Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching
Excellence
A graduate of the University of Tulsa (B.S.P.E.
1969) and Stanford University (M.Sc. 1971; Ph.D. 1976), Braeutigam
joined the faculty of Northwestern in 1975, where he now serves
as the Harvey Kapnick Professor of Business Institutions and
Professor of Economics. He was nominated as someone who "has
devoted an extraordinary amount of his energy and time to
undergraduate education at Northwestern." His continuing
efforts to elevate the level of the curriculum in economics
have resulted in extraordinary CTEC evaluations, immensely
popular courses, numerous teaching awards, and a redefinition
in the method of teaching undergraduate microeconomic theory.
Braeutigam has led the department in several important curricular
revisions. As the first faculty member to require calculus
as a prerequisite to Microeconomics, he spurred the department
to require it for all sections of the course. He has served
as a Faculty Associate for the Ayers Residential College of
Commerce and Industry, and is the President-Elect of the European
Association of Research in Industrial Economics. Braeutigam
serves on the editorial boards of several leading journals
in the field and is widely published. Price Level Regulation
for Diversified Public Utilities is his most recent book.
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Dwight Conquergood
Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching
Excellence
A graduate of Indiana State University (B.A.
1972), the University of Utah (M.A. 1974), and Northwestern
University (Ph.D. 1977), Conquergood joined the faculty of
Northwestern in 1978, where he is now Associate Professor
and Chair of Performance Studies. He was nominated as a person
who "epitomizes the active and engaged scholar who is
committed to teaching." He was described as "an
accessible listener, a charismatic lecturer, an unobtrusive
facilitator, and an impressive scholar." In his teaching
his goal is to "promote a vigorous exchange between critical
reflection and creative practice," and "help students
appreciate the productive dialectical tension between ideas
and action." Conquergood developed an immensely popular
Performance Studies course, culminating in a week-long festival
of one-person shows the students create from historical non-fiction
material. He has produced a number of films documenting his
ethnographic work, through which he has given students the
opportunity to interact with members of inner-city street
gangs and Southeast Asian refugees. He was named 1993 Professor
of the Year for the State of Illinois by the Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education, and has received grants
from such organizations as the Ford Foundation and the Illinois
Humanities Council.
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Thomas William Heyck
Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching
Excellence
A graduate of Rice University (B.A. 1960; M.A.
1962) and the University of Texas at Austin (Ph.D. 1969),
Heyck joined the faculty of Northwestern in 1968, where he
is currently Professor of History in the College of Arts and
Sciences. Heyck was nominated for his "exceptional intelligence
and dedication to the art of teaching" and for his work
in "enriching, broadening, and intensifying" the
quality of undergraduate education through the cultivation
of communities among both students and faculty outside of
the classroom. He pioneered and implemented the idea of the
Junior Tutorial at Northwestern and was one of the founders
of the residential college system, serving as a faculty fellow
of the Humanities Residential College since its foundation,
and Master from 1985 to 1989. As chair of Northwestern's 1988
Task Force on the Undergraduate Experience, he wrote a highly
influential report popularly known as "The Heyck Report."
He was named 1991 Professor of the Year for the State of Illinois
by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.
A scholar of British and Irish history, Heyck is author of
several books including The Transformation of Intellectual
Life in Victorian England, which was designated by Choice
as one of the outstanding academic books of 1982.
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Franziska Lys
Charles Deering McCormick University Distinguished
Lecturer
A graduate of the University of Rochester (B.S.
1980; M.A. 1981) and Northwestern University (Ph.D. 1988),
Lys joined the faculty of Northwestern in 1984. She is currently
Senior Lecturer in the Department of German in the College
of Arts and Sciences. Nominated for her "extraordinary
quality of teaching resulting from her innovative approaches
to the classroom," she is a leader in the field of electronic
language instruction. As Coordinator of Intermediate German
instruction, she has engineered a complete program of study
which includes an interactive CD-ROM program (Drehort: Neubrandenburg)
she and a colleague in the department developed, and an interactive
grammar program (Dasher). Among her pedagogical innovations
is her arranging for students to have e-mail partners in German-speaking
countries. Lys was honored with an Outstanding Teaching Award
from the College of Arts and Sciences in 1987, and was the
1996 recipient of the Lieutenant Governor's Award of the Illinois
Council of Teachers of Foreign Languages (ICTFL) for outstanding
achievement in the field of foreign language teaching and
research.
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