Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering 179 - 2014-11-19
Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering 179, 001 - Fall 2014 Process Technology of Solid-State Materials Devices - David B. Graves Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
Five outstanding UC Berkeley faculty have been selected as recipients of the 2015 Distinguished Teaching Award, the campus’s most prestigious honor for teaching. The award recognizes teaching that incites intellectual curiosity in students, engages them thoroughly in the enterprise of learning, and has a lifelong impact. This year, the Academic Senate’s Committee on Teaching recognizes:
- Kathleen Donegan, Department of English
- Daniel Feldman, Department of Molecular & Cell Biology
- Ulrike Malmendier, Department of Economics and Haas School of Business
- Francine Masiello, Departments of Comparative Literature and Spanish & Portuguese
- Lev Michael, Department of Linguistics
eCHEM 1A: Online General Chemistry
College of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley
http://chemistry.berkeley.edu/echem1a
Curriculum and ChemQuizzes developed by Dr. Mark Kubinec and Professor Alexander Pines
Chemical Demonstrations by Lonnie Martin
Video Production by Jon Schainker and Scott Vento
Developed with the support of The Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation
American Democracy, Veterans, and Higher Education
James Wright, President Emeritus and Eleazar Wheelock Professor of History, Dartmouth College
Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes Dartmouth's James Wright, President Emeritus and Eleazar Wheelock Professor of History, for a discussion of his work as a historian and as President of an Ivy League college. Topics covered include: his formative years, his research on populism in the Western U.S. in the 19th century, leadership in higher education, and challenges facing public and private universities in the new economic environment. President Wright also discusses his work in aiding Afghanistan and Iraq War veterans to pursue higher education. He places these efforts in the historical context of American democracy's ambivalent relationship to veterans from the time of the revolution to the present.
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/iis/Kreisler.html
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/
http://conversationswithhistory.typepad.com/conversations_with_histor/
http://www.thenewpress.com/index.php?option=com_title&task=view_title&metaproductid=1721