MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — Another welcome tradition at the Middle Tennessee State University’s Fall
Faculty Meeting is the annual presentation of the MTSU Foundation Awards, which
recognize, celebrate and reward university faculty members for their
accomplishments inside and outside the classroom.
This
year’s recipient of the foundation’s Career Achievement Award, considered the
pinnacle of recognition for stellar MTSU professors, is Kevin E. Smith,
a nationally recognized professor of anthropology at MTSU since 1988 (becoming
full-time faculty in 1994) and the founder and director of MTSU’s anthropology
program in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology in the College of Liberal
Arts.
Smith
received his award at MTSU’s annual Fall Faculty Meeting, held Thursday inside
Tucker Theatre.
“Thank
you to MTSU for allowing me the opportunities to earn this award,” Smith said,
pointing out that achieving such an accomplishment is “because of the
opportunities that we have here at MTSU as faculty.”
Smith’s
research interests lie in the archaeology of the southeastern United States
with a particular focus on the late prehistoric Native American cultures of
Middle Tennessee pre-1500 A.D., Tennessee’s late 18th- and early
19th-century frontier period, and African-American life from slavery through
Reconstruction. He’s an internationally recognized scholar on middle
Tennessee’s archaeology and an acclaimed mentor to hundreds of students whose
involvement in the more than 30 different courses he’s taught at MTSU is
enabling them to take their knowledge and talent around the world.
Smith
said he felt MTSU’s anthropology program has been vital over the years in
preserving archaeological sites around the region as the areas around Nashville
experienced tremendous growth and development over the years.
He
gave special thanks Dr. Marilyn Wells, the only anthropology professor at MTSU
when Smith was hired and now a professor emeritus. Wells charged Smith with
developing the program, he said.
“I
took on that challenge,” said Smith, adding that he’d be teaching his 5,000th
MTSU student this year. “We’ve had great faculty and great support.”
In
addition to his university service, Smith has organized or chaired more than 20
national, regional and state conferences and symposia and conducted archival
and collections research for the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of
the American Indian and the Tennessee State Museum, among others.
MTSU
alumnus Ron Nichols (’70), vice president of the MTSU Foundation, was on hand
to present 14 more MTSU professors with awards Thursday for their achievements.
The
five recipients of the foundation’s 2017 Outstanding Teacher Award are:
- Virginia S. “Ginny” Danby, Womack Educational Leadership
Department, College of Education.
- Timothy R. “Tim” Graeff, Department of Marketing, Jones College of
Business.
- Rebekka King, Department of Philosophy and Religious
Studies, College of Liberal Arts.
- Seth J. Marshall, Department of Psychology, College of
Behavioral and Health Sciences.
- Janet K. McCormick, Department of Communication Studies and
Organizational Communication, College of Liberal Arts.
The
nine additional foundation award recipients for 2017 are:
- Julie A. Myatt Barger, Department of English, College of Liberal
Arts – Outstanding Teaching in General Education Award.
- Becky B. Alexander, Department of Elementary and Special
Education, College of Education, and Tyler A. Babb, Department of
Aerospace, College of Basic and Applied Sciences – Outstanding Achievement
in Instructional Technology Awards.
- Sekou M. Franklin, Department of Political Science and
International Relations, College of Liberal Arts; K. Virginia Hemby,
Department of Marketing, Jones College of Business; and Nancy Ruth
James, director of the MTSU Child Care Lab, College of Education –
Outstanding Public Service Awards.
- Mary B. Farone, Department of Biology, College of Basic and
Applied Sciences – Distinguished Research Award.
- Charles O. “Odie” Blackman, Department of Recording Industry,
College of Media and Entertainment – Creative Activity Award.
- Hugh E. Berryman, Department of Sociology and Anthropology and
director of the Forensic Institute for Research and Education at MTSU,
College of Liberal Arts – Special Projects Award.
The
MTSU Foundation also recognized 11 new faculty emerti and two dean emeriti and
42 newly promoted and/or tenured faculty members across campus. You can view
the complete 2017 MTSU Foundation Awards program, which includes more details
about the award winners and other honorees, via PDF at http://ow.ly/Y9k730eDq1V.
Current
Foundation president is MTSU alumnus Tom Provow (’78).
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