Author: primmc

  • College Kudos: Dick Townsend, College of Business Administration

    Deans and administrators from each college suggested one of their faculty members who deserves special “kudos” during Faculty Appreciation Week.

    Richard TownsendAs associate professor of accounting and information management, Dick Townsend has seen the University of Tennessee campus and students change over the past 40 years, since he started working at UT in 1969.

    From teaching a course on a closed circuit television from 1975 to 1984 to teaching courses in the new, technology-rich James A. Haslam II Business Building, Townsend is still in awe of how he has seen the campus grow.

    “I’ve really enjoyed teaching at UT. I have a great group of colleagues,” Townsend said. “My colleagues and students are fantastic. The colleagues are very supportive because they are so good at what they do. That’s who I’m going to miss the most when I retire. I’ll also miss the interaction with the students. It’s a fresh group of students each year, and the students are generally fun to be with.”

    Townsend plans on retiring in June.

    Townsend received his doctorate in 1966 from the University of Texas at Austin. Here, he teaches undergraduate financial accounting courses. He also was the director of the master of accountancy program for 20 years.

    Outside of UT, Townsend also has taught continuing education for CPAs for more than 30 years. Through these efforts, Townsend said he’s made many friends and reconnected with former students.

    Although he has received many awards, the awards Townsend is most appreciative are the UT Alumni Outstanding Teaching Awards in 1982 and 2003 and the UT Hesler Award for teaching and service in 2001.

    His colleague, Department Head and Professor of Accounting and Information Management Dan Murphy, holds Townsend in the highest regard.

    “He is a beloved faculty member who consistently displays incredible teaching ability, a positive attitude and great collegiality,” Murphy said. “In addition to being one of the most well-respected and liked professors in our department’s history, Dick is one of the finest gentlemen we have known. His legacy is the profound influence he has had on the lives of students, professionals and colleagues.”

    Former student Matt White took a class with Townsend for only one semester, but that semester made a lasting impression.

    “He did a great job explaining advanced financial reporting, but he has made an impact on me that has gone far beyond the classroom,” White said. “I really admire the way Dr. Townsend authentically cares about his students. I also really appreciate the way he’s been very quick to help me out with things I’ve needed, such as career advice or providing a reference. Dr. Townsend is definitely irreplaceable!”

    ***

    In honor of Faculty Appreciation Week, Tennessee Today will feature stories and videos based on comments about great faculty members submitted by students, alumni and others.

    You can send a shout out to your favorite faculty member or read what others have written.

    Also this week, area merchants will offer a variety of discounts for UT faculty.

  • Time to Say ‘Thanks!’ UT Faculty Appreciation Week is Feb. 17-23

    KNOXVILLE — Is there a UT professor, researcher or lecturer who deserves a special pat on the back for the great work they do?

    If so, Faculty Appreciation Week, which begins tomorrow and runs through Feb. 23, is the perfect time to say “thank you.”

    In celebration of Faculty Appreciation Week, you can send a shout out to your favorite faculty member or read what others have written.

    Faculty Appreciation Week is a new event intended to offer special recognition to faculty whose teaching, research and outreach activities have helped make UT Knoxville a great university.

    In honor of Faculty Appreciation Week, Tennessee Today will feature stories and videos based on comments about great faculty members submitted by students, alumni and others.

    Also this week, area merchants will offer a variety of discounts for UT faculty.

    Among the special events planned to celebrate Faculty Appreciation Week:

    Wednesday, Feb. 17

    • Discount tickets to UT men’s basketball vs. Georgia. Faculty can get $7 tickets by logging onto http://www.uttix.com. Click on “VOLS TIX” at the top of the page, choose “GROUP TICKET WINDOW,” and sign in (ID=faculty; password=staff). There is a $1.25 processing fee.

    Monday, Feb. 22

    • “Night at the Museum.” To be held from 5 to 6:30 p.m. at McClung Museum, this event will include a reception with hors d’oeuvres, a scavenger hunt and a presentation about how to use the museum’s resources. The event is hosted by the Tennessee Teaching and Learning Center and the McClung Museum and sponsored by the Provost’s Office.
    • Discount tickets to UT Lady Vols basketball vs. LSU. Faculty can get $7 tickets by logging onto http://www.uttix.com. Click on “LADY VOLS TIX” at the top of the page, choose “GROUP TICKET WINDOW,” and sign in (ID=faculty; password=staff). There is a $1.25 processing fee.

    Tuesday, Feb. 23

    • Free continental breakfast for faculty. Sponsored by Student Alumni Associates, the drop-in breakfast will be available between 7 to 9:30 a.m. at Tyson Alumni House.
    • “Charley’s Aunt” and reception at Clarence Brown Theatre. Due to high demand, all tickets have been distributed for this event. Another free showing of “Charley’s Aunt” for faculty will be held on March 2. Click here for more information.
    • Luncheon Colloquium. The Tennessee Teaching and Learning Center and the College of Education, Health and Human Sciences are sponsoring this event at noon in the University Center’s Shiloh Room. RSVP by noon on Feb. 19 to reserve a free box lunch. Jan Allen, formerly of UT Knoxville and now of Columbia University, will talk about “Applying the Results of New Brain Functioning Studies to Teaching Today’s College Students.”

    CONTACT:

    Amy Blakely (865-974-5034, [email protected])

  • Provost’s Office to Lead VOL Vision Planning Effort

    Susan MartinThe Office of the Provost will take the lead this semester in launching VOL Vision, a planning process to engage the campus in a robust dialog regarding UT Knoxville’s future.

    I hope that each of you will consider joining us in this important activity.

    The VOL Vision process will build upon earlier efforts to create a campus strategic plan. Our most recent effort, during the 2007-08 academic year, involved 150 faculty, staff and students in discussions about campus priorities. As significant changes have occurred in the state and nation’s economic and higher education setting, it is now time to bring our campus community back together for these vital discussions.

    It is more important than ever to understand as a campus who we are, where we are going, and how we will get there. VOL Vision will provide that roadmap by laying out a campus vision and statement of strategic priorities for the coming years. We hope to produce a finalized plan by mid-fall semester 2010.

    Later this month, we will ask for your feedback in a variety of ways on new materials which are based on past drafts and a recent visit with our external consultant, Kathleen Paris of the University of Wisconsin’s Office of Quality Improvement.

    Faculty members Ed Cortez, Joan Heminway and Dixie Thompson, who currently represent our campus as fellows in the Southeastern Conference Academic Leadership Development Program, will lead the feedback process by engaging faculty, staff, administrators and students to share their thoughts, ideas and concerns.

    Our goal is to formalize a plan that represents the best thinking on how UT Knoxville will navigate a challenging and sometimes uncertain future, but also one that brings unparalleled opportunities.

    We will keep you posted about this effort. You will receive additional information soon about several opportunities to be involved in this process. We look forward to engaging with you in this process, and we welcome all of your suggestions and comments. Thank you for all that you do for the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

  • Crisis Resources Available for Faculty and Staff

    The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, wishes to express its condolences to those affected by the tragic events that occurred last week at the University of Alabama at Huntsville.

    This incident reminds us of our citizenship in a larger community of scholarship and caring. It also provides an opportunity for us to reflect upon our local university community and the importance of caring for ourselves and those around us.

    If you are a Knoxville-area staff or faculty member in crisis, or if you are concerned about the behaviors displayed by a staff or faculty member, there is help available.

    There are multiple resources available to you, depending on the specific situation:

    • Benefits-eligible staff and faculty members seeking confidential and free mental health counseling for themselves can call 1-800-308-4934 to reach the Employee Assistance Program (EAP).  This number puts you in touch with Magellan Health, the company that provides UT with EAP services. Alternately, you can contact Mary Lucal, EAP coordinator, at 865-974-1909.
    • If a staff or faculty member is experiencing a conflict for which mediation might be useful, an appointment can be made to see an ombudsperson. The faculty ombudsperson is Bill Nugent; the staff ombudsperson is Elaine Wynn. Appointments with either can be made by calling 865-974-6481.
    • If you are a staff or faculty member and are in crisis, or if you are concerned about another faculty or staff member between the hours of 8 a.m. and 6 p.m., you can call the Human Resources Call Center at 865-946-8847. Outside of the 865 area code, Knoxville-area faculty and staff can call1-888-444-UTHR. The call center team can connect you with someone trained to assist you.
    • In case of immediate emergency, those on the Knoxville campus can contact the UT Police Department at 865-974-3114.

    Again, the most important fact you can remember when you or someone in your workplace is experiencing crisis is that there is help available.

  • News Sentinel: UT Access, Success — Goals Not in Conflict

    This op-ed column by UT Knoxville Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek was published February 14, 2010.

    In the column, Chancellor Cheek discusses the university’s efforts to increase need-based scholarships for students while working to ensure that all students have every opportunity to succeed academically once they arrive on campus.

  • “Night at the Museum” Faculty Event Feb. 22

    The Tennessee Teaching and Learning Center and the McClung Museum will present “A Night at the Museum” for UT Knoxville faculty, lecturers, instructors and graduate teaching assistants, 5 – 6:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 22.

    In conjunction with Faculty Appreciation Week on campus, faculty will have the chance to learn more about the McClung Museum and how it can help reinforce classroom teaching. As in the movie, the museum will “come alive” for you and your students. A scavenger hunt will begin the evening, followed by refreshments and ample time to meet faculty from different disciplines as you share the excitement of education.

    The event is free but space is limited and a reservation is required. RSVP to the Tennessee Teaching and Learning Center at [email protected].

  • David Dia

    David Dia
    Assistant Professor
    Social Work

    Expertise:
    David Dia can discuss the treatment of anxiety (panic, social anxiety, OCD, etc.) and related disorders (depression, trichotillomania, hoarding, ADHD) with children, adolescents, and adults. Dia also can discuss cognitive behavioral therapy. He has been featured on the A&E network’s program “Hoarders” and the Discovery Channel’s program “Buried Alive: Hoarders.”

    Expertise Categories: Social Work | Therapy

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 901-448-4431
    UT Web: http://www.csw.utk.edu/faculty/pages/dia/index.htm
    Personal Web: http://www.drdaviddia.com/

  • Flavia Brizio-Skov

    Flavia Brizio-Skov
    Professor
    Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures

    Expertise:
    Flavia Brizio-Skov can discuss contemporary Italian literature, with an emphasis on critical theory, the problems of autobiography, postmodernism, metafiction, intertextuality, the collapse of literary genres, metahistory and the historical novel. Brizio-Skov also can discuss cultural studies and Italian cinema.

    Expertise Categories: Italian | Cinema | Literature | Business

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-7007
    Web: http://web.utk.edu/~brizio/

  • Participate in the CIE International Literary Colloquy

    In support of the University of Tennessee’s “Ready for the World” international and intercultural awareness initiative, the UT Center for International Education seeks participants in its spring 2010 International Literary Colloquy (ILC).

    Over its thirteen years, the ILC has engaged hundreds of UT students, faculty and staff in exploring cultural themes in books written by or about various world societies.

    Sixty spaces will be available this spring semester and the UT community is invited to apply. Each participant will be provided with copies of the three books and is expected to participate in all three book discussions and thematic luncheons. This semester’s three books are set in fairy tales from three different cultures. Experts on the included themes will facilitate the discussions which take place during three Wednesdays or three Thursdays from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the International House.

    Applications can be picked up an at the front desk of the International House or downloaded from their Web site. Once the application is completed it can be turned in at the I-House front desk or e-mailed to [email protected]. Applications must be received by Thursday, Feb. 11. Applicants will be notified of their status.

    For more info call 974-4453.

  • Accounting Students Offer Free Basic Income Tax Preparation

    The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, chapter of Beta Alpha Psi, an accounting honors student organization, is partnering again this year with the Internal Revenue Service and the United Way to provide free basic income tax preparation through the VITA program.

    The income tax preparation assistance is available from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays through April 10 at the UT Extension office at the Burlington Library, 4614 Asheville Highway.

    For more info call 974-1755.

  • Clarence Brown Theatre Hosts Faculty/Staff Appreciation Night March 2 With Encore Showing of “Charley’s Aunt”

    "Charley's Aunt"Knoxville-area University of Tennessee faculty and staff are invited to attend Faculty/Staff Appreciation Night at Clarence Brown Theatre on Tuesday, March 2, for a special performance of “Charley’s Aunt” at 7:30 p.m.

    This date is in addition to the previously-publicized Feb. 23 showing. Due to high demand, all tickets have been distributed for that date and the theatre has scheduled this second free performance.

    The family-friendly play has been called one of the funniest ever written. UT employees and up to five family members will each receive free admission and are invited to a reception hosted by the President’s office prior to the show.

    “Our employees are the university’s greatest assets and this event is presented as a thank you for all that UT employees do every day,” said Interim President Jan Simek.

    For questions or more information about Faculty/Staff Appreciation Night, call Brian Gard, director of special events, at 974-5028 or visit http://www.tennessee.edu/system/events/employeeappreciation/index.html.

  • Team of Six Governor’s Chairs Complement Campus Research Base

    Advertisement featuring the Tennessee Governor's Chair Program appearing in the Chronicle of Higher Education.

    Advertisement featuring the Tennessee Governor's Chair Program appearing in the Chronicle of Higher Education.

    Five new members of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, faculty — Howard Hall, Frank Loeffler, Yilu Liu, Alexei Sokolov and Thomas Zawodzinski, along with Jeremy Smith, hired in 2006 — have already made their presence known throughout campus and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

    The Governor’s Chair program is at the heart of our partnership with ORNL and these world-class researchers complement our talented and highly productive faculty.

    Learn more about their work at the new Governor’s Chairs Web site, where you can watch videos of each researcher.

  • Matthew Theriot

    Matthew Theriot
    Associate Professor and Program Director
    Social Work

    Expertise:
    Matthew Theriot is director of the Bachelor of Science in Social Work program. Theriot can discuss juvenile justice, school violence, mental health and criminal justice, mental health stigmas, and social work education.

    Expertise Categories: Social Work

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-8109
    Web: http://www.csw.utk.edu/faculty/pages/theriot/index.htm

  • Christine Egger

    Christine Egger
    Professor
    Small Animal Clinical Sciences

    Expertise:
    Christine Egger can discuss anesthesia and pain management of veterinary patients, the development of sustained-relese opoid formulations, acupuncture and herbal medicine.

    Expertise Categories: Veterinary Medicine

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-8387
    Web: http://www.vet.utk.edu/departments/SACS/index.php

  • Sarah Craun

    Sarah Craun
    Assistant Professor
    Social Work

    Expertise:
    Sarah Craun can discuss policies to prevent sexual violence, focusing mainly on sex offender registries, domestic violence and the use of mapping in social work.

    Expertise Categories: Social Work

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-3164
    Web: http://www.csw.utk.edu/faculty/pages/craun/index.htm

  • Stefan Spanier

    Stefan Spanier
    Professor
    Physics and Astronomy

    Expertise:
    Stefan Spanier can discuss particle physics, the Big Bang, international research collaborations and research at particle accelerators such as Fermilab in Chicago and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland.

    Expertise Categories: Physics

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-0597
    Web: http://hep.phys.utk.edu/wiki/Stefan_Spanier

  • Michael D. Wilcox Jr.

    Michael D. Wilcox Jr.
    Assistant Professor
    Agricultural and Resource Economics

    Expertise:
    Michael Wilcox can discuss rural development, economic development, international development, workforce development, entrepreneurship, agricultural marketing and price analysis.

    Expertise Categories: Development | Agriculture | Marketing

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-7410
    Web: http://economics.ag.utk.edu/wilcox.html

  • Christian Parigger

    Christian Parigger
    Associate Professor
    Physics and Astronomy

    Expertise:
    Christian Parigger can discuss laser applications, physics on the atomic, molecular and optical level, and computational physics.

    Expertise Categories: Physics | Lasers

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 931-393-7338
    Web: http://www.utsi.edu/faculty/cparigger/parigger.htm

  • Nominate Someone for an Alumni Public Service Award

    Each year the University of Tennessee Alumni Association provides funds for an Alumni Public Service Award of $2,000 to the Knoxville campus. The purpose of the award is to recognize individuals for outstanding achievement in public service and, through this recognition, to stimulate the growth and development of the university’s public service role.

    As one of the three primary missions of the university, public service includes technical assistance, management assistance, applied research, and other professionally related activities which are undertaken to help federal, state or local government, business, industry, professional organizations, education institutions (including extraordinary service to The University of Tennessee), or other client groups in the solution of practical problems or in taking advantages of opportunities for improvement.

    Activities unrelated to professional expertise undertaken in a citizenship role and resulting in service to church and community may also be considered. Services to the University of Tennessee which are part of normal faculty and staff work, such as student counseling and committee membership, may be considered if such service is deemed to be above and beyond the expected requirements of one’s job description.

    All full-time faculty and exempt staff of the university are eligible except (a) previous winners and (b) those whose primary job responsibilities are in public service. The Alumni Public Service Award recipient will be selected each spring by a committee and announced at the annual Chancellor’s Honors Banquet. Faculty and staff members who are nominated for a University of Tennessee Citation for Extraordinary Community Service will be automatically considered for the Alumni Public Service Award. Finalists for the alumni Outstanding Teacher Award who are not selected as a winner and who have a significant public service record as well may be considered.

    To submit your nomination, please send a letter of recommendation along with a current CV or resume to Mary Holtman-Reed ([email protected]) or fax to 974-0810. All nominations must be received by Friday, Feb. 19.

    For more info call 974-6507.

  • Rodney Runyan

    Rodney Runyan
    Assistant Professor
    Retail, Hospitality, and Tourism Management

    Expertise:
    Rodney Runyan can discuss entrepreneurship, small business management, community branding, tourism branding and international retailing.

    Expertise Categories: Management | Tourism

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-4594
    Web: http://csm.utk.edu/