Appendix DEach year the UCLA Alumni Association presents Distinguished Teaching Awards to five Academic Senate faculty members. The highly prized awards are presented at the annual UCLA Alumni Association Awards Ceremony, and selection of recipients is based on recommendations of the Academic Senate Committee on Teaching. Nominations are solicited from academic departments during Fall Quarter. The Luckman Distinguished Teaching Awards Program was established in late 1991 after receipt of a generous gift from Harriet and Charles Luckman. Awards given for 1992 through 1997 were named the Luckman Distinguished Teaching Awards. Kenneth N. Trueblood (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Charles W. Hoffman (Germanic Languages) Thomas P. Jenkin (Political Science) Ken Nobe (Chemical Engineering) Carl W. Hagge (Germanic Languages) Robert H. Sorgenfrey (Mathematics) Saul Winstein (Chemistry and Biochemistry Mostafa A. El-Sayed (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Moshe F. Rubinstein (Civil and Environmental Engineering) William R. Romig (Microbiology and Molecular Genetics) George A. Bartholomew (Biology) William P. Gerberding (Political Science) J.A.C. Grant (Political Science) David S. Saxon (Physics and Astronomy) E.K.L. Upton (Physics and Astronomy) Edward W. Graham (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Sydney C. Rittenberg (Microbiology and Molecular Genetics) Robert P. Stockwell (Linguistics) Robert J. Finkelstein (Physics and Astronomy) Douglas S. Hobbs (Political Science) Raymond M. Redheffer (Mathematics) Margret I. Sellers (Microbiology and Immunology) Ehrhard Bahr (Germanic Languages) Daniel Kivelson (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Vernon E. Denny (Chemical Engineering) Peter N. Ladefoged (Linguistics) Duane E. Smith (Political Science) Andreas Tietze (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures) James N. Miller (Microbiology and Immunology) Charles A. West (Chemistry and Biochemistry) David Evans (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Nhan Levan (Electrical Engineering) Judith L. Smith (Physiological Science) Robert B. Edgerton (Anthropology, Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences) David S. Eisenberg (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Victoria A. Fromkin (Linguistics) Robert C. Neerhout (Pediatrics) Alma M. Hawkins (World Arts and Cultures) Paul M. Schachter (Linguistics) Richard W. Young (Neurobiology) Marianne Celce-Murcia (Teaching English as a Second Language and Applied Linguistics) Marilyn L. Kourilsky (Education) Chand R. Viswanathan (Electrical Engineering) J. William Schopf (Earth and Space Sciences) Verne N. Schumaker (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Michael E. Jung (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Thomas D. Wickens (Psychology) Johannes Wilbert (Anthropology) Paul I. Rosenthal (Communication Studies) Christopher Salter (Geography) Ronald F. Zernicke (Physiological Science) Arnold J. Band (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures) Charles L. Batten, Jr. (English) Robin S. Liggett (Architecture and Urban Design, Urban Planning) Claude Bernard (Physics and Astronomy) Bryan C. Ellickson (Economics) Robert S. Elliott (Electrical Engineering) Charles M. Knobler (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Hooshang Kangerloo (Radiological Sciences) Sandra A. Thompson (Linguistics) Patricia M. Greenfield (Psychology) David F. Martin (Computer Science) Ross P. Shideler (Scandinavian Section, Comparative Literature) Roger A. Gorski (Neurobiology) Patricia A. Keating (Linguistics) Leonard Kleinrock (Computer Science) Lawrence W. Bassett (Radiological Sciences) Howard Suber (Film and Television) Richard A. Yarborough (English) Michael J. Goldstein (Psychology) Richard L. Sklar (Political Science) Kathleen L. Komar (Comparative Literature, Germanic Languages) Peter M. Narins (Physiological Science) Merlin C. Wittrock (Education) Margaret FitzSimmons (Urban Planning) Robert B. Goldberg (Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology) Richard B. Kaner (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Jon P. Davidson (Earth and Space Sciences) E. Victor Wolfenstein (Political Science) Noriko Akatsuka (East Asian Languages and Cultures) William M. Gelbart (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Peter B. Hammond (Anthropology) Uptal Banerjee (Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology) Christine D. Gutierrez (Education) Arnold B. Scheibel (Neurobiology, Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences) Verónica Cortínez (Spanish and Portuguese) Wayne A. Dollase (Earth and Space Sciences) Joshua S.S. Muldavin (Geography) Alessandro Duranti (Anthropology) Richard H. Gold (Radiological Sciences) Non-Academic Senate Recipients In spring of 1985, the Office of Instructional Development began sponsorship of awards to three instructors who are not members of the Academic Senate. This category includes lecturers and adjunct and clinical faculty members. All non-Academic Senate faculty members who are nominated by their departments are eligible. Recipients are selected by the Academic Senate Committee on Teaching, utilizing the same criteria as that used for Academic Senate members. The Luckman Distinguished Teaching Awards Program was established in late 1991 after receipt of a generous gift from Harriet and Charles Luckman. Awards given for 1992 through 1997 were named the Luckman Distinguished Teaching Awards. L. Geoffrey Cowan (Communication Studies) Mary Elizabeth Perry (History) Paul Von Blum (Interdisciplinary) Carol D. Berkowitz (Pediatrics) Jeffrey I. Cole (Communication Studies) Cheryl Giuliano (Writing Programs) Jeanne Gunner (Writing Programs) Art Huffman (Physics and Astronomy) David G. Kay (Computer Science) Bonnie Lisle (Writing Programs) Kenneth R. Pfeiffer (Civil Engineering, Psychology) Lisa Gerrard (Writing Programs) Dorothy Phillips (Physiological Science) Betty A. Luceigh (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Cheryl Pfoff (Writing Programs) Janet Goodwin (Teaching English as a Second Language and Applied Linguistics) Janette Lewis (Writing Programs) Yihua Wang (East Asian Languages and Cultures) Jutta Landa (Germanic Languages) Linda Jensen (Teaching English as a Second Language and Applied Linguistics) Shelby Popham (Writing Programs) Scott Bowman (Political Science) Timothy Tangherlini (Scandinavian Section) G. Jennifer Wilson (Honors and Undergraduate Programs) William McDonald (Film and Television) Sung-Ock Sohn (East Asian Languages and Cultures) Paul Frymer (Political Science) George Gadda (UCLA Writing Programs) Patricia Gilmore-Jaffe (UCLA Writing Programs) Scott Votey (UCLA Emergency Medicine Center) The $30,000 Gold Shield Faculty Prize, an award for academic excellence, was created by the Gold Shield Alumnae of UCLA in celebration of their fiftieth anniversary in 1986. The prize is funded by an endowment of $250,000 raised by Gold Shield for this purpose, which has grown to over $400,000. Guidelines provide that the prize "recognize and reward UCLA faculty members who have demonstrated extraordinary accomplishment in teaching and in research or creative activity...and who have made a significant contribution to undergraduate education." Preference for recipients is given to faculty members in mid-career who do not often receive the extra professional incentives available to distinguished senior faculty. The Gold Shield Faculty Prize is awarded to each recipient for scholarly use. The awardee is selected every two years by a committee of peers appointed by the Academic Senate. Student and Gold Shield representatives are included. Recipients must come from fields that have undergraduate programs at UCLA. Michael E. Jung (Chemistry and Biochemistry) Patricia M. Greenfield (Psychology) Jeffrey C. Alexander (Sociology) J. William Schopf (Earth and Space Sciences) Albert R. Braunmuller (English) Peter M. Narins (Physiological Science) Robert B. Goldberg (Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology)
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