Campus News

Two faculty members receive the inaugural UGA Award for Excellence in Teaching

Two faculty members have received the inaugural University of Georgia Award for Excellence in Teaching, which recognizes exemplary instruction by teaching faculty.

The 2021-2022 honorees are Mark W. Huber, senior lecturer in the department of management information systems in the Terry College of Business, and Melissa Landers-Potts, senior lecturer in the department of human development and family science in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences.

The University of Georgia Award for Excellence in Teaching was established in 2021 based on a recommendation from the UGA Teaching Academy. The award communicates the university’s commitment to its teaching mission and recognizes the corps of teaching faculty whose time is primarily dedicated to offering outstanding instruction to students, promoting pedagogical innovation and providing an engaging environment for student learning.

“It gives me great pleasure to recognize the outstanding contributions of our teaching faculty with this new award,” said S. Jack Hu, the university’s senior vice president for academic affairs and provost. “Dr. Huber and Dr. Landers-Potts have dedicated their careers to preparing students for success, and I extend my deepest appreciation to them.”

Mark W. Huber

Mark W. Huber (Submitted photo)

Huber’s commitment to teaching, service and leadership in the classroom inspires his students to achieve both individual and common goals. He is a passionate advocate for innovation in the classroom and often goes above and beyond to support students. When classes were conducted remotely in spring 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Huber held half-hour Zoom sessions with each of his 200 students to ensure a more personal connection beyond just the synchronous teaching of his classes.

Huber has received numerous awards, including the UGA Career Center Student Development Recognition Award, the UGA Creative Teaching Award, the Lee Anne Seawell Faculty Recognition Award and the Terry College Outstanding Service Award. He is a recognized campus leader who serves as vice chair of the UGA Teaching Academy. Huber is also the co-founder of the Teaching Academy Fellows Program, a mentoring program for early-career faculty, now in its 11th year.

Huber has a strong commitment to international education. He has led studies abroad for the UGA at Oxford Program and the Terry College of Business in China and South America programs. Additionally, he chaired the Terry Study Abroad and Foreign Exchange committees for multiple years.

Melissa Landers-Potts

Melissa Landers-Potts (Submitted photo)

Landers-Potts is deeply dedicated to effective teaching and learning and works at the cutting edge of pedagogy to benefit her students and community partners. She has received campus and national recognition for her high level of service-learning expertise in both traditional and online settings, including UGA’s Creative Teaching Award and the 2018 Service-Learning Teaching Excellence Award. She is a two-time recipient of the Teacher of the Year Award from the College of Family and Consumer Sciences and was one of 100 faculty and alumni honored for their service and impact as part of the college’s Centennial Celebration. In 2019, Landers-Potts was inducted into the UGA Teaching Academy, the first non-tenure track faculty member in the history of the organization to be recognized in this manner. Nationally, she has received the Cognella Innovations in Teaching Award from the National Council on Family Relations.

Landers-Potts’ excellence in the classroom is exemplified by her development of an innovative online service-learning class in which students had the opportunity to volunteer as online peer mentors to adolescents and young adults around the globe. The course was selected as a national exemplar to be used for faculty training purposes with the Service-Learning Quality Assessment Tool.

Each year, one to two full-time faculty members in a non-tenurable position will be selected to receive the UGA Award for Excellence in Teaching, which includes a $7,500 cash award. A committee composed of seven senior faculty members (at least four of whom will be teaching faculty) and two undergraduate students select the winner.

To learn more about the University of Georgia Award for Excellence in Teaching, see https://provost.uga.edu/resources/faculty-resources/awards/excellence-in-teaching/.