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Recipients of Russell Awards for excellence in undergraduate teaching announced

Athens, Ga. – Three University of Georgia faculty have been named recipients of the Richard B. Russell Awards for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching.

The 2011 Russell Award winners are:

The announcement was made by Jere Morehead, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, whose office administers the awards program.

The Russell Awards recognize excellence in undergraduate instruction by faculty members in their early academic careers. Three awards are made each year, with each awardee receiving $5,000 from the Richard B. Russell Foundation.

The awards presentations are usually made at the annual Faculty Recognition Banquet in April, but Sweetser will receive her award at a small ceremony on March 9. Sweetser, a Navy Reservist, has been mobilized as an Individual Augmentee to Afghanistan.

Sweetser joined the UGA faculty in 2006 and teaches courses in public relations research methods, social media and PR campaigns. She advised the Grady College team that won the 2010 national championship in the Public Relations Student Society of America Bateman Case Study Competition.She also has published papers with undergraduates in top PR journals and co-authored papers with undergraduates that were presented at major conferences.

Maerz came to UGA in 2005 and teaches undergraduate courses in herpetology and animal behavior, as well as an Honors Gateway Seminar for Natural Sciences Research. A member of the inaugural Writing Fellows program at UGA, he provides students many opportunities to write in his classes and also is committed to student-led problem solving using a variety of techniques in both large and small classes.He actively involves undergraduates in his research program and has been recognized with a mentor award by UGA’s Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities.

Like the other recipients, Allen successfully combines teaching, research and service. He came to UGA as a senior research scientist with the Center for Computational Chemistry and became an adjunct and then associate professor in the chemistry department, where he receives stellar student evaluations for the large freshman chemistry courses he teaches using innovative technology and encouraging student interaction. A 2009 recipient of UGA’s Creative Research Medal, he also was recognized in 2010 by the Northeast Georgia Section of the American Chemical Society for outstanding undergraduate teaching.

The Russell Awards, named for the long-serving senator from Georgia, were established by the Russell Foundation and first presented in 1991.

To be eligible for the award, faculty must have been at UGA for at least three years and in a tenure-track position for no more than 10 years.A committee of senior faculty members and undergraduate students makes the selections from nominations submitted by the deans.

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