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Paul Barnhart receives 2015 J. Bruce Jackson Award for undergraduate mentoring

In the corner of his office, Paul Barnhart keeps a 33-year-old photo of himself when he was a 杏吧视频 undergrad to remind him to think what it was like to be a student鈥攁nd to show students he was once like them. 鈥淎s a college senior, I was a different person in many ways,鈥 said Barnhart, now an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a certain amount of confidence lacking when we鈥檙e young, requiring some attention and some care.鈥 The attention and care Barnhart provides his students earned him a 2015 J. Bruce Jackson, MD, Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Mentoring. The Jackson Award celebrates faculty and staff who have guided a student in his or her academic and career paths, fostered the student鈥檚 long-term personal development, challenged the student to reflect, explore and grow as an individual and supported and/or facilitated the student鈥檚 goals and life choices. Barnhart and Gillian Weiss, associate professor of history, who also won the award, will be honored during commencement ceremonies Sunday, May 17. The Jackson Award follows Barnhart鈥檚 2013 Wittke Award for excellence in undergraduate teaching. He earned his bachelor鈥檚, master鈥檚 and PhD here, and spent two decades working for NASA contractors before returning as a full-time faculty member five years ago. His teaching led one student who nominated Barnhart for the Jackson to consider a career in aerospace engineering. 鈥淭hough I wanted to go down this road, I was apprehensive of the unknown and uncertain I had what it took to follow through,鈥 the student wrote. He credited Barnhart鈥檚 guidance and support for allaying his fears and helping him clarify his goals. 鈥淒r. Barnhart once commented on my tenacity when he saw me struggling to tackle certain problems in the Aerospace Design class,鈥 the student wrote. 鈥淗e saw something in me that I had not consciously realized...It motivated me to work even harder.鈥 Barnhart suggested a design project that would help the student gain skills and experience useful for graduate school, and, despite the student鈥檚 fears of receiving a poor grade, take a graduate-level course for full credit rather than auditing the class. Both forced the student to push himself harder than he鈥檇 pushed before and, he wrote, gave him confidence he could succeed. Barnhart, who was not the student鈥檚 official adviser, then helped him choose a graduate program that fit his interests and abilities. He starts in the fall. A second student who nominated Barnhart for the Jackson earned a D in Flight Mechanics, but Barnhart could see he cared about the class and grade. Barnhart spent extra time with him in this and a second class. When they realized the student needed a class offered only in spring to graduate鈥攔equiring the student to stay an extra semester鈥擝arnhart ended up teaching it to him as an independent study course. While that added to Barnhart鈥檚 teaching load, it saved the student the expense of another semester. 鈥淗e had to generate readings, problem sets and exams, and then he had to grade the responses, all for one student,鈥 the nominee wrote. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 his best student, yet he still spent so much time on me.鈥 The effort reflects Barnhart鈥檚 own experience鈥攊n particular, the help and advice he received from Professor Joe Prahl, who was one of his teachers and is still on faculty, and P.G. 鈥淕erry鈥 Lind, who had many roles, including assistant to the dean of academic affairs at Case Institute of Technology while Barnhart was an undergraduate. 鈥淪o, if a student requires help in a class or advice, I will give him or her as much time as it takes,鈥 Barnhart said. 鈥淚t takes more effort to help a student who is struggling, but our purpose here is to get all students through the program, not just those who do it easily.鈥
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