CALAS Faculty Spotlight

Dr. Jeremy Fiebig, Associate Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Performing and Fine Arts

About Dr. Fiebig

Dr. Fiebig implemented a course redesign to THEA 450: Senior Seminar, the capstone course for all theater majors. This course redesign brings an innovative approach to project management, software efficiency, and data analysis. Upon completion, students will be able to apply project management concepts and principles and have increased decision making skills in leadership.

Dr. Hsiaofen Hemstock, Associate Professor and Dr. Juan Ma, Associate Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Government and History

About Drs. Hemstock and Ma

Drs. Hemstock and Ma redesigned their course, ENEC 270: Climate Change and Public Policy. This course redesign focuses on integrating soft skills in studying public policy and technical skills in studying climate change. Upon completion of the course, students will be able to understand fundamental scientific concepts and will have the ability to apply scientific knowledge to situations common to daily life.

Dr. C. Edward Ebert, Associate Professor
Winston-Salem State University | Department of Chemistry

About Dr. Ebert

Dr. Ebert implemented a course to fulfill a regional need by employers by offering an upper-level course addressing the rapidly evolving field of biomaterials. Students will gain valuable experience in understanding complex issues, defending decisions supported by evidence, and articulating and communicating their hypotheses to others. Upon completion of this course students should take away knowledge of how to successfully work and collaborate across fields and skills to interact cooperatively to achieve challenging research goals.

Dr. Phillip Senter, Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Biological and Forensic Sciences

About Dr. Senter

Dr. Senter has redesigned BIO 230L: Human Anatomy and Physiology 1 Lab. Dr. Senter’s course redesign is to addressing students need to master new biology vocabulary by incorporating vocabulary practice quizzes into this course. Upon completion, students will be able to correctly spell the various biological terms covered throughout the semester.

Dr. Jiahua Zhou, Assistant Professor and Dr. Jennifer Bushelle-Edghill, Department Chair
Fayetteville State University | Department of Accounting, Finance, Healthcare Administration, and Information Systems

About Drs. Zhou and Bushelle-Edghill

Drs. Zhou and Bushelle-Edghill have redesigned a required core accounting course, ACCT 300: Accounting Information Systems. The overall goal of their redesign aligns with a recent Certified Public Accountant (CPA) Evolution Initiative, which places a strong emphasis on integrating IT technologies with accounting education to train the future accounting workforce.

Dr. Daniel Montoya, Associate Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Psychology

About Dr. Montoya

Dr. Montoya integrated soft skills into his course PSYC 421: Cognitive Psychology. To accomplish this, he introduced and implemented the five-minute paper into the course. The prompts that are used will enhance creativity and critical thinking skills amongst his students. These skills are particularly important to a course that is designed to instill scientific literacy among its students.

Dr. Dean Swinford, Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of English

About Dr. Swinford

Dr. Swinford redesigned ENG 401: Chaucer, to help students develop a series of technical skills. This course will foreground the intersection of art and science in the work of Chaucer and other writers who have informed and influenced Chaucer’s work. The technical skills students can expect to obtain while taking this course are: scientific literacy, data analysis, and technical writing.

Dr. Han Lheem, Associate Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Government and History

About Dr. Lheem

Dr. Lheem was hoping to encourage students to develop their technical and software skills while studying politics, social justice issues, and propaganda. To accomplish this, Dr. Lheem redesigned POLI 411: Propaganda and Public Opinions. One of the major nuances to this course will be the addition of a critical review video making project. The goal of this project was to help students improve critical thinking skills and digital literacy.

Professor Michael Pearce, Assistant Professor
North Carolina Central University | Department of Mass Communication

About Professor Pearce

Professor Pearce redesigned MSCM 4655: Independent Film Production for the Spring 2022 semester. This course takes students through all aspects of the independent filmmaking process. Professor Pearce hopes that this will eventually serve as a capstone course for the future digital filmmaking concentration. Through redesigning this course, he planned to incorporate STEM/Technical skills into the curriculum.

Dr. Shyamal Das, Professor and Dr. Sambit Bhaachariya, Professor
Elizabeth City State University | Department of Social Sciences
Fayetteville State University | Department of Mathematics and Computer Science

About Drs. Das and Bhaachariya

Drs. Das and Bhaachariya redesigned a homeland security course entitled “Terrorism” in the Department of Social Sciences at ECSU. The course emphasizes the histories, types, and theories of terrorism. It also has a special focus on social and social movement theories, network analysis, and ideology in analyzing the socio-economic and political costs of terrorism, and the prediction of terrorist acts in the future. Upon completion of this course, students will be familiar with the various types of terrorist acts in addition to conducting research on the related field.

Dr. Adegoke Ademiluyi, Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Intelligence Studies, Geosciences, Political Science and History

About Dr. Ademiluyi

Dr. Ademiluyi redesigned GEOG 440: Urban Geography to transform the course into a Geographic Information Systems spatial analysis application course. Students will learn core theories in urban geography and their policy applications in the US, practice GIS skills in analyzing urban communities, and acquire professional problem-solving skills. Applications such as Google Earth and ArcGIS will be embedded in the course. This course redesign enhances the technical capability of students thus preparing them for the workforce.

Dr. Farrukh B. Hakeem, Associate Professor
Shaw University | Department of Academic Affairs –CAS – Social Sciences

About Dr. Hakeem

Dr. Hakeem redesigned CRJ 304: Computer Applications in Criminal Justice. Students taking this course are introduced to criminal justice computer operating systems. They also learn basic SAS programming and are guided through the process of exploring the vast amount of machine-readable data available from the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Finally, students enhance their technical skills through various assignments that promote problem-solving and critical thinking skills through various assignments.

Dr. Jennifer Johnson, Associate Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Nursing

About Dr. Johnson

Dr. Johnson redesigned NURS 602: Introduction to Population Health and Epidemiology, which is a 15-week graduate online course. Dr. Johnson redesigned this course to enhance the application of soft skills required in the field of public health nursing and epidemiology. Upon completion, students will demonstrate four key soft skills: communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and problem-solving in the advanced nursing role in public health epidemiology.

Dr. Joshua Murray, Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of English: Literature, Teaching, Pre-Law, and Creative & Professional Writing

About Dr. Murray

Dr. Murray designed a research study that incorporated a software tool (Twine, a free, open-sourced software developed by Chris Klimas for the creation of interactive fiction) into several English courses to evaluate its effectiveness of promoting 21st century skills within his students. Upon completion of his study, Dr. Murray posited that his research would lead to increased levels of liberal arts student interest and engagement with STEM technical skills while also providing the skill development in an increasingly transdisciplinary world.

Crystal Edmonds, Adjunct Lecturer
Fayetteville State University | Department of English: Literature, Teaching, Pre-Law, and Creative & Professional Writing

About Ms. Edmonds

Ms. Edmonds redesigned English 120 to infuse technical writing skills that focus on research design and data analytics into this course. Her course redesign required students to focus on areas related to healthcare or science. After completing the course, students developed critical thinking skills to address issues in healthcare or science through research and technical writing skills.

Dr. Bradley Mills, Assistant Professor and Dr. Ashley Holder, Assistant Professor
Fayetteville State University | Department of Early Childhood, Elementary, Middle Grades, Reading, and Special Education

About Drs. Mills and Holder

Drs. Mills and Holder conducted a study to examine the impact of incorporating data analysis and technical writing into education courses. The researchers redesigned SPED 647, SPED 460, and READ 316 to embed technical writing and data analysis skills. Upon completion of the research, students gained technical skills and data analysis skills to lead a more career-ready path. The researchers hoped the results of this study would help create strategies for faculty to increase the use of technical writing and data analysis skills within other teacher education courses, as these skills are becoming more important within the field of education.