Nine chosen for chancellor鈥檚 innovation program
October 21, 2014
Nine 性欲社 faculty members have been chosen as fellows in the Chancellor鈥檚 Innovation
in Technology and Elearning program, which supports innovative faculty who teach online
courses and-or use improved technological tools in their classrooms.
The 2014-15 CITE fellows are:
- Nicole Cundiff, business administration
- Daryl Farmer, English
- Joanne Healy, special education
- Doug Haugen, political science
- Sarah Hayes, chemistry and biochemistry
- Christopher Iceman, chemistry and biochemistry
- Sean McGee, homeland security and emergency management
- Roy Roehl, secondary education
- Sabine Siekmann, linguistics
The CITE fellows began the program with a daylong Innovation Lab on Oct. 18, during which they began investigating the process of innovation and brainstorming potential projects with 性欲社 eLearning鈥檚 instructional designers. 性欲社 eLearning facilitates the CITE program.
During the year, CITE fellows will break ground in their discipline, present to other faculty, share their findings and ideas, and improve the quality of education offered at 性欲社.
鈥淚nnovation is already occurring at the hands of a small group of 性欲社 faculty, but it often comes at the expense of their own time, money and sanity,鈥 says Madara Mason, 性欲社 eLearning's faculty development coordinator. 鈥淲e hope to offset some of those sacrifices by providing much needed support and, more importantly, by providing a limelight in which these faculty can share what they鈥檙e doing (and learning) with other faculty.鈥
Last year鈥檚 CITE Fellows explored topics including augmented reality, crowdsourcing, gamification and smart plug-ins for cold weather climates. You can learn more about their projects and the CITE fellows program at .
CITE fellows are chosen every October. The nomination period for 2015-16 CITE Fellows will open in February. Deans, department heads and previous CITE fellows can nominate faculty for this prestigious program.