NSF
ADVANCE Co-Principal Investigators
::
Sue V. Rosser
|
|
Dr.
SUE V. ROSSER
Dean, Ivan Allen College |
Professional Preparation
1969 B.A. in French and Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
1971 M.S. in Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
1973 Ph.D. in Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
1973-1976, Post-doctoral Fellow, University of Wisconsin
Appointments
Dean, Ivan Allen College, and Professor of History, Technology
and Society, Georgia Institute of Technology
(7/99 - present)
Director, Center for Womens Studies and Gender Research
and Professor of Anthropology, University of
Florida-Gainesville (7/95 - 6/99)
Senior Program Officer of Womens Programs, National
Science Foundation
(7/94-12/95) Director, Womens Studies and Professor
of Family and Preventive
Medicine, University of South Carolina-Columbia
(1986-1995)
Associate Professor of Family and Preventive Medicine,
University of South
Carolina-Columbia (1986-1990)
Visiting Distinguished Professor, University of Wisconsin
System (Fall 1993)
Associate Professor, Mary Baldwin College (1983-1986)
Visiting Lecturer, Towson State University (Fall 1984)
Assistant Professor, Mary Baldwin College (1976-1983)
Visiting Professor, University of WisconsinMadison
(Summers, 1976-1986)
Most Relevant Publications
Rosser, Sue V., Women, Science and Society:
The Crucial Union; New York: Teachers College
Press, Columbia University, 2000
Rosser, Sue V., Re-Engineering Female
Friendly Science; New York: Teachers College Press,
Columbia University, 1997.
Rosser, Sue V., ed., Teaching the Majority:
Science, Mathematics, and Engineering
Teaching that Attracts Women.;
New York: Teachers College Press, Columbia University, 1995
Rosser, Sue V., ed., Womens
Studies Quarterly, Building Inclusive Science in Womens
Studies and Women in Science and
Engineering; Spring/Summer, 2000.
Rosser, Sue V., and Mireille Zieseniss. Final
Report on Professional Oppoirtunities
for Women in Research and Education
(POWRE) Workshop, March 30-April 1, 1998, Gainesville,
FL: UF, CWSGR.
Other Significant Publications
Rosser, Sue V. Balancing: Survey of Fiscal Year 1997,
1998, and 1999 POWRE
Awardees Journal of
Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering. 2001,
(7): 1. 1-11.
Rosser, Sue V., and Mireille Zieseniss, Career Issues
and Laboratory Climates:
Different Challenges and Opportunities for Women Engineers
and Scientists. Survey
of FY 1997 POWRE Awardees, Journal
of Women and Minorities in Science
and
Engineering, 2000, 6,(2).
In press.
Rosser, Sue V., and Bonnie Kelly. From Hostile
Exclusion to Friendly Inclusion: USC System Model
Project for the Transformation of Science and Math Teaching to
Reach Women in Varied Campus Settings. Journal
of Women and Minorities in Science
and
Engineering 1, no. 1 (1994):
29-44.
Rosser, Sue V., Different Laboratory/Work Climates:
Impacts Upon Women in the Workplace. Women
in Science and Engineering: Choices for Success (Ed). Cecily
Selby. Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 869, April 15, 1999, pp
95-101.
Rosser, Sue V., Group Work in the Science, Engineering
and Mathematics Classroom: Consequences of Ignoring
Race and Gender. College Teaching, 1998, 46(3): 82-88.
Synergistic Activities
Rosser, Sue V., and Bonnie Kelly, Educating
Women for Success in Science
and Mathematics. National
Science Foundation Project HRD 9053892. West Columbia,
SC: University of South Carolina Publications, 1994.
Councilor, National Board of Association for Women
in Science (AWIS), 2001-2003
Member, National Academy of Engineering Steering Committee
for Engineer of 2020.
Member, Committee for Science and Engineering (CWSE),
National Academy of
Sciences, 2000-2003.
Member, National Advisory Board, Washington State
Gender Equity Project, 1999-2003.
Collaborators & Other Affiliations
Collaborations: Patricia
H. Miller, University of Florida
(within
last 48 months) Mary
Frank Fox, Georgia Institute of Technology
Carol
Colatrella, Georgia Institute of Technology
Eliesh
ONeal Lane, Georgia Institute of Technology
Graduate Advisor: Dr.
J. T. Robinson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Post Doctoral Advisors: Dr. Robert M. Auerbach, University
of Wisconsin-Madison
Dr.
William H. Stone, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Dr.
David Clark, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Thesis Advisor: Patricia Balar, Kearsley Stewart,
Marcia Good-Maust, Heather- McIlvaine Newsad,
Leslie Henson, Audrey Steiner, Bonnie Kelly, Amy Hudock, Donna
Hudson, Tony Herbert, Sheila Jeffers, Laura Sullivan,
Julie Montgomery, Mireille-
Zieseniss.
Postgraduate-Scholar Sponsor: Marianne Barnes, Donna Hughes
As Director of Womens Studies, I served as undergraduate
advisor both at the
University of South Carolina and the University of
Florida. At those institutions and
at Mary Baldwin College, I have advised more than 100 undergraduate
students,
although not in the capacity of thesis advisory
I have been on the graduate committee
of 32 students and served as post-doctoral advisor
to two.