{"id":3030,"date":"2013-04-30T13:30:05","date_gmt":"2013-04-30T18:30:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/inside.augsburg.edu\/news\/?p=3030"},"modified":"2023-01-18T19:51:49","modified_gmt":"2023-01-18T19:51:49","slug":"distinguished_contributions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/news\/2013\/04\/30\/distinguished_contributions\/","title":{"rendered":"Four faculty recognized for distinguished contributions"},"content":{"rendered":"
The 2013 recipients of the Distinguished Contributions to Teaching and Learning awards have made exemplary contributions to creating an engaging academic learning environment through teaching, scholarship, and mentoring and advising. <\/p>\n Laura Boisen is known for her complete dedication to mentoring all those with whom she comes into contact in the Social Work Department, including current students and junior faculty as well as alumni.<\/p>\n Boisen, the field coordinator for students in the College’s Master of Social Work (MSW) program, was recognized for her work to ensure students gain hands-on skills during their studies.<\/p>\n “Laura has taken great pains to ensure that every single MSW student…has a practicum experience that enriches their learning and helps them to achieve a high level of skill and professionalism,” wrote one of Boisen’s colleagues.<\/p>\n Boisen also volunteers her time to coach alumni in their efforts to pass the state social work licensing exam. Nancy Rodenborg, chair of the Social Work Department, said this work demonstrates Boisen’s commitment to helping ensure social workers can provide services within their own communities and cultures.<\/p>\n This sentiment was echoed by a group of MSW alumni who said Boisen “provided the best of the best for us…. It was through Dr. Boisen’s outstanding teaching strategies that we are now able to serve in communities that have long been waiting for members of their community to provide them with the best social services possible.”<\/p>\n David Matz is recognized for his commitment to mentoring students through the research process and for his skill at matching students’ interests and ability levels to their work.<\/p>\n “Students who work with him are excited about research and ultimately confident that the work they have done represents quality scholarship in their field,” said Dixie Shafer, director of Augsburg’s URGO program.<\/p>\n Shafer said Matz sets a high bar but helps students achieve his rigorous standards. Some of his students, she said, present their work at national conferences, a high accomplishment for undergraduates.<\/p>\n Matz has served as adviser, professor, mentor, and colleague to Hillary “Hue” Manning ’13 and was a co-adviser on her summer research project<\/p>\n “Dr. Matz was always there to help me plan, keep track of deadlines, and stay true to good scholarship,” she said. “…[He] has challenged me, inspired me, and helped me see how my scholarly strengths fit with the needs of my field.”<\/p>\n In addition to teaching, Matz is the chair of the Psychology Department. His scholarly interests include groups and group decision-making, cognitive dissonance, evolutionary psychology and mate selection, and the relationship between religion and prejudice. Matz established an eye-tracking lab at Augsburg, which is used to study the relationship between physical features, attention, and the perceptions of desirable characteristics in potential mates.<\/p>\n Darcey Engen ’88 practices her scholarly activity through professional theater work in the community, which enables her to bring her writing, acting, and directing experiences to Augsburg students in the classroom and on the stage.<\/p>\n “I believe it has been Darcey, as much as anyone on this campus, who has helped us understand what scholarship \u2018looks like’ for someone centered in the arts,” said Bob Cowgill, a professor of English who has worked with Engen on several Augsburg theater productions.<\/p>\n Engen, who serves as chair of the Augsburg Theater Arts Department, worked with colleagues on an original production, titled I<\/em>‘<\/em>m Telling<\/em>. The play draws on Engen’s research with mothers in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood and explores issues of “everyday motherhood.” Engen said performing is vital to her life as a professor. “A piece of artistic work created by a performer is her scholarship,” she said. “It’s how we interact with big ideas about the human journey.”<\/p>\n
For Excellence in Mentoring and Advising: Laura Boisen, Professor of Social Work<\/h2>\n
For Excellence in Scholarship: David Matz, Associate Professor of Psychology<\/h2>\n
For Excellence in Scholarship: Darcey Engen, Associate Professor of Theater Arts<\/h2>\n