码."
Arthur Westerberg "Most recently, he has been a leader in developing and continuing an innovative product design course within ICES... (that) involves students from different disciplines working on design problems in collaboration with an industrial sponsor. It provides both excellent experience for students and a broad exposure to innovative design approaches. Few, if any, universities have a comparable course...." Suresh Konda of the Software Engineering Institute says that although he was never formally taught by Westerberg, "I have been one among a number of people who, effectively, were his students. Quite simply, it would be impossible to be around Art even as a colleague without learning from him....The striking feature of Art as the teacher is that he is... utterly devoted to the idea that you, the student, learn." ICES Principal Research Scientist Eswaran Subrahmanian, praises Westerberg as "a scientist, an engineer and a quintessential pragmatist" who brings "to teaching a challenge, adventure and innovation that never stops. He is a paradigmatic teacher who is dedicated to teaching his students the ability to accept criticisms and continuously refine their ability to address them." "The greatness of universities like Carnegie Mellon," said the nomination letter signed by professors John Anderson, Ignacio Grossmann and Pradeep Khosla, "can be traced to distinguished professors such as Art Westerberg.... He is the reason that Carnegie Mellon holds a leading international position in designin teaching and curriculum development at all levels, and in multidisciplinary pursuit of equilibrating art and science in the design process.... His impact on education in design is without parallel."
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