Fellows Directory

Displaying 1 - 23 of 23
Headshot of Marina Alexandrova in front of a bookcase.

Marina Alexandrova

Current Fellow
Slavic and Eurasian Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts

Dr. Alexandrova teaches a variety of courses on Russian history, culture, and language. Her current research interests include international modernism and avant-garde, Russian radical and revolutionary movements, spirituality in Imperial Russia, and, most recently, cultural and spiritual ties between Russia and the United States. Her Signature Course, UGS 303 "Tsars and Mystics," examines (un)Orthodox spiritual practices of Russian rulers from Ivan the Terrible to Nicholas II.

Atkinson headshot

Lucy Atkinson

Current Fellow
Advertising and Public Relations
|
Moody College of Communication
Initiative Focus
Undergraduate Research
Headshot of Samy Ayoub.

Samy Ayoub

Current Fellow
Middle Eastern Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Mary Beer, with red hair, stands in front of a tree, wearing a striped shirt.

Mary Beer

Current Fellow
Social Work
|
Steve Hicks School of Social Work

Mary Beer is an LCSW-S and is a clinical associate professor and the Assistant Dean for Practicum Education at the Steve Hicks School of Social Work. She has taught Practice and Field, Theories and Methods of Group Intervention, Experiential Leadership, Generalist Social Work Practice, Treatment of Children and Adolescents, and the Advanced Integrative Capstone courses. Mary has integrated compassionate pedagogy, alternative grading, and experiential learning into her courses and these approaches are the focus of her PTF project.

Julia Campbell

Current Fellow
Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences
|
Moody College of Communication

Dr. Julia Campbell is a clinical audiologist and auditory neuroscientist who specializes in cortical plasticity in auditory disorders such as hearing loss and tinnitus. She serves as the Audiology Graduate Program Director and Audiology Discipline and Training Coordinator for the ACT LEND program. She currently instructs audiology graduate students in clinical training, pediatric audiology, and medical audiology.
 

Headshot of Robert Carroll.

Robert Carroll

Current Fellow
Communication Studies
|
Moody College of Communication

Dr. Robert Carroll is an Assistant Professor of Instruction in the Moody College of Communication. As a member of the Communication Studies department he teaches the 2nd year college-wide Foundation course and an Honors Service Learning and Community Engagement course. Additionally he works as an MBA+ Communication Coach where he leads interactive workshops on storytelling, leadership principles, and authenticity.

person in suit top

Wenhong Chen

Current Fellow
Journalism
|
Moody College of Communication
Initiative Focus
Experiential Learning

Dr. Wenhong Chen is a professor of media studies and sociology, the founding co-director of Center for Entertainment and Media Industries, and a Distinguished Scholar in the Robert Strauss Center for International Security and Law at the University of Texas at Austin.  

Tanya Clement, with shoulder-length gray hair and a black shirt, smiles while wearing gold accessories and sitting in front of a staircase.

Tanya Clement

Current Fellow
English
Information
|
College of Liberal Arts
School of Information
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Inclusive Teaching and Learning

Tanya E Clement is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Texas at Austin. Her primary areas of research are textual studies, sound studies, and infrastructure studies as these concerns impact academic research, research libraries, and the creation of research tools and resources in Digital Humanities (DH).

A man wearing glasses and a sweater over a button-up stands in front of trees.

Joe Cutbirth

Current Fellow
Communication Studies
|
Moody College of Communication

Dr. Cutbirth is an assistant professor of instruction whose work focuses on the transdisciplinary practice of communication in leadership. He teaches in Moody College of Communication and the University Bridging Disciplines Program, where his classes examine the role of trust, deception, and hope in narratives used by leaders and about leadership itself. He was a finalist for the 2024 Moody College Teaching Award. His project is designed to examine the relationship between rigor and accommodation in the post-COVID era.

person in regalia

Natalie Czimskey

Current Fellow
Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences
|
Moody College of Communication
Initiative Focus
Student Success
Student Wellbeing

Natalie Czimskey, Ph.D., is a lecturer in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at The University of Texas where she earned all three of her degrees. She began teaching as a doctoral student in 2012 and continued teaching part time until completing her Ph.D. in 2019 when she joined the faculty full-time.  Her primary research area is adult neurogenic disorders with a special interest in traumatic brain injury, though her passion is teaching; she has taught 9 different courses in the past 2 years.

Picture of Jules Elkins.

Jules Elkins

Current Fellow
Sustainability Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Collaborative Learning
Interdisciplinary Learning

Dr. Elkins is the Director of Sustainability Studies and Assistant Professor of Instruction in the Department of Geography and the Environment. Dr. Elkins’ research and teaching is in environmental health, and healthy indoor environments. She is particularly interested in low-dose chemical exposures, especially during the period from preconception to early childhood. Her interests focus on how exposures can be practically and cost-effectively reduced or prevented based on evidence-based models of what interventions measurably work.

Mike Findley

Michael Findley

Current Fellow
Government
Public Affairs
|
College of Liberal Arts
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
Initiative Focus
Mentorship
Student Success
Peniel Joseph

Peniel Joseph

Current Fellow
Public Affairs
History
|
College of Liberal Arts
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
Initiative Focus
Mentorship

Peniel Joseph is the First-Year Representative on the 2020 PTF Steering Committee.

Photo of Lee Ann Kahlor

Lee Ann Kahlor

Current Fellow
Advertising and Public Relations
|
Moody College of Communication
Initiative Focus
Inclusive Teaching and Learning
Elon Lang, wearing a vertically blue-striped shirt, smiles while leaning against a red pole.

Elon Lang

Current Fellow
Liberal Arts Honors and Humanities Programs
|
College of Liberal Arts

Elon Lang is an Associate Professor of Instruction at the University of Texas at Austin, where he teaches a variety of undergraduate literature survey courses on ethical topics, medieval and early modern studies, dramatic literature, and Experiential Learning courses based in archival research. One example was his 2020-2021 courses called Archival Advocacy in which students learned how to bring archival techniques to bear on a real-world social justice issue facing the East Austin, Texas, community: the closing of one of Austin's historically Hispanic elementary schools.

Phot of Julia Mickenberg

Julia Mickenberg

Current Fellow
American Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Skill-Building

Julia Mickenberg is Professor of American Studies and an affiliate in the Center for Women and Gender Studies, the Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, and the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies. She is the author of American Girls in Red Russia: Chasing the Soviet Dream (Chicago, 2017) and Learning from the Left: Children's Literature, the Cold War, and Radical Politics (Oxford, 2006) and editor or co-editor of several other books, along with articles in journals ranging from the Journal of American History to Radical Teacher.

person in green tanktop

Amy Nathan Wright

Current Fellow
Human Dimensions of Organizations
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Experiential Learning

Amy Nathan Wright got her PhD in American Studies at UT Austin and returned in 2019 as an Assistant Professor of Instruction in Human Dimensions of Organizations.  She is a civil rights scholar completing a book on the Poor People’s Campaign and has taught interdisciplinary courses focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion for the past decade and a half.

A man with black thin circular glasses and a salt-and-pepper beard smiles while sitting with one leg crossed. He is wearing a blue button-up shirt under a deep dark blue blazer and beige slacks, sitting in front of a bookshelf.

Marcelo Paixao

Current Fellow
|
College of Liberal Arts

Marcelo Paixão is an Associate Professor at The University of Texas at Austin. He is a faculty at the African and African Diaspora Studies Department (AADS), in conjunction with the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies (LLILAS). Prof. Marcelo is a Brazilian economist and holds a Ph.D. in Sociology (IUPERJ, Brazil). Before coming to Austin, he has been a Professor of Economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) for 16 years, the same place where he majored.

Photo of Amy Kristin Sanders, a white woman with dark wavy hair, smiling and looking at the camera. She is wearing a black shirt and silver necklace.

Amy Kristin Sanders

Current Fellow
Journalism
|
Moody College of Communication

Dr. Amy Kristin Sanders is an award-winning former journalist, licensed attorney and Associate Professor. Before coming to the University of Texas at Austin, she taught at Northwestern University’s campus in Doha, Qatar. Her expertise focuses on the intersection of law, ethics and new technology as it relates to media freedom and democratic participation. As an instructor, Sanders has developed and taught courses on comparative media law, media ethics, media leadership, and media and society.

Headshot of Sarah Sloan.

Sarah Sloan

Current Fellow
Social Work
|
Steve Hicks School of Social Work
Initiative Focus
Inclusive Teaching and Learning

Sarah Sloan is an Assistant Dean for Health Affairs and Clinical Associate Professor in the Steve Hicks School of Social Work. Her practice interests include social justice, mental health, and working with LGBTQIA+ communities. She worked with students at the UT Counseling and Mental Health Center from 2003-2012. Her project is about understanding Critical Race Theory and how it can be added as an additional theory in the curriculum to help social work faculty and students explore inequitable systems that marginalize people.

strong

Pauline Strong

Current Fellow
Anthropology
Humanities Institute
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Collaborative Learning
Inclusive Teaching and Learning

Dr. Pauline Strong is a Professor of Anthropology and served as director of the Humanities Institute and its Difficult Dialogues Program from 2009 until 2022. She is also affiliated with American Studies, Native American and Indigenous Studies, Women’s and Gender Studies, and Human Dimensions of Organizations. Her research focuses on representations and self-representations of indigenous people in the US, and her teaching areas include cultural anthropology, feminist anthropology, culture and health, museum studies, youth organizations, and indigenous cultures and histories.

Di Wang, with black hair, is smiling and wearing a white blazer against a grey background.

Di Wang

Current Fellow
Government
|
College of Liberal Arts

Dr. Di "Wendy" Wang is an Assistant Professor of Instruction at the University of Texas at Austin with a joint appointment in the Department of Government and the International Relations and Global Studies (IRG) program. She teaches courses in international political economy, globalization, and capstone research. She has been the faculty director of a widely successful study abroad program in Singapore and Vietnam. Her research focuses on sovereign wealth funds and politics of foreign direct divestment.

Nick, with black and white glasses and bob-length green hair, smiles while wearing a black top, standing in front of a large tree with purple flowers.

Nick Winges-Yanez

Current Fellow
Social Work
|
Steve Hicks School of Social Work

Dr. Nick is a clinical assistant professor at the Steve Hicks School of Social Work leading the Disability Studies program. She is a queer crip feminist activist-scholar interested in critical discourse analysis and how language, signs, and symbols create and perpetuate our realities. Her work also interrogates histories of disability in relation to sexuality, citizenship, and trauma. She is deeply dedicated to teaching and expanding and growing her practice of compassionate and inclusive pedagogy.