Dr. Maria Carrillo, Alumnae Award Recipient

Alumnae Award Recipient, 2018

From The Alumnae of Northwestern University

The Alumnae Award recognizes a woman who has brought honor to Northwestern University through outstanding professional contributions in her field and who has attained national recognition. Established in 1976, the Alumnae Award has been presented every year to an alumna who has had a significant impact in her field of endeavor. Educators, journalists, doctors, scientists, and artists are included among The Alumnae’s roster of awardees. 

Dr. Maria Carrillo to Receive 2018 Alumnae Award

EVANSTON, Ill. --- Dr. Maria Carrillo, Chief Science Officer, Medical and Scientific Relations, Alzheimer’s Association National Office, Chicago, Illinois, is the recipient of The Alumnae of Northwestern University’s 2018 Alumnae Award.

Dr. Carrillo holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology, with a minor in biology, from the University of Illinois, and a doctorate in neuroscience from the Neuroscience Institute, Cell, Molecular and Structural Biology department, Northwestern University.

Dr. Carrillo was named Chief Science Officer in 2015. Prior to that she was vice president, senior director and director, Medical & Scientific Relations, at the Alzheimer’s Association National Office.  She served as an assistant professor at Rush University Medical Center’s Department of Neurological Sciences; and instructor and post-doctoral fellow at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center’s Department of Neurological Sciences.

“As Chief Science Officer of the Alzheimer’s Association, Maria Carrillo’s strategic thinking and grasp of the field have made the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) the place to be for all serious workers in Alzheimer’s disease,” notes Marek-Marsel Mesulam, Director, Cognitive Neurological Alzheimer’s Disease Center, The Ruth Dunbar Davee Professorship in Neuroscience, Feinberg School of Medicine.

“Maria has become an effective spokesperson for the importance of preclinical and clinical research to head off the approaching Alzheimer’s Disease epidemic, markedly increasing Alzheimer’s Disease federal research funding,” says John F. Disterhoft, Magerstadt Memorial Research Professor, Department of Physiology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University. “In addition, she is an outstanding example of work/family balance and community involvement.”

 

Alumnae Graduate Fellow, Alexzandra Wallace, is featured in the 2019 News from NU's School of Education and Social Policy

January 15, 2019       Click the link to read about 2018-19 Alumnae Graduate Fellow, Alexzandra Wallace, by Julie Deardorff.      https://www.sesp.northwestern.edu/news-center/news/2019/01/wallace-recei...

Shirin Vossoughi, Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient

Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient, 2019

Three members of the NU faculty have recieved the 2019 The Alumnae of Northwestern Award for Curriculum Development.  Read about Megan Bang and Shirin Vossoughi in this excerpt from Northwestern Now, January 11, 2019.

"The awards, administered by the Office of the Provost, provide $12,500 to each professor to support the development of innovative course materials and new modes of teaching.

Connecting students and the broader community through hybrid courses

Bang and Vossoughi will design a hybrid course that brings together Northwestern students with young people and community members outside the University to investigate issues of social justice within the education system. Their award will fund the development of a pilot course for Northwestern undergraduates and students at ETHS, including an innovative apprenticeship in community-based research.

The initial hybrid course offering -- co-taught by Vossoughi, Bang and an ETHS teacher -- will focus on educational justice. Students will examine histories of educational inequity and design and carry out community-based research projects on local educational struggles. They will move beyond summarizing key arguments found in course texts toward engaging evidence-based analysis and argumentation with the goal of integrating theory, research and social action. The course will foster the development of students as publicly engaged scholars and writers.

As SESP Dean David Figlio noted in his letter of support, the proposed course also “directly furthers our efforts to ensure that SESP is at the cutting edge of undergraduate pedagogy, and enhances our research and teaching missions in collaboration with and in service to our local communities.”

Bang, a 2009 SESP doctoral alum, and Vossoughi both have personal experience teaching high school students. Bang has studied STEAM (STEM plus Arts) learning among K-12 Indigenous youth and has examined differences among rural Native American, urban Native American and urban non-Native American preschoolers in their approaches to play with a forest diorama. Vossoughi, who completed postdoctoral work at Stanford University and the San Francisco Exploratorium, has studied culture, equity and learning in after-school tinkering and making programs and has helped design summer institutes organized around expansive forms of reading, writing and social analysis.

Their award will fund collaborative summer work on course design by Vossoughi and Bang, one or two ETHS teachers and students from both Northwestern and ETHS. It also will provide funds for compensating community partners, elders and local organizers who engage with students during the first offering of the course.

The Alumnae of Northwestern University is an all-volunteer organization of women that raises funds for a wide range of projects to benefit the University and also shares the University's academic resources with the community through its Continuing Education program. Founded in 1916, The Alumnae has given more than $8 million to the University in the form of grants, fellowships, scholarships and an endowed professorship. It also has provided funds for special University projects and summer internships."

Megan Bang, Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient

Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient, 2019

Read about Megan Bang and Shirin Vossoughi in this excerpt from Northwestern Now, January 11, 2019.

"Connecting students and the broader community through hybrid courses

Bang and Vossoughi will design a hybrid course that brings together Northwestern students with young people and community members outside the University to investigate issues of social justice within the education system. Their award will fund the development of a pilot course for Northwestern undergraduates and students at ETHS, including an innovative apprenticeship in community-based research.

The initial hybrid course offering -- co-taught by Vossoughi, Bang and an ETHS teacher -- will focus on educational justice. Students will examine histories of educational inequity and design and carry out community-based research projects on local educational struggles. They will move beyond summarizing key arguments found in course texts toward engaging evidence-based analysis and argumentation with the goal of integrating theory, research and social action. The course will foster the development of students as publicly engaged scholars and writers.

As SESP Dean David Figlio noted in his letter of support, the proposed course also “directly furthers our efforts to ensure that SESP is at the cutting edge of undergraduate pedagogy, and enhances our research and teaching missions in collaboration with and in service to our local communities.”

Bang, a 2009 SESP doctoral alum, and Vossoughi both have personal experience teaching high school students. Bang has studied STEAM (STEM plus Arts) learning among K-12 Indigenous youth and has examined differences among rural Native American, urban Native American and urban non-Native American preschoolers in their approaches to play with a forest diorama. Vossoughi, who completed postdoctoral work at Stanford University and the San Francisco Exploratorium, has studied culture, equity and learning in after-school tinkering and making programs and has helped design summer institutes organized around expansive forms of reading, writing and social analysis.

Their award will fund collaborative summer work on course design by Vossoughi and Bang, one or two ETHS teachers and students from both Northwestern and ETHS. It also will provide funds for compensating community partners, elders and local organizers who engage with students during the first offering of the course.

The Alumnae of Northwestern University is an all-volunteer organization of women that raises funds for a wide range of projects to benefit the University and also shares the University's academic resources with the community through its Continuing Education program. Founded in 1916, The Alumnae has given more than $8 million to the University in the form of grants, fellowships, scholarships and an endowed professorship. It also has provided funds for special University projects and summer internships."

James Hambleton, Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient

Curriculum Innovation Award Recipient, 2019

Three members of the NU faculty have recieved the 2019 The Alumnae of Northwestern Award for Curriculum Development.

"The awards, administered by the Office of the Provost, provide $12,500 to each professor to support the development of innovative course materials and new modes of teaching.

Hambleton, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering in the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, will develop a teaching module that supports and enhances an existing first-year engineering course and includes experiential learning activities aimed at improving student engagement and performance. 

Bang and Vossoughi, professor and assistant professor, respectively, in the School of Education and Social Policy (SESP), plan to develop a pilot collaborative course with Evanston Township High School (ETHS) that investigate issues of social justice within the education system. 

With a focus on active learning, critical thinking and the development of relevant skills, each professor’s projects will prepare students for greater success within and outside of their disciplines. Each project embodies the innovation that is paramount for recipients of The Alumnae Award for Curriculum Development, helping to grow and strengthen the undergraduate curriculum at Northwestern in creative ways.

Inspiring first-year engineering students to enjoy basic mechanics

Hambleton will develop an elective course entitled Engineering Analysis 2 (EA2), which is associated with a required first-year course in engineering. Hands-on activities, friendly competitions and in-depth discussion of real-world examples will inspire and engage students and reinforce core course content.

During the first half of the course, Hambleton will draw from his own research on how soils are moved and shaped through interaction with man-made objects. Student teams will design and build a “boring machine,” which will be tested in the new Soil-Structure and Soil-Machine Interaction Laboratory. In developing their own designs, students will be encouraged to look at bio-inspired machine designs, examining how worms, insects, clams and plant roots burrow through soil.

For the second group activity, students will design, build and test a 3D-printed truss, making use of 3D printers in on-campus maker spaces. They also will examine and discuss the mechanics involved in prominent bridge failures.

Both activities will culminate in competitions between student groups, with prizes awarded to the best-performing models and to those employing the most innovative design concepts.

Hambleton noted that education research identifies hands-on activities as a means of retaining engineering students, and the course provides an innovative and rigorous pedagogy to address the knowledge gap that can exist between first-year engineering students.

Hambleton joined the Northwestern faculty in Fall 2016 and has gained recognition as a skilled and dedicated teacher. In her letter of support, department chair Kimberly Gray noted that Hambleton is a “superior communicator” with an “infectious exuberance for engineering.”

Hambleton’s award will fund the purchase of supplies and equipment for the pilot offering of the course, the hiring of undergraduate teaching assistants and prize money for the winning groups. Close work with the undergraduate assistants, who will serve as mentors for the first-year students, will be another course benefit."                                                  Northwestern Now, January 11, 2019

Dr. Maria Carrillo, 2018 Alumnae Award recipient and Dr. Teresa Woodruff, Dean of The Graduate School

From The Alumnae of Northwestern University

For Immediate Release: October 26, 2018

Dr. Maria Carrillo to Receive 2018 Alumnae Award

EVANSTON, Ill. --- Dr. Maria Carrillo, Chief Science Officer, Medical and Scientific Relations, Alzheimer’s Association National Office, Chicago, Illinois, is the recipient of The Alumnae of Northwestern University’s 2018 Alumnae Award.

Dr. Maria Carrillo, Chief Science Officer, Medical and Scientific Relations, Alzheimer's Assn. National Office, Chicago, Illinois, receives The Alumnae of Northwestern's 2018 Alumnae Award

Dr. Maria Carrillo, Chief Science Officer, Medical and Scientific Relations, Alzheimer’s Association National Office, Chicago, Illinois, is the recipient of The Alumnae of Northwestern University’s 2018 Alumnae Award.