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Linda Beck, Nancy Worman and Robert McCaughey Honored With Teaching Awards


Linda Beck


Robert McCaughey

NEW YORK, N.Y., May 9, 2001 - Three Barnard faculty members - Assistant Professor of Political Science Linda Beck, Assistant Professor of Classics Nancy Worman, and Ann Whitney Olin Professor of History Robert McCaughey - have been honored by the College for excellence in teaching.

In introducing the winners, Provost and Dean of the Faculty Elizabeth Boylan quoted John Milton, who wrote in Aeropagitica in 1644: "Where there is much desire to learn, there of necessity will be much arguing, much writing, many opinions; for opinion in good men is but knowledge in the making."

Said Boylan, "This quote reminds us of the wonderful commodity we begin with - students with much desire to learn. It also focuses us on the central identity of Barnard - a place where knowledge is made, where arguing and writing and the forging and re-forging of opinions are the tools used by faculty and students in their common endeavors - teaching and learning, independently and together."

Beck and Worman each received the Gladys Brooks Faculty Excellence in Teaching Award, recognizing considerable individual achievement of assistant professors.

Beck began her career at Barnard in 1996 after receiving her BA from Skidmore, spending a year as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Senegal and then earning her master's and PhD degrees from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Her teaching at Barnard ranged from First-Year Seminar on the Politics of Identity, to the lecture course on Contemporary African Politics, to the Junior Colloquium and Senior Research Seminars, to team teaching a G8000 course on Political Incorporation.

Boylan noted that Beck's nomination was made on the basis of "her excellent performance in the classroom, her development of new courses, her willingness to spend extra time with students outside of class, and on her success in teaching the First-Year Seminar," and her very strong record as an academic advisor. Despite a reputation of being a tough grader and giving daunting reading assignments, students praise her as one of the premier lecturers in the department and for arranging time for in-class discussion that is "just right." Said one student: "I would just like to emphasize how wonderful a person Professor Beck is."

Worman also began teaching at Barnard in 1996, but for her it was a return to her alma mater from which she received her B.A. in Ancient Studies, magna cum laude. After completing her master's and PhD degrees in Classics at Princeton, Nancy taught for one year at Rutgers, then at Yale. Her teaching has included: a First-Year Seminar on Children of Medusa, courses in both Greek and Latin, in Comparative Literature too, and a graduate seminar on The Monstrous in Greek Tragedy. Common adjectives from her students include "energetic," "well-informed," "dynamic, "and "great."

Boylan noted that Worman's nomination rested in part on her special contributions to the Comparative Literature major, including teaching both the introductory course and the junior colloquium, and her participation in meetings with majors and those going on and returning from study abroad. One student wrote: "Professor Worman made me feel close to the other members of the class and the materials. This course really made me feel a sense of community within the Comp Lit major, something that is difficult to do because we're all doing such different things." When rating the overall quality of the instructor, this same student wrote (on a five point scale with 5 equaling excellent): "6 - beyond excellent."

McCaughey received the Teaching Excellence Award in 2001, and was nominated for this award by his colleagues in the sciences and math, testimony to the achievements he has racked up over the years beyond the confines of the History Department, helping to bring about and then directing for five years the First-Year Seminar program, launching the Writing Fellows program and most recently, leading the Mellon-funded teaching with technology initiative we fondly call BEATL. McCaughey came to Barnard from Harvard where he earned his PhD in History. His bachelor's and master's degrees are from the University of Rochester and the University of North Carolina respectively.

A winner of the Emily Gregory Teaching Excellence Award in 1987 and an NEH Teaching Fellowship in Maritime History in 1996, Boylan noted that McCaughey has melded his teaching and scholarship through his work and courses on the history of American colleges and universities and through his research on the faculties of selective liberal arts colleges, entitled "Scholars and Teachers." A recent student who had taken three courses with Bob, a lecture course and two seminars, plus courses at the University of Chicago and Northwestern, wrote: "I consider Professor McCaughey to be the most outstanding lecturer, advisor and teacher I have had... I found his teaching style to be highly effective and unique." Said Boylan: "His colleagues look to him for inspiration and moral support as they launch into unfamiliar waters teeming with techno-benefits and techno-pitfalls; his students are taken with the many ways he finds to engage them deeply with the material and the methodology of history; and the staff at the Mellon Foundation are pleased with his ability to take money off their hands, knowing that it will be invested well toward the improvement of undergraduate teaching."

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An independent college for women in New York City affiliated with Columbia University