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May 25, 2007|Volume 35, Number 29|Three-Week Issue


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Graduate School students
applaud faculty mentors

The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences will honor three faculty members as outstanding mentors at this year's Commencement Convocation on May 27.

They are Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, professor and director of graduate studies in psychology; Valerie Hansen, professor and director of graduate studies in history; and Scott Strobel, professor and chair of molecular biophysics and biochemistry.

"I am delighted that the Graduate School is able to honor faculty members for helping students evolve into colleagues," said Graduate School Dean Jon Butler. "The relationship between graduate students and their research advisors is immensely important."

This year's winners were selected from among 28 faculty who had been nominated for the award by students via anonymous letters of recommendation.

Bill Rando, director of the Graduate Teaching Center, which coordinates the annual competition, said: "The individuals nominated for the Graduate Mentor Award represent Yale at its best. In their letters of nomination, students describe acts of enormous personal dedication, affection and courage on the part of their mentors. It's wonderful to think about how much good these mentors have produced, especially when you consider that these same acts will likely be repeated when their students become mentors themselves."

Writing in nomination of Nolen-Hoeksema, one student said, "Everyone in our lab is amazed at how much time she devotes to our research projects. In addition to the time that she puts into helping us develop our strengths in the lab, Susan also takes special efforts to make us feel welcome and comfortable. She and her family have hosted barbecues and parties at their home for the lab, and it is so nice working in caring, collaborative environment."

Another wrote: "Susan is my primary research advisor, my mentor as a teaching fellow, and the director of graduate studies for the psychology department. In all of these different roles, she has demonstrated her dedication to the graduate students in this program. Her generosity and support have shaped my graduate experience thus far, and I can't imagine what my experience at Yale would be like without her."

In nominating Hansen, one student wrote, "Her exceptional ability to balance her work and her family life (she's happily married with three kids!) has inspired me to aim at a higher level of professional and personal satisfaction. I believe that she has consistently demonstrated all the best traits of a mentor and adviser -- challenging me to think and to learn, listening and giving thoughtful responses to my concerns, and preparing me for advanced stages of the Ph.D. and beyond."

Another student noted, "She's one of few professors at Yale I know who have audited and taken courses (even as a professor with tenure!) just to expand her own knowledge of various other disciplines. This active involvement with learning new things all the time means that she is particularly sympathetic to what it's like to be a student."

One of the students nominating Strobel wrote: "Scott has taught all of us to think like scientists, providing the necessary framework of logic and skepticism. His vision has been to establish a laboratory environment that fosters creativity, independent thought and scientific discourse; it is a culture that is both supportive and critical. He demands excellence from his students at all times. We are encouraged to think critically not only about our own problems, but also those facing our peers."

Another said of the researcher: "He is proof that it is possible to be a first-rate scientist and educator while maintaining family responsibilities and outside interests. For many of us, his example serves as a guide as we pursue our own careers."


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

University will hold its 306th Commencement May 28

'Oprah Show' hails first grandmother to earn Yale M.D.

Global health expert to head Yale's World Fellows Program

Trachtenberg reflects on her 20 years as 'Betty T.'

Inside the Forbidden City

Summertime at Yale

University to host international symposium on music education ...

Law School to train legal journalists, media lawyers

Campus celebrates its first African-American graduate

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

University names its first director of sustainable transportation systems

Graduate School students applaud faculty mentors

Eight faculty members elected to the AAAS

Three Yale scholars are new members of the APS

Peter Reinhardt named director of Yale's Office of Environmental ...

Kim Bottomly named president of Wellesley College

First-Year Building Program's 40th anniversary

Festival highlights 'revolutionary' artists and thinkers

Peabody Museum exhibit to showcase award-winning wildlife photography

Study finds dynamin 1 gene is critical for sophisticated brain function

Researchers examine why children (and some adults) are resistant ...

Three student scientists win Goldwater Scholarships

Archer named one of Glamour's 'Top 10 College Women'

Council of Masters presents awards to 10 juniors for their contributions

Ten Yale-China Teaching Fellows to begin appointments this summer

Top judges reach 'verdict' in law students' moot court trial

Dr. Lockwood's latest honors include 'Pulitzer Prize of the business press'

Campus Notes


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