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Cited
For His Passion, Innovation and Commitment
Edward L. Ayers, U.Va. Historian And Dean, Receives Nation’s
Top Teaching Award
November 13, 2003 --
Edward
L. Ayers, dean of the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
at the University of Virginia, has been admired for his teaching,
scholarship and public service for so long that it should come
as no surprise that he was named today as the 2003 national Professor
of the Year at doctoral and research universities. The annual award
for dedication to undergraduate education is given by the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for
Advancement and Support of Education (CASE).
One
of the country’s
foremost Southern history scholars, Ayers has continued his teaching
and advising of undergraduate and graduate students and outreach
in history-education nationwide while serving as the top administrator of U.Va.’s
liberal arts core. He and honorees in three non-doctoral college categories were
selected from among 400 distinguished professors nominated around the country.
“As
an educator, mentor and advisor, Professor Ayers has had a lasting
impact on both the University of Virginia and on his discipline,” said
Vance T. Peterson, president of CASE. “Students seek him out for his
wise counsel and guidance because of the extraordinary commitment he brings
to everything
he does.”
In
addition to being a legendary teacher and award-winning author,
Ayers has been a national advocate for exploring the potential
of
computer technology
to enhance scholarship and teaching. He previously received the Outstanding
Faculty
Award from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia and currently
serves as a presidential appointee to the National Council for the Humanities
and on
the executive board of the National Council for History Education.
“His
infectious passion for learning invigorates every encounter with
students, whether in a class of 400, a seminar of 10, or an individual
conference,” said
U.Va. vice president and provost Gene D. Block, who nominated Ayers for
the award.
Among
the first wave of scholars to tap the power of emerging technologies
for learning, Ayers created and directs an authoritative
Internet archive, “Valley
of the Shadow: Two Communities in the American Civil War,” that
has won numerous major awards for its contributions to education. It
is used in classrooms
at all levels throughout the country and makes available thousands
of original sources for students and scholars to conduct their own
research
and draw their
own conclusions about history.
A
finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award
for his 1992 book, “The
Promise of the New South,” he has also recently published a
groundbreaking new book about the coming of the Civil War, “In
the Presence of Mine Enemies.”
Block
noted that Ayers’ passion
for teaching carries beyond his own work to close collaborations
with his graduate students, as they prepare for teaching
careers, and to long involvement with the University’s Center
for the Liberal Arts in mentoring K-12 classroom teachers around
the state and country.
While
teaching, serving as dean, writing books, and fundraising for
educational projects, Ayers holds regular
undergraduate office
hours
each week and
encourages his students to visit him. He requires students at
all levels to conduct
their own original research into what he has called “the
messy complexity of the past” to gain a deeper understanding.
“He regards classroom walls as the most arbitrary of boundaries and never
stops instructing or inspiring those around him,” said Charles F. Irons,
who received his B.A. and Ph.D. in history at U.Va. and was one of several colleagues
and former students who sent the awards committee letters testifying to Ayers’ effects
on their personal lives. “In every circumstance, he spreads his boundless
enthusiasm and helps his listeners to imagine a better tomorrow.”
“He
is so much a part of the University -— and what is right
about it –- that it is difficult to extricate him from
it,” wrote Lee J.
Hark, a doctoral student in education. “He occupies
an almost mythic status in the minds of students. I found
the process of studying with him quite unsettling,
which it seems, is exactly what he wants.”
Ayers
confirms that notion. “Unless we come to terms with the
hardest parts of this nation’s history, we cannot see it
clearly,” he
wrote in a statement about teaching. “And unless
we see our nation clearly we cannot know how best to live
within
it. Coming to terms with the past demands that students
confront its problems for themselves.”
Ayers
received his doctorate in American Studies from Yale in 1980
and
joined the U.Va. faculty that year. He has
been dean
of the
College and
Graduate
School of Arts & Sciences since 2001.
The
U.S. Professor of the Year awards, created in 1981, are the only
national
honors for excellent undergraduate
teaching
and
mentoring.
The
other three national winners are:
- Outstanding
Community College Professor: Paris Svoronos, professor of
chemistry, City University
of New York Queensborough
Community College of (Bayside, N.Y.)
- Outstanding
Baccalaureate College Professor: Thomas Goodwin, professor
of chemistry,
Hendrix College (Conway, Ark.)
- Outstanding
Master’s University and College Professor: Patty Hale,
professor of nursing, Lynchburg College (Lynchburg, Va.)
The
national winners and winners of state Professor of the
Year awards
will be honored
at an awards luncheon
at the
National Press Club
in Washington, D.C.
today.
For additional information about
the awards please contact Joye
Barksdale at the Council
for Advancement
and Support
of Education
at (202)
478-5680.
For
interviews, Edward Ayers may be reached at (434) 924-4611 or
ela@virginia.edu Contact:
Bob Brickhouse, (434) 924-6856 |