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For Immediate Release April 24, 2009 |
News Services Office 310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820 Asheville, NC 28804-8507 828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6677 Web: http://www.unca.edu/news e-mail: news@unca.edu |
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UNC Asheville Professor Sam Kaplan Honored for Teaching Excellence
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Sam Kaplan, one of UNC Asheville's most
respected professors, was named today as a recipient of the Award
for Excellence in Teaching from the University of North Carolina's
Board of Governors. Kaplan, associate professor of mathematics, was
nominated by a committee of UNC Asheville faculty. He will receive a
commemorative bronze medallion and a $7,500 cash prize.
Kaplan, who holds a doctorate from Boston University, joined the UNC
Asheville faculty in 1999. He immediately became respected by both
students and faculty colleagues for being an outstanding professor.
Recently, Kaplan has also devoted his time to creating and launching
the Asheville Initiative in Mathematics (AIM), a program that
connects UNC Asheville's Mathematics Department with local
communities. The group, which includes regional teachers and
community members, has received $925,000 in grants and is hard at
work on several projects, including a tutor training program and an
annual Math Literacy Summit.
"I hope that my excitement and activities inspire my students to
view math as a fun and important endeavor," said Kaplan. "In the
classroom I have learned that teaching is about providing
experiences for the students that help them grow as scholars, master
material and build a positive perspective on the craft of
mathematics. Always, it is a pleasure to take on this challenge."
UNC Asheville Mathematics Department Chair Dave Peifer, who works
closely with Kaplan, has ready praise for just how he takes on the
challenge. "Sam has several attributes that make him a great
teacher. Of these, the most significant is his devotion and true
compassion for his students." said Peifer. "As with many educators,
Sam believes that education and the pursuit of truth and knowledge
will profoundly help his students in many aspects of their
professional and personal lives."
In their end-of-semester evaluations, students consistently praise
Kaplan for his ability to explain difficult material, his
enthusiasm, and the way in which he organizes each course. In
addition to lectures, he engages students in group work and oral
presentations. By providing students with a variety of tools and
immersing them in different settings to solve problems, he is able
to effectively reach a broad range of skill levels.
UNC Asheville junior Sadie Ferguson, who aspires to be a teacher,
appreciates Kaplan's approach in the classroom. "While effectively
and efficiently teaching difficult material, he makes the lessons
relevant to our lives and goals in education," she said. "Dr. Kaplan
encourages us to continually think, learn, solve and hypothesize
about all questions we encounter."
Kaplan applies this same philosophy to his own life. In addition to
teaching in the Mathematics Department, he has taught two Humanities
course, a class on Jewish women, a colloquium on mathematics and
social justice, and a master's of liberal arts course.
Kaplan's love for his subject matter and devotion to scholarship has
motivated student to undertake undergraduate research projects.
During the past 10 years, Kaplan has directed original research
projects for 20 students in topics ranging from geometry of atonal
music to celestial mechanics.
Students attest that he's able to make such abstract topics come to
life.
"Dr. Kaplan is a wonderful teacher who knows how to relate material
to students," said senior mathematics major Benjamin Filip. "He
always pushes us to do better, and through that Dr. Kaplan makes
this University a better place."
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