Teaching Awards from the NU Alumni Association and
Alumnae of Northwestern

1987 Irwin Weil Slavic Languages and Literatures
1989 Charles Moskos Sociology
1991 Ron Braeutigam Economics
1992 Carl Petry History
1994 Joseph Lambert Chemistry
1995

George Bond

Religion

1996 Henry Binford History
1997 Robert Holmgren Biochemistry, Molecular & Cell Biology 
1998 Richard Gaber
David Meyer
Biochemistry, Molecular & Cell Biology
Physics & Astronomy
1999 Edward Muir History
2000 Richard Silverman Chemistry
2001 Daniel Linzer BMBCB
2003 Peter Hayes History
2006 (Alumnae) Franziska Lys German
2008 Thomas Meade

Chemistry

Biochemistry, Molecular & Cell Biology

2009

(Alumnae)

Karl Scheidt Chemistry

 

Back to Faculty Award Winners

Honors and Achievements

Physics and Astronomy professor Jim Sauls has been awarded the Bardeen Prize for his work on superconductivity.

Art Theory & Practice MFA candidate Rachel Niffenegger has been accepted into the two-year, De Ateliers residency program in Amsterdam.

Sarah Jacoby, assistant professor of Religious Studies, has been awarded an ACLS Grant for 2012-2013.

The History Department's Dyan Elliott and Melissa Macauley were offered fellowships at the National Humanities Center for 2012-2013.

Krista Thompson, associate professor of Art History, has been awarded an ACLS fellowship for 2012-2013.

Chemistry professor Tobin Marks received the 2012 National Academy of Sciences Award in Chemical Sciences.

Mentions in the Media

Michelle Obama, Paradox
"Michelle Obama is a genuine paradox," said Darlene Clark Hine, a professor of African American studies and history at Northwestern University. Hine's lecture, part of a black studies conference at the university last week, argued that the first lady is a "transformative, liberationist" figure -- despite her interest in domestic issues and the long list of magazine cover stories focused on topics such as Obama's approach to motherhood or the importance of healthful eating. washingtonpost.com April 16, 2012 Full story

Seismic hazards: Japan earthquake and other tectonic surprises challenge scientific assumptions
"It's almost impossible to make a sensible earthquake hazard map," argues Northwestern University geophysicist Seth Stein.... "We call this the 'whack-a-mole model' of earthquake hazard mapping. The mole will come up the same hole that it went down," Stein said. And that's rarely the case. washingtonpost.com March 9, 2012 Full story

December 17, 2010