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Breaking Down Barriers
Tufts literacy expert Maryanne Wolf has pioneered ground-breaking research that has led to advances in dyslexia testing and treatment.
In recent years, the Tufts faculty has included:
During the 2005-2006 academic year, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Travel Awards allowed 185 graduate students to present their research at national and international conferences throughout the US and in 10 countries abroad.
During the 2006-2007 academic year, there are 598 faculty members within the School of Arts and Sciences; the A&S faculty size has increased by 14 tenured/tenure-track positions since AY 2004-2005
The School of Arts and Sciences offered 3,286 courses with total student enrollment of 51,118 in 2004-2005.
The School of Arts and Sciences conferred 1,223 Bachelor degrees and 481 graduate degrees in 2005-2006, 59 percent of the degrees awarded by the University.
The School of Arts and Sciences is the largest School at Tufts, enrolling approximately 4,600 undergraduate students and 1,000 graduate students.
The School of Arts and Sciences was accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) in November of 2003.
Tufts University was founded in 1852. The University is designated as a "Research University/Very High Research Activity (RU/VH)" by the Carnegie Foundation. The School of Arts and Sciences, located on the Medford/Somerville campus, is the largest of the seven schools that comprise Tufts University, just a few minutes from downtown Boston.
In the fall of 2006, Child Development graduate alumna, Amanda Sequin, was one of two Massachusetts educators and 100 nationwide who were honored with a $25,000 prize presented by the Superintendent of Boston Schools and representatives of the Milken Foundation at a surprise school assembly. These National Educator prizes are sometimes referred to as "The Oscars of Teaching."
Several students have received NSF Graduate Research Fellowships and Fulbright Scholarships to do dissertation research across the world. Most recently, Jocelyn Muller, a Biology Ph.D. student, and Katherine Handwerger, a Psychology Ph.D. student, were awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships and Iris Ponte, a Ph.D. student in Child Development, and Neilesh Bose, a Ph.D. student in History, won Fulbright Doctoral Dissertation Awards.
In 2006, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences awarded 36 doctoral degrees, 28 percent more than 10 years ago, and 332 masters degrees, an increase of 17 percent.
The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences has the largest number of graduate students at Tufts, with an average yearly enrollment of 1,000 graduate students.
The Class of 2010 is the first A&S class to enroll with a mean SAT greater than 1400 and 83 percent rank in the top 10 percent of their high school class.
The School of Arts and Sciences has experienced a record applicant pool for undergraduate admissions in 12 of the past 13 years.
In recent years, Tufts has produced more than 260 recipients of major national scholarships and fellowships.
In recent years, Tufts has produced 4 Marshall Scholars, 1 Rhodes Scholar, 4 Beinecke Scholars, 3 Goldwater Scholars and 2 Luce Scholars.
In recent years, Tufts has produced 4 Truman Scholars, the most prestigious graduate scholarship awarded to students for their commitment and interest in public service.
In recent years, Tufts has produced more than 175 Fulbright Scholars. Tufts has been among the top five universities in producing Fulbright Scholars for some time.
During the 2004-2005 academic year, Tufts undergraduates experienced a 78 percent acceptance rate to medical school, compared to the national average of 48 percent that year.
Tufts is an acknowledged leader in producing Peace Corps volunteers, among the top five colleges and universities in recent years.
Roughly 40 percent of Tufts undergraduates have an overseas study experience, placing Tufts among the top five research universities. The Kaplan College Guide named Tufts one of America's 25 Hot Schools, recognizing it as the "Hottest for Studying Abroad."
Virginia Jackson, Associate Professor of English, was recently awarded the 2006 Christian Gauss Award for the Best Book in Literary Criticism by Phi Beta Kappa.
Marina Bers, Assistant Professor of Child Development, was one of 20 people in the United States to receive the 2005 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientist and Engineers (PECASE), the highest honor given by the US government to promising and groundbreaking investigators who are starting their independent research careers.
Martin J. Sherwin, Professor in the Department of History, and biographer Kai Bird have been awarded the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for biography for American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (2006). Their book on the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the physicist who led the Manhattan Project, which resulted in the development and use of the atomic bomb in August 1945.
In 2006, Department of Chemistry faculty member David Walt was recognized with a prestigious Howard Hughes Medical Institute Grant.
Two members of the Arts and Sciences faculty have been recognized with MacArthur Awards: Jay Cantor and Ayesha Jalal.
Eight members of the Arts and Sciences faculty have been admitted to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, including President Lawrence S. Bacow, Dean Robert J. Sternberg, James Theodore Park, Jerome P. Kassirer, Daniel Dennett, Nils Yngve Wessell, Jane Bernstein, and Ray Jackendoff.
Tufts boasts more than 10 Fulbright Fellows in recent years.
Erin Yeh (A'07)
Working as an intern for MTV Hong Kong helped prepare Tufts junior Erin Yeh for the real world.
Expanding Their Horizons
This summer was action-packed for Tufts students who undertook a variety of projects across the world and in their own backyards.
Face To Face
Webcasting technology is giving Tufts students a real-time view of life in the Middle East.
Great Wide Open
Through the OpenCourseWare initiative, Tufts is using the power of the Internet to share its greatest resource - knowledge - across the globe.
Hot Stuff
When the semester starts to cool down, student performance groups at Tufts begin heating up.
International Appeal
Kaplan/Newsweek College Resource Guide ranked Tufts as the "Hottest School for Study Abroad" in 2004, celebrating the university's international approach to learning.
Jay Cantor Professor, English
BACKGROUND: Raised in Great Neck, NY; Ph.D., University of California-Santa Cruz; at Tufts since 1977.
PUBLISHED WORK: Five books, including three novels; latest work is Great Neck. Working on next novel, titled The Reborn.
ABOUT WRITING: "It starts with just a love of putting words together and a certain physical feeling that comes with that. Beyond that, without story-telling, I wouldn't know what to do with all the lives that I hear about everyday."
WHY TUFTS: "Tufts is a place very open to a person teaching what they are most interested in.
I think graduate students come to Tufts for the strength of the faculty, its accessibility, and its range of interests. They won't be disappointed by the other students, who, from my experience are a very self-directed, independent minded group."
AFTER-HOURS: "I don't have free time. I say that because I'm either working on classes or I'm researching things for class, or for my novels or essays. But those are all things that I want to do. So you could say that the good thing about my work for Tufts is that it is what I would want to do in my free time. I also write screenplays, as work for hire for studios."
Jeffrey Taliaferro Asking Why
Taking an approach that blends political science and psychology, Tufts faculty member, Jeff Taliaferro, sheds new light on the reasons why states become embroiled in counterproductive military situations.
John D. McDonald Professor, music
Background: Born in Norfolk, Va., doctorate from Yale; composer/pianist in residence in Mongolia via the U.S. Information Agency; at Tufts since 1990.
Compositions: More than 800, including commissions for the Havana Festival 2000, St. Petersburg Spring Festival 2002, Duke University, Wellesley College, Vienna Saxophone Quartet, Boston Celebrity Series, Worcester Chorus, and Florestan Recital Project.
Current work: Annual piano albums (collections of short solo keyboard pieces); "Peace Process," a work for basset horn and piano for Tufts Merrin Professor (and clarinetist) Ray Jackendoff; an evening-long song cycle about animals for voice and piano; a choral work for the Worcester Chorus.
Goal in music: "I like to confront people, to mark events in our lives, to capture in music something I've observed that would be difficult to express in words-something about a person, something political, or something completely abstract. All my acts of composing are inherently pacifist."
Why Tufts: "I don't feel I can meet the needs of more than eight graduate composers at a time, so the smallness of our graduate music program is important. I also appreciate all the contact I have at Tufts with people from other departments and disciplines, as well as the very high quality of our undergraduate students."
After-Hours: Compose, practice, read, and then do those things some more. What little free time I have, I spend with my wife and children. I also like to run in the woods."
Jonathan Wilson Professor and Chair, English; Fletcher Professor of Rhetoric and Debate
BACKGROUND: Born in London, England; educated at the University of Essex, St. Catherine's College, Oxford, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; with a dissertation on the novels of Saul Bellow; Guggenheim fellowship in fiction; at Tufts since 1982.
PUBLISHED WORK: Seven books, including two novels, two collections of stories, two critical works and a biography of Chagall.
ABOUT WRITING: "Writing is a lifetime of unfolding your imagination. It remains a mysterious activity."
WHY TUFTS: "Teaching at Tufts is an undiminished pleasure. It's a pleasant atmosphere for teaching, an intimate atmosphere. I keep up with many of my former students; I get e-mails from some students I taught 22 years ago."
AFTER-HOURS: "I'm a soccer fanatic. [Wilson covered the 1994 world cup for The New Yorker.] I also love watching TV with my sons. I used to play poker but gave that up.
Karina Weinstein (A'02) Spreading Hope to the Children of Chile
For Tufts graduate Karina Weinstein, studying abroad in Chile during her junior year was a life-changing experience.
Krishna Kumar Professor and Chair, Chemistry, Associate Member, Cancer Center, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Adjunct Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering
BACKGROUND: Born in Madras, India; Ph.D., organic chemistry, Brown University; Skaggs Fellow, The Scripps Research Institute; at Tufts since 1998.
RESEARCH: De novo design and construction of proteins, especially those with nonstick properties; also probing the evolution of proteins by using bioinformatics to deconstruct enzymes to the smallest pieces that still have catalytic properties.
ABOUT HIS WORK: "We use two complementary approaches. One is to take inspiration from biology, to push the frontiers of understanding of how biology works and use that understanding to do chemistry. The second is to use chemistry to endow extra-biological properties to molecules and organisms."
WHY TUFTS: "We have a dual mission of education and research, and I find that Tufts does both quite well. They are synergistic-you can't do cutting-edge research without engaging in and benefiting from teaching, and students must be involved in pushing the research envelope to receive a top education and train other students."
AFTER-HOURS: "I play squash, ski, and sail."
L. Michael Romero Professor, biology; Professor, environmental and population health, Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine
BACKGROUND: Raised in Albuquerque, NM; Ph.D. in biology, Stanford; post-doctoral fellowships from National Science Foundation and American Psychological Association; at Tufts since 1996.
CURRENT RESEARCH: Using neuroscience, physiology, and ecology-in the lab and in the field-to learn about stress in vertebrates, specifically how levels of stress-related hormones released in an animal are barometers for how well it is coping with its environment; currently focused on what role those hormones play in survival.
WHY TUFTS: "It's rare to find a department where faculty members co-author papers the way we do here. That's because it's rare to find a biology department with such a wide range of faculty as we have-including a physiologist, plant scientist, ecologist, neurobiologist, molecular biologist, geneticist, conservation biologist, and animal behaviorist. Tufts also is unusual in the closeness graduate students have with their advisers; most of our biology labs have only two or three graduate students in them."
AFTER-HOURS: "I read science fiction voraciously; I also enjoy hiking, skiing and bridge.
Martin J. Sherwin Walter S. Dickson Professor of English and American History
Maryanne Wolf Professor, Child Development; Director; Tufts Center for Reading and Language Research John DiBiaggio Professor Citizenship and Public Service, Tisch College Adjunct Faculty
BACKGROUND: Born in Indiana; Ed.D., Harvard; Fulbright fellow in Germany; at Tufts since 1980.
CURRENT RESEARCH: Integration of research in cognitive neurosciences, linguistics, and child development to understand the evolution, development, and variations in the reading brain; the application of this knowledge to the design of tests and interventions for children with dyslexia.
HONORS: Awards from the International Dyslexia Association, Fulbright Fellowship, American and Massachusetts Psychological Associations; and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; DiBiaggio Chair of Citizenship and Public Service.
WHY TUFTS: "I tremendously value a place where I can be real friends with everyone from the maintenance person to the president; this is a place where people care about each other. It is also a place where the scholar-teacher is at the core of the academic mission. That is the core of who I am."
AFTER-HOURS: "Every night at 11:00 or 11:30 (and sometimes at 4:00 a.m.) I return to my roots as an English lit. major and quietly read poetry and fiction. I also swim, ski (badly), play the piano, and travel to places where I can grin in gratitude at the variety of creation."
Pattern Language: Clothing As Communicator
Every year, the Tufts University Art Gallery features a wide variety of art, including works from national and local artists, as well as Tufts students. Gallery Director Amy Ingrid Schlegel discusses a recent exhibit that explores clothing as a metaphor of larger social and cultural issues.
A Jumbo Retrospective
Former Tufts athletic director Rocky Carzo talks about Jumbo and school spirit at Tufts.
Richard Lerner Professor, child development Bergstrom Chair in Applied Developmental Science; Director, Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development
BACKGROUND: Born in Brooklyn, NY; Ph.D.,City University of New York; at Tufts since 1999.
CURRENT RESEARCH: Groundbreaking work on the nature of positive development among adolescents. Several longitudinal studies are underway exploring how adolescents develop in positive ways and how this development is juxtaposed with risk behaviors (alcohol, drug use, unsafe sex, delinquency, etc.) often seen during this period.
LATEST BOOK: Liberty:Thriving and Civic Engagement Among America's Youth.
WHY TUFTS: "Tufts has a great liberal arts tradition and is making a difference in the world for individuals, communities, and civil society more generally. Having the opportunity to work at an institution that has this traditional excellence and yet this commitment, this pillar, to application to real world service is just an enormous opportunity, a great gift."
AFTER-HOURS: "I like to spend time with my kids and my wife, who is a professor at Boston College. I also jog every day and do crossword puzzles."