Accomplishments

Faculty Accomplishments: College of Arts & Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences is excited to share recent accomplishments from our faculty and staff members.

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Accomplishments are listed by date of achievement in reverse chronological order, with the most recent first.


All Recent Accomplishments

Amanda Golden, Ph.D., associate professor of English, has Annotating Modernism: Marginalia and Pedagogy from Virginia Woolf to the Confessional Poets, published on May 14, 2020 by Routledge.

Kevin LaGrandeur, Ph.D., professor of English, was an organizer and a referee for the annual Posthuman Global Symposium, held at New York University, New York on April 30 - May 2, 2020.

Niharika Nath, Ph.D, professor of biological and chemical sciences, was elected to be a Council Representative on the Executive Board of the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR) on April 27, 2020. This leadership opportunity gives New York Tech a voice at the national level and is a testament to Nath’s many years of service to CUR, her commitment to undergraduate education in general, and undergraduate research in particular. Nath will serve for a three-year term, beginning June 27, 2020.

Pejman Sanaei, Ph.D., assistant professor of mathematics, and Yixuan Sun, graduate student, had their article, "Modeling and design optimization for pleated membrane filters," published on April 27, 2020 in Physical Review Fluids. Their article speaks to the use of pleated membrane filters in a wide variety of applications.

Claude E. Gagna, Ph.D., professor of biological and chemical sciences, published a peer-reviewed journal article abstract titled “MicroCT Scanner to Differentiate Histotechnological Processing of Bone Tissue Using Different Nucleic Acid‐Based Fixatives” in the April 2020 issue of The FASEB Journal. The article discusses how different histotechnological fixation of bone tissue can result in the preservation of canonical and exotic DNAs.

Jonathan Goldman, Ph.D., associate professor of English, had his video, “COVID-19 Check-In,” published on the University of Tulsa's websiteas part of the "James Joyce Quarterly," on April 13, 2020.

Claude E. Gagna, Ph.D., professor of biological and chemical sciences, was voted into the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society (ΑΩΑ) on April 6, 2020. He entered the Society as a Member, (distinguished teachers' category). Alpha Omega Alpha currently has active chapters in 132 LCME-accredited medical schools in the United States. New members are elected annually by society administrators and members. The majority of new members are elected in their final year of medical school, but distinguished teachers, faculty members, residents, and alumni can also be inducted into the society.

Kevin LaGrandeur, Ph.D., professor of English, and John Misak, D.A., assistant professor of English, held a virtual session, "Experiencing the Past through Visual Models and Virtual Reality," for the Renaissance Society of America's NTRS-DH@RSA Virtual Conference on April 2, 2020. Their presentation focused on the development of our Hamlet game used to teach Shakespeare's play. Topics included pedagogy, game design, and critical theory.

Andrew Costello, Ph.D., assistant professor of behavioral sciences, was interviewed for an article “As Coronavirus Surges, Crime Declines in Some Cities,” by Simone Weichselbaum and Weihua Li, published in The Marshall Project on March 27, 2020.

Jonathan Goldman, Ph.D., associate professor of English, had his article, “Babe Ruth's New York at 100,” published in Public Books on March 26, 2020. Goldman's article, speaks on the sale of Babe Ruth to the Yankees and its impact on modern culture. The article was then listed by History News Network's in its Roundup Top Ten for March 27, 2020. Goldman's article is an offshoot of his ISRC-Grant-sponsored project, “New York 1920: When We Became Modern.”