Present Academic Position and Address
Associate Professor of the Practice of Biology, Department
of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC. My primary responsibility is
to direct the introductory biology laboratories. I also teach a field
and lab-oriented organismal diversity course and non-majors plant biology.
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Academic Background
B.A. in Botany with highest honors, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill (1970); B.A. in Zoology, University of Washington,
Seattle (1976); Ph.D. in Zoology, Duke University (1982); NSF post-doctoral
researcher, Department of Botany, Duke University; Instructor, Duke University
Writing Program. My research interests are in pollination ecology, plant
reproductive biology, and ecological genetics. My teaching interests
are in biodiversity, introductory biology, botany, and scientific writing.
Since 1998 I have served as the Treasurer for the Duke chapter of Sigma
Xi.
Past and Current ABLE Activities or
Service
I joined ABLE in 1994 and have participated in every
annual meeting since then. I presented major workshops at Emory ("Diversity
of Photosynthetic Pigments"), Purdue ("Reproductive Isolation
in Angiosperms"), and Clemson (“Mitochondria and Metabolism in
Honeybee Flight Muscle”). I have served as Treasurer for ABLE since
June of 1999.
Personal Statement
Like many members, I was delighted to discover an encouraging
group of people who understood the challenges of laboratory teaching
and who had so much to share. I have benefited enormously from the
workshops as both a presenter and participant. I believe ABLE can take
justifiable pride in the annual conferences, the website, and the published
Proceedings. I applaud the recent efforts to increase participation
in mini-workshops -- especially because they often cover topics that
are not “wet-lab” exercises -- and I welcome their inclusion in the
Proceedings.
As Treasurer I have continued a policy of fiscal prudence
and re-confirmed our tax-exempt status with the IRS. ABLE’s financial
status is healthy, and I welcome the opportunity to continue advising
the ABLE board on how to maintain that condition while balancing such
potential demands on our budget as the differences in meeting expenses
at different host institutions, waivers of registration grants, and
sponsoring of initiatives such as scholarships to develop new lab exercises.
My experience as ABLE Treasurer has given me a new appreciation for
the dedicated effort of our membership and the many, often unnoticed
contributions by the members that make ABLE so successful. In a time
of academic cut-backs and fiscal constraints, ABLE remains a strong
voice advocating for the value of hands-on learning and laboratory teaching.
I would be pleased to continue serving ABLE, and I will work to keep
fostering the openness and support that characterizes our Association.
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