2012-2013 Graduate Catalog

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This is an archived copy of the 2012-2013 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.callutheran.edu.

Faculty Profiles

California Lutheran University’s distinguished faculty come from some of the top institutions in the country and are dedicated to helping students achieve success. Small classes make it possible for faculty members to develop close mentoring relationships with students, and CLU maintains a campus environment conducive to faculty and student interaction.. The quality of this interaction sets CLU apart from other institutions of higher education. Since the University opened its doors to the first students in 1961, the quality of the faculty has been considered the institution’s greatest asset and one of the reasons the University was awarded accreditation by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges early on. Through the years, that tradition of faculty excellence has been maintained.

 

Ali Akbari
Professor of Business Administration, 1984
M.A., Ph.D., University of Southern California

A former researcher for the National Science Foundation, Ali Akbari has been active professionally – publishing articles, presenting papers, serving on professional programs and consulting. He has published two textbooks in economics: Explorations in Macroeconomics and Economic Way of Thinking. As Director of the CLU Center for Economic Research, Dr. Akbari developed an economic and business forecasting model that provides quarterly forecasts of economic activities in the major cities of Ventura County.

Gerhard Apfelthaler
Professor of International Business and International Management, 2009
M.B.A., Ph.D., Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration

A native of Austria, Gerhard Apfelthaler started his career at the Vienna University of Economics in Austria. After having served as an Austrian Trade Commissioner to the United States and as a Commercial Attaché at the Austrian Embassy in Singapore, he successfully built international business programs at two different universities in Austria before joining CLU. He teaches and publishes in the areas of international business, international market entry and cross-cultural management. He has published extensively on these topics and is a member of the Academy of Management, the Academy of International Business, the Strategic Management Society and the University Accreditation Board of Oman.

Michael J. Arndt
Professor of Theatre Arts, 1982
B.A., Augsburg College
M.F.A., University of Minnesota

Besides teaching theatre courses in acting, directing and theatre history, Michael Arndt directs many of CLU's theatre productions. His recent CLU productions have included Pericles: Prince of Tyre, Anatomy of Gray, and The Threepenny Opera. Professor Arndt is also active in professional theatre and is founder and artistic director of the Kingsmen Shakespeare Company, a professional theatre company of CLU. Recent Kingsmen productions he has directed include Macbeth, King Lear and Othello

Chad L. Barber
Assistant Professor of Biology, 2011
Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles
Chad Barber most recently worked as a postdoctoral fellow at UCLA, conducting research in immunology. He also has been teaching at Pepperdine University. He earned a B.S. in biology at Pepperdine, an M.S. in biology at California State University, Northridge, and a Ph.D. in molecular biology at UCLA. His research interests range from radiation biology to immunology, including “cell-cell interactions modulating signal transduction pathways” and various facets of immune cell development and function.

Somnath Basu
Professor of Business, 1999
B.A., University of Delhi
M.B.A., Marquette University
Ph.D., University of Arizona

Somnath Basu is a professor of finance and Director of the California Institute of Finance at CLU. He is widely published and an award-winning teacher. He has significant consulting experience with U.S. Fortune 100 companies, advising institutional money managers and in developing proprietary finance and planning software. Dr. Basu serves on various boards and committees including the CFP (chaired the Model Curriculum Revision Committee) Board of Standards and the Financial Planning Association. He is co-author of Investment Planning for Financial Professionals (McGraw Hill, 2006).

Robert Beilin
Senior Lecturer in Graduate Psychology, 2009
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

Robert Beilin is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and School Counselor. He has made presentations at the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts Southwest Regional and California Chapter Conference, the Ventura County Family Law Bar Association, and the Tenth Annual Forensic Mental Health Conference at Patton State Hospital among others. Beilin is a member of the American Association for Marital and Family Therapy, the Collaborative Family Law Professionals of Ventura and other professional organizations.

William J. Bersley
Associate Professor of Philosophy, 1980
B.A., Concordia Senior College, Ft. Wayne
M.Div., Concordia Theological Seminary, St. Louis
Ph.D., University of Colorado

Problems, logic, history of philosophy and philosophy of religion are among the topics Bill Bersley teaches at CLU. He received an NDEA Fellowship for his doctoral work at the University of Colorado and previously served as a parish pastor and campus pastor at Black Hills State College. Dr. Bersley enjoys running, tai chi chuan, singing, playing the guitar and drumming.

William L. Bilodeau
Professor of Geology, 1990
B.A., University of California, Santa Barbara
Ph.D., Stanford University

Prior to joining CLU’s faculty, Bill Bilodeau taught for eight years at the University of Colorado, Denver, where he developed both an extensive knowledge of the local geology and a love for the Rocky Mountains. His research has centered on the regional structural geology, tectonics and sedimentary geology of parts of Colorado and Arizona. Dr. Bilodeau believes that geology is best learned in the field, so he includes many overnight field trips in his class activities. Outside the classroom, he enjoys hiking, camping, cross-country skiing, reading science fiction and visiting an occasional Saturday morning garage sale.

James Arthur Bond
Associate Professor of English, 2004
B.S., Ball State University
M.S., Ph.D., Indiana University

Jim Bond was the recipient of the William Riley Parker Teaching Award at Indiana University. He has considerable expertise in the areas of writing theory and pedagogy, American literature and periodicals, literacy and print culture studies, the Vietnam War in literature, children’s literature, and English education. He has published two articles on prominent 19th-century periodicals for the multi-volume project American History through Literature, 1870-1920 (Scribner’s, 2006). Dr. Bond is also a Reader for the AP English Language Exam for Educational Testing Service and a Reviewer for the AP Course Audit.

Elizabeth Brennan
Associate Professor of Special Education, 2011
Ph.D., Kent State University

Beth Brennan holds a B.A. in social work from Colorado State University and an M.Ed. and Ph.D. from Kent State University in Ohio. Her research interests include the history and foundations of children with disabilities, disability labels and service provision, and behavioral supports for students with autism. Her most recent academic appointment was as associate professor at Saint Mary’s College of California. Prior to that, she was a research coordinator for the Early Childhood Institute on Inclusion at San Francisco State University, where she also taught education courses. Brennan was a recipient of the Alice H. Hayden Award, presented annually to one U.S. doctoral student who demonstrates potential for leadership in teaching, scholarship and service on behalf of people with significant disabilities.

Michael E. Brint
Professor of Political Science and Uyeno-Tseng Professor of International Studies, 2000
B.A., University of California, Santa Cruz
Ph.D., University of Oxford, England

Michael Brint, Uyeno-Tseng Professor of Global Studies, created CLU’s Study Abroad Program to Oxford, which pairs a traditional study abroad model with extensive European travel seminars. Previously, he was Director of the Integrated Program in Humane Studies and Associate Professor of Humane Studies at Kenyon College and also has served as a visiting professor at Stanford University, assistant professor of government and foreign affairs at University of Virginia, and Thomas Jefferson Professor at Cambridge University, England, as well as Chief Administrative Officer for Laureate Inc., an organization to improve institutional information, collaboration and student learning through the use of information technology.

Christopher (Chris) Brown
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 2008
B.S., M.S., University of Missouri, Rolla
Ph.D. University of Colorado, Boulder

Before coming to CLU, Chris Brown was a visiting assistant professor of mathematics at The College of William and Mary, and also has held visiting positions at Kenyon College, the University of Northern Colorado, and the University of Colorado, Boulder. The subject of his doctoral dissertation was Connectedness and Reflections in Symmetry Algebras of Differential Equations, and his research interests include dynamics and game theory, with applications to ecology and finance. He is especially interested in problems of conservation and management in Caribbean marine turtle populations.

Lisa Buono
Interim Director of Adult Degree Evening Program
Assistant Professor in Education, 2005
B.A., University of California, Santa Barbara
M.A., Ed.D., California Lutheran University

Lisa Buono teaches a variety of courses in both the Pupil Personnel Services and the College Student Personnel programs in the Department of Counseling and Guidance, and serves as Field Work Coordinator for the department. Through a collaborative effort, she also taught distance-learning courses to counseling candidates in the Federated States of Micronesia. Prior to CLU, Buono taught at UCLA in the MFA Producer’s Program.

Barry Burns
Instructor in Multimedia, 2005
B.F.A., University of Houston

Barry Burns has been teaching part time at CLU for more than 12 years. His prior experience in multimedia includes animation, art, broadcast, graphic communication, music and photography. He owned and managed the graphic design firm Fortuna Design. As an illustrator, he has been published in eight books on neuroscience including The Human Brain by Jackson Beatty of UCLA. In addition to teaching, Burns has a passion for painting and sculpture.

Kristine D. Butcher
Professor of Chemistry, 1989
B.S., California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Ph.D., Stanford University

Kristine Butcher teaches a variety of chemistry courses, including general, physical and inorganic chemistry. Her current research examines the electronic structure and bonding properties of metallic carbides using molecular orbital calculations. Dr. Butcher is a member of the American Chemical Society and the National Science Teachers Association. She enjoys music, baseball and beachcombing.

Nathan Carlson
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 2009
B.A., Oberlin College
M.A., Ph.D., University of Kansas, Lawrence

Prior to joining the CLU faculty, Nathan Carlson held a postdoctoral position at the University of Arizona, which emphasized both research and teaching. His publications and research are in the area of point-set topology. However, his interest in math pedagogy has led him to work with middle school teachers as well as with university colleagues in the field. His work with curriculum and pedagogy led to a University of Arizona Math Department Teaching/Service award.

Peter Carlson
Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion, 2011
Ph.D., Claremont Graduate University
Peter Carlson’s B.A. in communication from Wheaton College led to a career in television production. Subsequently he earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in the history of Christianity from the Claremont School of Theology and Graduate University, respectively. Focusing on medieval and early modern Christianity, his research investigates the “intersections of material texts and religious practice.” Currently, he is researching the “Customal and Martyrology (as well as the rest of the library) of an obscure English monastic college known as the Boni Homines, or Good Men, in an effort to demonstrate the religious and educational roles that this unique order played in late medieval English society.”


Penchusee (Penny) L. Cefola
Associate Professor of English, 1987
B.A., Prasanmit College of Education, Bangkok, Thailand
M.S., Ph.D., Georgetown University

Penny Cefola earned her master’s and doctorate in applied linguistics. She has taught linguistics and writing in Thailand, Korea, and China and is an active member of the American Association for Applied Linguistics (AAAL). She enjoys the atmosphere of a small university such as CLU and, as the founder and advisor of CLU’s Asian Club and Friends, she has a special interest in motivating and encouraging minority students to strive for academic excellence. Dr. Cefola’s textbook Let’s Do Linguistics: Applied Linguistics for Language Teachers is used in her linguistics and language acquisition classes.

Xiang Chen
Professor of Philosophy, 1992
B.A., M.A., Zhongshan University
M.S., Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Xiang Chen teaches courses in the philosophy of science, logic, technology, and values and contemporary philosophy. His specialties include the philosophy and history of science and Oriental philosophy, and he has written numerous articles for academic journals on these and other philosophy-related topics. A native of China, Dr. Chen formerly taught philosophy at Zhongshan University in Canton, China, and at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Barbara Collins
Professor of Biology, 1963
B.S., Bates College
M.A., Smith College
M.S., Ph.D., University of Illinois

Barbara Collins’ main interests are botany and ecology. She loves teaching and enjoys leading field trips to the chaparral, deserts and mountains of Southern California. She teaches a summer course on the wildflowers of the Sierras, has extensively studied the flora of Southern California, and has assisted in several environmental impact studies. Dr. Collins is the author of 10 textbooks, some of which are used in local colleges and universities. Her latest effort has been the production of a wildflower website that includes more than 3,000 photos of California plants indexed to common, scientific and family names.

Carol Lynn Coman
Associate Professor of Business Administration, 1986
B.S., M.S., California State University, Northridge

Professor Coman teaches courses at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, and her continuing research has been on assessment. Her work on assessment has been published, and she is frequently asked to present the results of her research at national and international conferences. In addition to on-campus courses, Coman leads International Business Seminars (IBS) that involve students in travel throughout Western Europe and visits to business entities during the course. Outside of her work at CLU, Coman also is a management consultant, specializing in financial and tax matters.

Jonathan Cordero
Assistant Professor of Sociology, 2005
B.A., University of California, Berkeley
M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Jonathan Cordero is a culture sociologist whose primary areas of research explore the intersection between culture and religion. Other areas of research interest include social theory, aesthetics, racial and ethnic relations, and social justice. He teaches courses in social theory, culture, religion, and racial and ethnic relations and is actively engaged in supporting diversity efforts on campus and in the community. Dr. Cordero is an award-winning professor who has published numerous articles on the topic of religion and popular culture. He is currently working on a book about sacrilege in American culture.

Michael Cosenza
Associate Professor in Education, 2006
B.A., Queens College of the City University of New York
M.Ed., California Lutheran University
Ed.D. candidate, California Lutheran University

Michael Cosenza’s specialty is preparing candidates to become public school teachers, and he teaches courses in instructional methods with a focus in mathematics, science and technology integration. He also oversees candidate assessment including the administration of the California Teaching Performance Assessment (CalTPA) program and conducts seminars that prepare teacher candidates for the CalTPA. Prior to joining the CLU faculty, Cosenza taught for the Moorpark Unified School District. In addition to teaching he serves as the Professional Development School Coordinator and manages an elementary and single subject partnership with both the Moorpark Unified and Conejo Valley Unified School Districts.

Lynn Creighton
Senior Lecturer in Art, 2009
B.S., Temple University
B.A., M.A., California State University, Northridge

Lynn Creighton is an internationally recognized and exhibited sculptor who is known for her clay and bronze female figures. William Zimmer, contributing art critic for New York Times, wrote that her art suggests that “she has glimpsed through hallowed means that the core of life, its heart and spirit as well as its root, is women’s special gift and responsibility.” She has taught at CLU as an adjunct for the past five years and has also taught at a number of local universities and colleges.

Jamshid Damooei
Professor of Economics, 1987
B.Sc., University of Tehran, Iran
M.Phil., University College London, England
M.Sc., Ph.D., Economics University of Surrey, England

Jamshid Damooei’s scholarly work embraces a broad spectrum of current social and economic issues.. During the last 10 years, he has become more focused on the study of California's economy and authored a number of reports and studies on economic analyses of social issues. Recently, Dr. Damooei’s research studies have primarily been conducted within CLU’s Center for Leadership and Values, of which he is co-director. He is a former Director General of the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance in Iran and senior economist for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Currently, he is a consultant for the United Nations and most recognized for his expertise on economic and institutional capacity building in East Africa and the Middle East.

Rainer Diriwächter
Associate Professor of Psychology, 2005
B.A., West Virginia University
M.A., Ph.D., Clark University

Rainer Diriwächter is a native of Switzerland and has a strong background in the history of German psychology. He has published several articles and book chapters that highlight the contributions of “Ganzheitspsychologie” - the German holistic approach to psychology. His recent books include the international volume Striving for the Whole: Creating Theoretical Syntheses (Transaction Publishers) and Innovating Genesis: Microgenesis and the Constructive Mind in Action (Information Age Publishing), both published in 2008. Dr. Diriwächter is editor of the newly founded Journal of Integrated Social Sciences (JISS.org) and serves as an editorial board member for two peer-reviewed journals. He is faculty adviser to Psi Chi (the national honor society in psychology) and the Interdisciplinary Research Council.

Sharon D. Docter
Professor of Communication, 1992
B.A., J.D., University of California, Los Angeles
Ph.D., University of Southern California

An attorney with a doctorate in communication theory and research, Sharon Docter brings a special dimension to the Communication Department. Along with working in securities and general business litigation, she has studied regulations of broadcasting, cable television and telephone companies. Her current research examines the regulation of new technologies such as the Internet. Docter teaches courses in media law, public speaking, communication theories, argumentation and business law.

Harry A. Domicone
Professor of Business, 1993
B.G.S., Ohio University, Athens
M.B.A., California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Ph.D., University of Cincinnati

With special research interests in the strategic management of international entrepreneurship, Harry Domicone serves as Director of the International MBA Program and teaches a variety of management and other business courses. He currently consults in the areas of new venture development and family and closely held businesses. He is a member of several professional organizations, including the Academy of Management, the Strategic Management Society and the Academy of International Business.

Deborah Erickson
Associate Professor of Education, 2002
B.A.E., M.A., Pacific Lutheran University
M.A., California State University San Bernardino
Ed.D., University of the Pacific

Deborah Erickson teaches in the master’s programs in Educational Administration and Curriculum and Instruction as well as in the doctoral programs. Her research interests are in the areas of the principalship, mentoring, and faculty induction. Previously, an elementary teacher, reading specialist and principal, she also served as Director of Curriculum and Student Services for the San Carlos School District. She has an extensive background in staff development and has worked as a consultant to urban charter schools.

R. Guy Erwin
Professor of Religion and History, 2000
B.A., Harvard College
M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

Guy Erwin is the first full-time holder of CLU’s first endowed chair, the Gerhard and Olga J. Belgum Chair of Lutheran Confessional Theology. He also serves as Director of the Segerhammar Center for Faith and Culture. In addition to a survey course in the history of Christianity, Dr. Erwin teaches seminar courses on medieval, Reformation and early modern history and theology, including the life and thought of Martin Luther. Almost all of his courses are cross-listed in both religion and history. He also offers instruction on liturgy and worship in cooperation with the Music Department and occasionally teaches ecclesiastical Latin as a tutorial. Erwin is a native of Oklahoma and an active member of the Osage Tribe of Indians.

Karrolyne Fogel
Associate Professor of Mathematics, 1999
B.S., Santa Clara University
Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin

Karrolyne Fogel’s mathematical specialty is algebraic number theory. While her research is related to Stark’s Conjecture, she is particularly fond of elliptic curves, a mathematical construct that played a vital role in Andrew Wiles’ 1994 proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem (which remained unsolved for 350 years). Her more recent interests include the mathematics of voting, and mathematics education, particularly at the elementary school level. She is an avid fan of astronomy and has been known to spot Venus during the daytime.

Julia Lambert Fogg
Associate Professor of Religion, 2003
B.A., Colgate University
M. Div., Yale Divinity School
Th.M., Candler School of Theology, Emory University
Ph.D., Emory University

Julia Fogg teaches New Testament, Early Christianity, Christianity in culture, and Islam. In her research, Dr. Fogg explores the ways in which culture and social practices shape community expressions of faith. Although she specializes in Pauline studies, she pursues her interest in Liberation Theology, interfaith conversations and creative pedagogies such as service-learning and often leads the Turkey Travel course. Fogg is also developing a model for bilingual, Latino/Chicano urban ministry in Pasadena.

Robert Fraisse
Distinguished Educator in Residence, School of Education, 2006
B.S., California State University, Los Angeles
M.S., California Lutheran University
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

As Distinguished Educator in Residence in the School of Education, Robert Fraisse oversees CLU’s growing Ed.D. programs. Dr. Fraisse has worked in the field of K-12 public education for almost 33 years. During much of that time, he served in leadership positions in three districts, most recently as Superintendent of the Conejo Valley Unified School District. As a higher education administrator, he enjoys helping prepare school leaders who are able to meet the challenges in today’s K-12 education system.

Gregory K. Freeland
Professor of Political Science, 1991
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Greg Freeland is Chair of the Department of Political Science, Director of the Center for Equality and Justice and faculty adviser to Model United Nations. He has worked on the New Sanctuary Movement for immigrant rights and delivered papers on the topic. Dr. Freeland is an active member of the American Political Science Association, the Western Political Science Association, and the Caribbean Studies Association. He received the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation 2009 Faculty Fellowship for a study on “Redistricting by Citizen Task Force: An Analysis of the Impact on Ventura County” and previously received grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities for summer fellowships. Freeland is President of the Board of Directors of Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE).

Michael Gagliardo
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 2011
Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin

Michael Gagliardo earned his B.S. in mathematics at Southwestern University and his M.A. and Ph.D., also in mathematics, at the University of Texas at Austin. Subsequently he taught at Jacksonville University in Florida, where he won the Excellence Award in Teaching and was heavily involved in the development of a curriculum using inquiry-based methods. His research interests include differential geometry, integrable systems, lie groups and wavelets.

Kenneth Gardner
Professor of Theatre Arts, 1985
B.A., State University of New York, Brockport
M.F.A., Ohio University

In addition to his interest in theatre, Kenneth Gardner has produced a television show, has had two TV scripts optioned and worked as a script analyst for Meyers-Shyer Productions at Disney Studios. He has written and directed several original pieces with CLU students including Mark Twain and the Ghost at the Stagecoach Inn, a children’s musical that was a semi-finalist in a national playwriting contest. Gardner has directed the department’s Summer Theatre Workshop for Youth and has directed on the Equity Waiver circuit in Los Angeles.

Daniel M. Geeting
Professor of Music, 1984
B.A., California State University, Fresno
M.M., University of Southern California
D.M.A., University of Oregon

As Director of Instrumental Music, Dan Geeting conducts the University Symphony and Wind Ensemble, and directs the Jazz Ensemble. As a clarinetist, he has played on sound tracks for motion pictures and television and has performed extensively as a recitalist. His latest recording project is a compact disk of the clarinet music of the renowned British composer Arnold Cooke. He has also recorded the clarinet works of another major British composer, Gordon Jacob. Both recordings are on the PROdigital label.

Marylie Gerson
Associate Professor of Psychology, 2001
B.A., College of William and Mary
M.A., Ph.D., Princeton University

Marylie Gerson teaches a wide variety of undergraduate and graduate courses including clinical, developmental, social and research psychology. She combines a background in university teaching with experience as a licensed clinical psychologist and strong research interests, leading to a number of professional publications in the field. Dr. Gerson’s love of mentoring brought her to the CLU community, where her goal is to excite and guide students in the many aspects of psychological inquiry.

Michael Gerson
Assistant Professor of Graduate Psychology, 2008
B.A., California State University, Northridge
M.A., California State University, Dominguez Hills
Ph.D., California Graduate Institute

Michael Gerson brings nearly 30 years of experience to CLU as a graduate level instructor and clinician in clinical psychology and marriage and family therapy. Dr. Gerson has also taught courses at University of California, Los Angeles, Phillips Graduate Institute, California School of Professional Psychology, California Graduate Institute, and Loyola Marymount. He is licensed as a psychologist, marriage and family therapist, and psychoanalyst, and has served as an expert witness in criminal, child abuse, and domestic violence cases.

Rahuldeep Gill
Assistant Professor of Religion, 2009
B.A., University of Rochester
M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Rahuldeep Gill specializes in Sikh, Hindu and Muslim traditions, and has expertise in the Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu, Sanskrit, Persian and German languages. His dissertation is based on the works of the 17th century Sikh commentator Bhai Gurdas Bhalla. Through his writings, Dr. Gill “investigates the role of religious literature in defining communal identity and its implications for the interaction of religion and politics.”

Bruce Gillies
Assistant Professor of Business, 2005
B.S., University of the State of New York
M.S., M.A., U..S International University
Psy.D., Alliant International University

Bruce Gillies holds a doctorate in industrial/organizational psychology. His varied career includes 21 years of active duty in the Navy as well as leadership positions at colleges and universities. At CLU, he teaches courses in both the MBA and undergraduate programs. With research interests in athletic team dynamics, sports psychology and leadership, Dr. Gillies has assisted the athletic department through the use of mental skills training, team dynamics and communication, and leadership trait identification.

Herbert E. Gooch III
Professor of Political Science, 1987
B.A., University of California, Berkeley
M.B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

Herb Gooch is Director of the Master’s in Public Policy and Administration Program and Assistant Provost for Graduate Studies. He also chairs the Lutheran Colleges Washington Semester consortium based in Washington, D.C. He teaches in both the graduate MPPA program and the undergraduate Political Science Department and is a frequent commentator in the media on local and national political events and trends. His interests include foreign travel, politics and movies.

Monica Gracyalny
Assistant Profesor of Communications, 2011
Ph.D., Arizona State

Monica Gracyalny completed her Ph.D. in communication at Arizona State University and earned her B.A. and M.A., also in communication, at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Her research interests are interdisciplinary, as attested by her dissertation, which develops “a theoretical model specifying how the experience and expression of remorse lead to forgiveness in close relationships.”

Joan Griffin
Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, 2007
A.B., Washington University
M.A., Ph.D., Harvard University

Joan Griffin came to CLU from Augsburg College in Minneapolis where she served as Associate Dean for General Education and as a faculty member in the English Department. In addition to chairing the Faculty Senate, she held leadership roles in the Honors Program and co-authored the institutional vision statement. Prior to Augsburg, Dr. Griffin taught at Wartburg College and Lakeland College and served as a teaching fellow at Harvard.

Sandra Grunewald
Assistant Professor of Business, 2004
B.A., Augsburg College
M.B.A., California Lutheran University

Sandra Grunewald teaches a wide variety of accounting, tax, and audit classes. She also has a CPA practice in Ventura, and provides accounting, tax and consulting services for her clients, as well as training in the use of QuickBooks and other accounting software programs. Before coming to CLU, she owned Pacific Legal Arts College, a vocational school with branches in Oxnard, Camarillo, Bakersfield and Los Angeles. Grunewald is a graduate of the Ventura Police Academy and worked for the Port Hueneme Police Department for two years.

Veronica Guerrero
Assistant Professor of Business, 2005
B.S., Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
M.B.A., California State University, San Jose
Ed.D., Pepperdine University

Veronica Guerrero has more than 12 years of experience in marketing communications for companies such as BBDO, GRC International, 3Com and BearingPoint (formerly KPMG Consulting). She recently completed her doctorate in organizational leadership.

Dan Hamilton
Assistant Professor of Business, 2009
B.S., University of California, Davis
M.S., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Dan Hamilton is Director of Economics in the CLU Center for Economic Research and Forecasting (CERF). He began working professionally with economic forecast models in 1997 with the Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates (WEFA) Group formed by Nobel Prize winner Lawrence Klein. In 2000, he joined the UCSB Economic Forecast Project with Bill Watkins. While with UCSB, Hamilton built and maintained a variety of forecast models in Eviews, including models of the United States, California and Oregon.

Grady Hanrahan
Associate Professor of Chemistry, 2007
B.S., Indiana State University
M.S., Southern Illinois University
Ph.D., University of Plymouth (England)
Postdoctoral research - Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium

Grady Hanrahan is the John Stauffer Endowed Professor of Analytical Chemistry. With experience in directing undergraduate and graduate research, he has taught in the fields of analytical chemistry and environmental science at California State University, Los Angeles. His research is focused on four main areas: bio- and environmental analytical method development; modeling of chemical species in environmental systems; chemometric experimental design, optimization and data analysis; and application of neural networks and evolutionary computing techniques for solving complex chemical problems.

Paul Hanson
Professor of History, 1978
B.A., Luther College
Ph.D., University of Chicago

Twice a Fulbright Scholar in India, Paul Hanson’s research has focused on Islamic history in South Asia, especially the relationship of religion and political legitimacy. Other national fellowships and awards have enabled him to study in London, Sri Lanka and Jordan. Winner of the President’s Award for Teaching Excellence, Dr. Hanson is known for his extensive use of images from his own travels in his classes. He is currently developing a reference collection of digitized images from Asia. Hanson has served as Co-director of CLU's Global Studies major and Coordinator of the Global Studies Program, He previously taught at St. Olaf College and Agra University in India.

Steven Hawkins
Professor of Exercise Science, 2007
B.S., M.S., Emporia State University
Ph.D., University of Southern California

Following completion of his doctorate in exercise science in 1999, Steven Hawkins joined the faculty of Kinesiology and Nutritional Science at California State University, Los Angeles where he worked until the spring of 2007. He also has an adjunct appointment in the Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy at USC where he has taught graduate level physiology courses since 2002. Hawkins’ research focuses primarily on musculoskeletal aspects of aging. He has also been involved in projects investigating skeletal muscle changes in response to acute and chronic exercise, as well as hormonal supplementation in older subjects.

Timothy Hengst
Professor of Multimedia, 2001
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.A., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Tim Hengst, who serves as Director of CLU’s Multimedia program, has illustrated more than 50 medical/surgical textbooks and has won numerous national awards in medical illustration, including three Best Illustrated Medical Text awards from the Association of Medical Illustrators. After receiving his graduate degree in medical and biological illustration, Hengst illustrated for Dr. Denton Colley at the Texas Heart Institute and served as Director of Photography and Audiovisual Communications. He joined the faculty of the Art as Applied to Medicine graduate program at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine serving as production manager in the medical art division and assistant professor in the graduate program. He has a freelance business that offers services in all areas of biomedical communications.

Larkin Higgins
Professor of Art, 1985
B.A., California State University, Long Beach
M.A., California State University, Fullerton
M.F.A., Otis College of Art and Design

In addition to teaching courses in drawing, painting and interdisciplinary arts, Larkin Higgins involves herself with multiple creative media, actively exhibiting and publishing. Her artworks are in several permanent collections. The Boston Globe, Antiques & the Arts Weekly (New York), U-Turn (Chicago), Artweek, and Los Angeles Times are among publications that have included and/or reviewed her artworks. Anthologized by University of Iowa Press, Fossil Press and elsewhere, Higgins also writes poetry and creates visual poetry for exhibits and publication.

Haco Hoang
Associate Professor of Political Science, 2005
B.A., University of California, Santa Barbara
Ph.D., Boston University

Haco Hoang was a Fulbright Scholar at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore and has taught courses on international relations, global studies, terrorism, ethnic conflict and genocide, public policy, and women in politics. Currently, she is the education policy consultant to promote youth environmental activism for Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s Million Trees Los Angeles initiative. Her policy work and research have been profiled in the Women’s Policy Journal of Harvard-Kennedy School of Government, Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education and other outlets.

Andrea Huvard
Professor of Biology, 1991
B.A., Trinity University
M.S., San Diego State University
Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

Andrea Huvard’s interests are in marine biology, invertebrate zoology and underwater videography. She has focused her recent career on the conservation and preservation of marine ecosystems through education. In addition to research articles and textbook materials, her publications include a series of underwater videos that document coastal marine ecosystems of the Channel Islands and the Hawaiian Islands. Her current research involves a long-term study of how the input of anthropogenic nutrients can determine the diversity and distribution of certain organisms in marine ecosystems. As an administrator, she is interested in the interdisciplinary nature of modern science and how to deliver this to a new generation of university students.

Cynthia Jew
Professor of Education, 2001
B.A., University of Colorado, Denver
M.A., University of Colorado
Ph.D., University of Denver

Cynthia Jew is a licensed psychologist and Certified School Psychologist. Her research expertise and interests include resiliency, family systems and cultural diversity. Author of the Resiliency Skills and Abilities Scale, her current research projects include work with cochlear implant users. Dr. Jew served as a school psychologist in Colorado and as an assistant professor of education at universities in Tennessee, Ohio, Colorado and California. At the University of Redlands, she was Program Coordinator for the School Counseling and PPS Credential Program as well as Project Director for the development of the school psychology program.

Bonnie Johnson
Senior Lecturer in Business, 2004
B.A., California State University, Fullerton
M.B.A., Claremont Graduate University

Bonnie Johnson is an economist with more than 25 years of financial management experience, including seven years at the CFO level. She has worked in various business environments and industries, including financial institutions, entertainment, manufacturing, education, wholesale distribution, staffing, real estate and not-for-profit.

Kapp Johnson
Senior Lecturer in Business, 2006
B.S., University of Wyoming
M.A., Claremont School of Theology
M.Div., Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary
J.D., University of La Verne College of Law

Kapp Johnson is an ELCA pastor and attorney with a joint appointment in the School of Business and Department of Religion, where he teaches courses in biblical studies and business, economics and Christian ethics. His scholarly interests include biblical legal texts, Ezekiel, hermeneutics and the intersection between faith and the work place.

Edward H. Julius
Professor of Business Administration, 1981
B.A., Rutgers University
M.S., The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
C.P.A. Certificate, State of Illinois

Ed Julius’ specialty is financial accounting, which he teaches in the traditional undergraduate and ADEP programs. Professor Julius has published numerous learning and teaching aids to accompany accounting textbooks, as well as six highly regarded crossword puzzle books. He has also published four books on rapid calculation, one of which appears in seven languages and was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection for nine consecutive years. His outside interests include vintage jazz, Broadway musicals, pop culture, wordplay, comedy, old movies, bowling and the Boston Red Sox.

Kristopher Karsten
Asistant Professor of Biology, 2011
Ph.D., Oklahoma State University

Kris Karsten describes himself as “an ecologist who integrates evolution, behavior and physiology into research, mostly using lizards as a model system.” After earning his Ph.D. in zoology from Oklahoma State University, he conducted postdoctoral research at Texas Christian University. He also holds a B.S. in biology from Truman State University and an M.S., also in biology, from TCU. As an instructor at the University of Central Oklahoma, he was recognized by the Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society for teaching service in animal biology. He also won a zoology teaching assistant award at Oklahoma State.

Louise Kelly
Assistant Professor of Exercise Science, 2008
B.S.C., Ph.D. University of Glasgow

After completing a post-doctoral research fellowship in the Department of Developmental Medicine at the University of Glasgow, Louise Kelly accepted an appointment as a research associate in the Department of Preventive Medicine at University of Southern California. Dr. Kelly’s research and publications speak to her interest in the effects of nutritional, socio-economic and environmental influences on the exercise habits, issues of obesity and related health problems of children. She recently completed two research projects funded by the National Cancer Institute. A grant from the National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities is supporting a current project titled “Obesity in Minority Youth in Los Angeles: A Generation ‘At Risk.’”

Hala King
Associate Professor of Mathematics, 2002
B.S., M.S., American University of Beirut
Ph.D., Stanford University

Hala King established herself as an effective teacher while serving as a member of the adjunct faculty at CLU. Recognized by her students as a faculty member who “goes the extra mile,” Dr. King has a clear vocation for teaching. Her research interests lie in number theory and geometric analysis. She is committed to providing students with rich learning experiences and is involved in supervising undergraduate research at CLU.

Eric Kinsley
Senior Lecturer in Music, 2009
B.A., California State University Northridge
M.A., California Institute of the Arts
Ph.D., Manhattan School of Music

Eric Kinsley is a performing artist and educator who studied with Albert Fuller at Juilliard, Kenneth Cooper at Columbia, Trevor Pinnock of Guild Hall, and Leonid Hambro in New York City. He has performed and lectured widely in Los Angeles and has toured with the New York Contemporary Band, Pacific Classical Players, and as accompanist for Don Krim and Marlo Partamian. Kinsley has been seen and heard on National Public Radio and Television, as well as recorded concerts and radio shows for the Radio de Strato in Rome, and Sundays at 4 at the Bing Theatre. He has received grants from the NEA and the New York Harpsichord Society, and has written a book on the music of Franz Joseph Haydn.

Steven C. Kissinger
Professor of Psychology, 1991
B.A., University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
M.A., Ph.D., Kent State University

Steven Kissinger teaches courses in experimental psychology. His research interests include physiology and animal models of learning and memory. His interests are not limited to the lab, however, as he also enjoys building furniture, remodeling houses and restoring antique communications equipment.

Myungsook Klassen
Professor of Computer Science, 1998
B.S., Sogang University, Korea
M.S., Kansas State University
M.S., Ohio State University
Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University

Before coming to CLU, Myungsook Klassen held assistant and associate professorships at Chinese University of Hong Kong and at Soochow University in Taipei. In addition to her established research record and teaching skills, Dr. Klassen has several years of experience working in industry as a programmer and systems analyst. Her doctoral work and specialty lie in artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and pattern recognition. Her recent research interest is in data mining, bioinformatics and Web mining.

Jodie Kocur
Assistant Professor of Psychology, 2008
B.A., Pepperdine University
M.A., Ph.D., Colorado State University

While completing her doctorate in counseling psychology, Jodie Kocur focused her clinical training on therapy and assessment with children, adolescents and families. She completed a clinical internship at The Help Group in Sherman Oaks where she was a therapist for children with special needs. She is currently working on completing the requirements for her licensure as a psychologist. Dr. Kocur's research interests include the developmental origins of the experience and expression of anger, as well as the impact of parental physical aggression on children. She runs a research team for students interested in working with her on these topics, but also enjoys mentoring students on their own research studies within the areas of developmental, clinical or counseling psychology.

Julie M. Kuehnel
Professor of Psychology, 1975
B.A., California Lutheran College
Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin

Julie Kuehnel co-chairs the Department of Psychology at CLU and is a coordinator of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Division. She is the second CLC graduate to return to CLU to teach. Her primary focus has been to challenge and engage students in the classroom and to mentor them towards fulfilling their career aspirations. Dr. Kuehnel has published a book on marital therapy, and journal articles and book chapters on behavior therapy. Her most recent book is a text titled Evil Minds: Understanding and Responding to Violent Predators, which she uses in her Criminal Psychology course. She is currently working on a supplemental text on the applications of learning theory to relationships. Dr. Kuehnel received the 2010 President's Award for Excellence in Teaching.

Michele LeBlanc
Professor of Exercise Science, 2003
B.S., Indiana University
M.S., University of North Carolina
Ph.D., Indiana University

Prior to her appointment at CLU, Michele LeBlanc held faculty positions at several universities and a research position as a Health Science Specialist in the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Gait Lab for the Greater Los Angeles V.A. Hospital. Her research focuses on flail-like motion and its role in many high velocity movements as well as how intersegmental dynamics contributes to human performance. Dr. LeBlanc has been funded by the United States Olympic Committee to serve as the biomechanist for American elite-level javelin throwers. She is currently conducting research on how exercise programs can effectively prevent falls in the elderly.

Kirk M. Lesh
Instructor in Economics, 2009
B.S., University of Colorado, Boulder
M.B.A., University of California, Irvine
Ph.D. candidate, University of California, Santa Barbara

Kirk Lesh is Senior Economist at the CLU Center for Economic Research and Forecasting (CERF). His current research interests include the impact of public unions on governments and real estate. Prior to coming to CLU, he was the Real Estate Economist at the Economic Forecast Project at UCSB, where he prepared and presented annual real estate forecasts for several communities in Central California. Additionally, Lesh served as a consultant on several large, community-orientated projects.

Helen Ahm Lim
Associate Professor of Criminal Justice, 2005
B.A., University of California, Irvine
M.A., Ph.D., Indiana University

Helen Lim’s research and teaching interests include hate crimes, criminology, race, gender and crime, and white collar crime. Her current research focuses on hate crimes against Asian Americans. Dr. Lim has held teaching positions at Indiana University and Raritan Valley College.

Lisa Loberg
Senior Lecturer in French, 2005
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.A., Boston College

Lisa Loberg is a half-time lecturer and Director of CLU’s Study Abroad Program. She received her bachelor’s degree magna cum laude in French and English and was a Pi Delta Phi (French National Honor Society) scholarship recipient for the Study Abroad Program at the Institute for American Universities in Avignon, France. While working on her master’s at Boston College, she served as a Teaching Fellow in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures and received the Donald J. White Teaching Excellence Award. She has also worked for both the Boston College Center for International Studies and The American University of Paris.

Kenneth Long
Associate Professor of Biology, 1989
B.A., San Francisco State University
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Kenneth Long teaches courses in vertebrate anatomy and physiology, cell biology and neuroscience. His general research interest is in neuroscience, specifically the cell biology of the vertebrate retina. Dr. Long involves undergraduates in research utilizing anatomical, biochemical and electrophysiological techniques. His outside interests include natural history, acoustic music and t’ai chi.

Maureen Reilly Lorimer
Assistant Professor of Education, 2009
B.A., M.A., Pacific Oaks College
Ph.D., Claremont Graduate University

Maureen Lorimer teaches educational foundations, methods and advanced methods courses in the teacher credential program as well as educational research courses in the M.Ed. program. She has had extensive experience in K-12 education as a classroom teacher, teacher mentor, staff development presenter and program coordinator. Her research interests include using arts education to promote social justice and equity in learning and teaching.

Schannae Lucas
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, 2008
B.S., University of California, Irvine
M.A., Ph.D., Washington State University

Shannae Lucas came to CLU from Lewis University, where she was an assistant professor of justice, law and public safety studies. She also has taught at Washington State University. Dr. Lucas’ work has taken her to Garden Grove, Calif., where she worked on Monitor II/Special Projects for the Community Correctional Center and to Santa Ana, where she interned for the U.S. Probation and Parole Office. She also has considerable experience as a research assistant at Washington State.

Jacqueline Lyons
Assistant Professor of English, 2011
Ph.D., University of Utah

Jacqueline Lyons earned her B.A. in English and sociology at the University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire, her M.A. in creative writing at Colorado State University and her Ph.D. in literature and creative writing at the University of Utah. Her third volume of poetry won the 2010 Del Sol Poetry Prize; her other poems, essays and criticism have appeared in more than 25 journals and anthologies. She has taught at Washington State University, the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and Colorado State, and was a Peace Corps volunteer in the southern African nation of Lesotho.

David J. Marcey
Professor of Biology, 1999
B.A., College of Wooster
Ph.D., University of Utah

David Marcey is Fletcher Jones Professor of Developmental Biology and a member of Project Kaleidoscope’s F21 (Faculty for the 21st Century). His research in Drosophila developmental genetics has been funded by the American Cancer Society, NSF, and the Fletcher Jones Foundation. Dr. Marcey has considerable pedagogical experience with molecular modeling. His modeling website, The Online Macromolecular Museum (www.callutheran.edu/BioDev/omm/gallery.htm), pioneered the use of Web-based tutorials in macromolecular structure. Marcey’s tutorials, often co-authored with undergraduate students, have accompanied several prominent textbooks, and he has served on the editorial boards of Biochemical and Molecular Biology Education (Elsevier), biomednet.com, and Project MERLOT, an online peer reviewed journal of digital learning tools. He currently chairs the Committee of Examiners for the Graduate Record Examination in Biology (Educational Testing Service).

Jose Marichal
Associate Professor of Political Science, 2004
B.S., Florida State University
M.S., Florida Atlantic University
Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder

Jose Marichal teaches and writes about public policy, race and politics, civic engagement, the Internet and politics, and community development. His current projects include examining how the Internet affects cross-cultural interaction, exploring the relationship between diversity and civic engagement, and identifying Latino youth understandings of civic leadership.

Maura Martindale
Assistant Professor of Education, 2007
B.A., Annhurst College
M.Ed., Smith College
Ed.D., University of Southern California

Maura Martindale is Director of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Program. Her specialization is in teaching spoken language to children with hearing loss and parent education. Dr. Martindale taught general education students in public schools in Connecticut before teaching and leading programs at John Tracy Clinic for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children and in the USC graduate program.

Charles Maxey
Professor of Management, 1991
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Charles Maxey serves as Dean of the School of Business and teaches courses in strategic management, human resources and organizational behavior. Author or co-author of numerous academic articles, he is also active as a business and litigation consultant and labor arbitrator. His previous academic appointments were at Northwestern University, Loyola University of Chicago and the University of Southern California, where he also served as Senior Associate Dean of the Graduate School of Business. Immediately prior to joining CLU’s faculty, Dr. Maxey was visiting professor of management at the Sasin Graduate Institute of Business Administration in Bangkok, Thailand.

Michael McCambridge
Associate Professor of Education, 2002
B.S., Ohio University
M.Ed., Pepperdine University
Ed.D., University of San Francisco

With 40 years of teaching and administrative experience at the elementary, middle school, secondary and higher education levels, Michael McCambridge maintains a deep interest in the growth and development of children and adolescents as they mature physically, cognitively, socially and morally. As a university professor, he creates opportunities for teachers and teachers in training to explore how teaching and learning theory inform good practices that result in academic, personal, social, and moral growth and development of K-12 students. Dr. McCambridge was awarded the President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2008 and was voted Professor of the Year for 2009 by the senior class.

Robert J. Meadows
Professor of Criminal Justice, 1991
B.S., Northern Arizona University
M.S., Ed.D., Pepperdine University
Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School

Bob Meadows has had years of teaching and research experience in addition to time spent in law enforcement and private industry. His research and teaching interests include violence and victimization and legal issues in criminal justice. He is a member of several editorial boards and has authored a number of articles, research reports and books. His most recent books are Understanding Violence and Victimization, now in its fifth edition, and Evil Minds, both published by Prentice-Hall.

Marja Mogk
Associate Professor of English, 2004
B.A., University of Michigan
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley

Marja Mogk’s areas of expertise include medical humanities, studies on disability and aging, American and Native American literature, and dramatic and creative nonfiction writing. She is co-author of Macular Degeneration: The Complete Guide to Saving and Maximizing Your Sight (Ballantine, 2003).

Wyant Morton
Professor of Music, 1992
B.A., B.B.A., Gonzaga University
M.M., D.M.A., University of Arizona, Tucson

Wyant Morton is Director of Choral and Vocal Activities and Chair of the Music Department. In addition to overseeing the work of the CLU Choir, Morton conducts all of the choral ensembles in the Music Department, teaches conducting and supervises the voice faculty. He also maintains an active schedule as a guest conductor, clinician and adjudicator appearing throughout the United States and Canada and holds memberships in a number of professional organizations. In fall 2009, he launched Areté, a professional vocal ensemble in residence at CLU.

Susan Murphy
Professor of Business, 2002
B.B.A., M.B.A., Texas Tech University
Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago

Susan Murphy teaches courses in human resources management, organization development and organizational behavior in the MBA, traditional undergraduate and adult degree programs. Dr. Murphy is author of an article on human relations titled “Understanding Social Loafing: The Role of Justice Perceptions and Exchange Relationship.” She has served as a reviewer for professional journals and has additional research interests in trust, cross-cultural teams and organizational citizenship behavior.

Nancy Myers
Senior Lecturer in Education, 2005
B.A., University of California, Santa Cruz
M.A., California State University, Los Angeles

Nancy Myers is Coordinator of the Multiple Subjects Program in the School of Education and Director of the California Reading and Literature Project. She also teaches a variety of courses in the Teacher Education Department. Myers has worked in the field of K-6 public education for more than 20 years. As an educator, she is dedicated to empowering future and current teachers to “Be the change you want to see in the world” (Gandhi).

Adina Nack
Professor of Sociology, 2003
B.A., University of California, Irvine
Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder

Adina Nack was founding Director of CLU’s Center for Equality and Justice. Before coming to CLU, Dr. Nack served as Director of the Sexual Health Education Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder and was an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Maine. She is a medical sociologist who has been active in health education and research since 1994: her research focuses on sexual and reproductive health, social inequality, social psychology, gender and sexuality. Nack’s academic articles have been reprinted in more than a dozen anthologies, and she has won awards for her research, teaching, activism and public policy work. Her research-based book on women’s sexual health Damaged Goods? was published by Temple University Press in 2008.

David Nelson
Assistant Professor of History, 2011
Ph.D., Indiana University 

David Nelson comes to CLU from Austin Peay State University, where he was recently recognized for excellence in teaching. He earned his M.A. and Ph.D. at Indiana University, where his major field was pre-modern East Asian history, and his B.A. at Utah State University, majoring in Asian studies and minoring in Chinese. Nelson’s research and teaching interests include samurai culture and Japan’s relationship with the Asian continent. As a faculty member at APSU in Clarksville, Tenn., he has served as history club adviser and involved his students in community service projects such as the cleanup of a local slave cemetery. 

Dru L. Pagliassotti
Professor of Communication, 1998
B.A., University of California, Santa Barbara
M.A., Ph.D., University of Southern California

Dru Pagliassotti teaches news writing, editing, Web publishing and film theory. Her research combines the study of mass media with the sociology of gender and sexuality. She is currently examining the introduction and spread of yaoi manga and male/male romance novels within the West and is co-editor of the academic collection Boys’ Love Manga: Essays on the Sexual Ambiguity and Cross-Cultural Fandom of the Genre, published by McFarland in 2010. Dr. Pagliassotti also runs The Yaoi Research Wiki (www.yaoiresearchwiki.com) and The Harrow Press (www.theharrowpress.com). Her romantic fantasy Clockwork Heart was published by Juno Books in 2008, and her contemporary horror An Agreement with Hell was published by Apex Book Company in 2010.

Michael Pearce
Associate Professor of Art, 2005
B.A., Dartington College of Arts
M.F.A., University of Southern California
Ph.D., Plymouth University, England

Michael Pearce is an accomplished oil painter, installation designer, and an award-winning theatrical scenic designer. He is Chair of the Art Department and curator of the Kwan Fong Gallery of Art and Culture, which under his direction hosts continuous exhibitions by well-known outside artists, as well as CLU faculty and students. He considers teaching painting and drawing to CLU students the most rewarding job of his life.

Edlyn Vallejo Peña
Assistant Professor of Education, 2009
B.A., University of California, Santa Cruz
M.Ed., Ph.D., University of Southern California

Edlyn Peña teaches a number of research methods and content courses in the area of higher education. She also serves on a number of dissertation committees for students pursuing the Doctor of Education. Peña served as an assistant professor of clinical education at USC, where, in addition to teaching courses at the master’s and doctoral levels, she led workshops for the Doctoral Support Center to advise students through the dissertation process. Her areas of expertise include action research/collaborative inquiry in higher education, faculty development, and equitable educational outcomes for college students.

Chang-Shyh Peng
Professor of Computer Science, 1997
B.S., National Taiwan University
M.S., Ph.D., University of Texas at Dallas

Chang-Shyh Peng develops and teaches a wide spectrum of undergraduate and graduate level computer science courses. He also has considerable experience in working with business to develop curricular offerings that are responsive to the needs of the corporate community. Dr. Peng’s interests include Local Area Network/Wide Area Network, data communication and networking, parallel processing, client/server development and graphical user interface. He has published numerous articles on network simulations and modeling, fuzzy network applications, and design and analysis of algorithms.

George J. Petersen
Dean of the Graduate School of Education, 2010
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Most recently, George Petersen served as Co-director of the Joint Doctoral Program in Educational Leadership at University of California, Santa Barbara/California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. His former positions include Chair of the Department of Graduate Studies in the College of Education at Cal Poly and Associate Director of the University Council for Educational Administration, a national research and policy organization. Petersen has extensive experience in program and curriculum development, having designed and taught courses at the undergraduate, master’s and doctoral levels. He has also written two books and numerous articles on educational leadership.

Mindy Puopolo
Assistant Professor of Psychology, 2004
B.S., Plymouth State University
M.Ed., Notre Dame College
Psy.D., Pepperdine University

Mindy Puopolo is Director of CLU’s Graduate Programs in Psychology. She has held adjunct teaching positions at California State University Northridge, where she earned an award as the Distinguished Faculty Member of the Year, and at Phillips Graduate Institute. Dr. Puopolo’s research interests include gender and sexuality, peace psychology, cognitive psychology and attachment theory. Puopolo is a licensed clinical psychologist who specializes in neuropsychological assessment and psychodynamic psychotherapy with an emphasis on object relations theory. She maintains a private practice in Ventura County and serves as a reviewer for the California Board of Psychology’s mandatory continuing education program.

Michael Quinlan
Visiting Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 2011
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley

Michael Quinlan is not new to CLU, having taught in the chemistry department from 1996 to 1997. More recently, he served as general chemistry laboratory coordinator and a research associate at the University of Southern California. Quinlan earned his B.S. in chemistry at West Chester State College and his M.S. and Ph.D. in physical chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley – the latter after a period spent working in industry with SRI International.

Eva Leticia Ramirez
Associate Professor of Spanish, 1996
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Arizona State University

Eva Ramirez has taught courses on Spanish language, Latin-American culture and civilization, theory of contemporary culture and Mexican literature. A researcher of Mexican and Latin American literature as well as literary and culture theory, Dr. Ramirez has published articles on Mexican literature and literary and nonliterary forms of sociocriticism on Mexico. She also works with the Upward Bound Program as a faculty adviser and a guest lecturer. She holds membership in a number of honorary societies and professional organizations, including Phi Beta Kappa.

Bryan Rasmussen
Assistant Professor of Engish, 2008
B.A., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
M.A., Ph.D. Indiana University

Bryan Rasmussen is a former Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellow in Religion and Ethics (Woodrow Wilson Foundation) and has served as Managing Editor of the journal Victorian Studies. He specializes in British literary and cultural history of the 19th century. His current book project, Spiritual Ethnographies: Science, Religion, and Ethics in the Nineteenth Century, explores religion’s role in shaping 19th-century social science. Dr. Rasmussen sits on the Advisory Board of CLU’s Office of Undergraduate Research and enjoys mentoring students on guided research projects.

Michaela C. Reaves
Professor of History, 1987
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.A., California State University, Northridge
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Michaela Reaves specializes in American history, with an emphasis in sociocultural history. Her dissertation work was in the social organization of agrarian societies in California in the 1870s, and she recently published an essay for the Alexander Street Database on fractious farmers. She is working on a paper titled “The Colonial Crone: Women and Menopause in Colonial America.” Dr. Reaves received the President's Award for Teaching Excellence in 2004 and has been chosen Professor of the Year three times. In 2008 she collaborated with the Moorpark Unified School District to bring a U.S. Department of Education grant for Teaching American History (TAH) to three local school districts.

Craig Reinhart
Associate Professor of Computer Science, 2002
B.S., California State University, Northridge
M.S., Ph.D., University of Southern California

Craig Reinhart came to CLU from the computer science industry where he directed research in high-level visualization and image processing programs. The author of a number of articles and conference papers, Dr. Reinhart worked at Hughes Aircraft and the Rockwell International Science Center before becoming the manager of a software development company where he patented a number of innovative processes.

Karen Renick
Professor of French, 1972
Certificat du Lycée Climatique de Gérardmer, France
B.A., Occidental College
M.A., Middlebury College
Ph.D., University of Southern California

Besides teaching intermediate and advanced French courses, Karen Renick has led several classes to France to study the country’s culture and civilization. A member of the Paris Advisory Council in conjunction with the Study Abroad programs in France, she also supervises student teachers of French in CLU’s undergraduate and graduate programs. Dr. Renick serves as National Editor of the Pi Delta Phi newsletter, member of the Pi Delta Phi Executive Board and liaison with the Délégation du Québec of Los Angeles. She is also a member of several professional organizations.

Daniel Restuccio
Instructor in Multimedia, 2003
B.F.A., Syracuse University

Daniel Restuccio is West Coast Editor of Post Magazine, a trade publication that covers production and post-production in the film and television industry. He is owner and Chief Creative Officer of Realwork Entertainment, which is currently in production on a digital feature project and completing post production on three documentaries. He is a former producer at Walt Disney Interactive and Walt Disney Imagineering and has worked on a number of Disney projects for DisneyWorld’s EPCOT Center, Disney/MGM Studios and the DiscoverQuest series. For his high-tech multimedia work for the AT&T InfoQuest Center, he received a CINE Gold Eagle Award, an ITVA Silver Award, and a Bronze Award from the Houston and New York International Film Festivals.

Dennis Revie
Professor of Biology, 1988
B.A., Ph.D., University of California, Davis

Dennis Revie’s current research is focused on understanding the replication of several mammalian viruses. The majority of the work focuses on understanding the replication of the Hepatitis C virus (HCV), which causes liver and blood diseases. One student project involved determining if HCV, HIV (which causes AIDS) and Human Herpes Virus 6 (HHV-6) can simultaneously infect the same cells. Another project, done in collaboration with the California Institute of Molecular Medicine (CIMM), involves looking at different strains of Feline leukemia virus (FeLV), a major cause of leukemia in cats. Dr. Revie and his students are also working on other genomics projects, in collaboration with another university and on their own.

L. Jeanne Ricci
Lecturer in Education, 2009
B.A., Northeast Louisiana University
M.A., California Lutheran University

Jeanne Ricci is Coordinator of Teacher Candidate Placement and a part-time faculty member. She has been particularly active in facilitating CLU’s partnerships with Moorpark Unified School District, where she worked for many years as a teacher, program coordinator, project director and elementary principal. As principal, she provided strong leadership for Walnut Canyon, a magnet school for the visual and performing arts. Ricci is a member of the Association of California School Administrators and has been honored with a number of professional awards. Before moving to California, she was a classroom teacher in Louisiana, Texas and Florida.

Jane Rider
Assistant Professor of Exercise Science, 2003
B.S., M.S., Truman State University
Ph.D., University of Utah

Jane Rider has taught in the Exercise Science Department since 1996. Her specialty area includes the pedagogy courses. A former coach, Dr. Rider has held a variety of positions at Truman State University, University of Utah, Cerritos Junior College, Chapman University and the Boise Unified School District. Her areas of interest include women in sport, running, strength training and scuba diving.

Linda A. Ritterbush
Professor of Geology, 1981
B.S., M.S., California State University, Northridge
MAGL, Fuller Theological Seminary
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Linda Ritterbush teaches courses in geology (paleontology, historical geology, water resources) and in the interdisciplinary environmental science major, for which she is current Program Director. Trilobites (fossil arthropods) are a recurrent fascination for Dr. Ritterbush, who has published on extinction patterns, paleoecology, and functional morphology of Agnostid Trilobites. She also speaks and writes on science and religion topics, including evolution controversies and ethical food production. In her spare time, she enjoys hiking, backpacking, kayaking, food gardening, music and reading.

Mariana Robles-Dalany
Assistant Professor of Education, 2009
B.A., University of Southern California
M.A., California State University, Los Angeles
Ph.D., Claremont Graduate University

Mariana Robles-Dalany is Coordinator of the Liberal Studies Program and teaches education courses. She has taught and served as an administrator in both public and private K-12 schools in California, most recently as Lower School Director of Polytechnic School in Pasadena. As a native Spanish speaker and first generation college graduate, she has a keen understanding of the needs and challenges faced by a growing number of California students as reflected in her dissertation titled “Voices of Success: Narratives of College-Bound Latinas.” Her interests are in brain research as it relates to attachment theory, child development, and parenting.

Renee Rock
Senior Lecturer in Business, 2007
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.A., California State University, Northridge

Renee Rock began her career as a grant writing consultant for a local nonprofit organization. After entering an MBA program, she went to work for a venture capital company developing business and marketing plans for high-tech startup companies. In 2002, she started her own communications company and has worked with an impressive list of clients including Toyota, Honeywell and Fleetwood. She recently earned a master’s in rhetoric and composition from Cal State Northridge where she has taught composition courses.

Robert (Bob) Rumer
Lecturer in Physics, 2008
B.S., Johns Hopkins University
M.S. University of California, Berkeley

Bob Rumer has had 25 years in design, management and marketing of medical instruments, computers, storage systems and semiconductors. He focuses on teaching introductory-level physics and engineering classes in order to spark student interest in science and technology. Rumer’s passion for teaching extends beyond his university courses. He promotes engineering to middle school and high school students, and developed and managed the AP outreach program for physics, chemistry, and calculus in 2007 and 2008.

Jean Kelso Sandlin
Assistant Professor in Communication, 2007
B.A., M.P.A., California Lutheran University

Jean Kelso Sandlin joined the CLU faculty after more than 20 years of professional experience in advertising, public relations and journalism. Most recently, she served as creative director for an agency in the Pacific Northwest. Her expertise includes strategy, copywriting and corporate social responsibility. She has directed campaigns for nonprofit organizations, education, government, waste management, healthcare and “green” retailers. Her research interests include social media, digital literacy, authenticity in new media, storytelling in new media and sustainability.

Sigmar Schwarz
Professor of English, 1972
B.A., Augustana College, Sioux Falls
M.A., Ph.D., University of Southern California

A past Woodrow Wilson Fellow and NDEA Fellow, Sig Schwarz is interested in non-Western and minority studies. He currently teaches a seminar in non-Western writers and emphasizes the Afro-American, Chicano and Native American “voices” in his writing and literature courses. Dr. Schwarz does research on the subjects of romanticism and phenomenology. He is active in the Modern Language Association and the National Council of Teachers of English.

Christine Sellin
Associate Professor of Art, 2006
B.A., University of California, Berkeley
M.A., University of California, Los Angeles
Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

Christine Petra Sellin completed her advanced degrees in 17th century Dutch art history, and her research concentrates on religious art, literature, and narrative imagination in the early modern northern Netherlands. In addition to scholarly articles, Dr. Sellin published her first book, Fractured Families and Rebel Maidservants: The Biblical Hagar in Seventeenth Century Dutch Art and Literature, in 2006 (Continuum Books/T&T Clark, London). Her new book, From Unholy to Holy: The Four Female Ancestors of Christ According to the Gospel of Matthew, (with medievalist Ruth Mellinkoff) is slated for publication in early 2010 (Ruth Mellinkoff Publications, Los Angeles).

Mary Jo Shane
Lecturer in the School of Management, 2011
Ph.D., The Fielding Graduate Institute

Mary Jo Shane earned a B.S. in Commerce from DePaul University, an M.A. in organizational management from Antioch University, an M.A. in organizational development and a Ph.D. in human and organizational systems, both from The Fielding Graduate Institute. She has been an adjunct professor of Management at CLU since 2005. Her research interests include virtual work, virtual teams and organizations, cross-cultural organizational issues, and ethnography.

Michael Shaw
Professor of Physics, 2002
B.S., University of California, Berkeley
M.S., Ohio State University
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Michael Shaw performed his post-doctoral studies at the University of Cambridge, England. Prior to his current appointment, he was Manager, Design and Reliability Department, Rockwell Scientific. Dr. Shaw enthusiastically seeks to apply his lifelong fascination for the relationships between the structure and properties of all forms of matter to topics in aerospace, power electronics, biomaterials and astrophysics through individual research projects with undergraduate students in his lab. He has received several awards for his publications and presentations, and has more than 45 publications, including a recently published book.

Dennis Sheridan
Professor of Education, 2006
B.A., Louisiana Tech University
M.Ed., Louisiana State University
M.A., Ed.D., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

Dennis Sheridan joined the School of Education faculty as a professor in the doctoral program and as Director of the Higher Education Leadership Program. His career in education began in 1975 as a high school teacher of English and social studies. It then took an interesting turn as he transitioned into the field of College Student Affairs, first at Texas Christian University and then at California Baptist University where he served as Vice President for Student Affairs for 10 years. Prior to CLU, Dr. Sheridan spent 12 years on the graduate faculty at Azusa Pacific University, chairing the Department of Higher Education and Organizational Leadership.

Beth Anderson Smith
Associate Professor of Education, 2000
B.S., Ph.D., University of Colorado
M.A., Point Loma Nazarene College

Beth Anderson Smith teaches and supervises teacher candidates pursuing their single subject credentials and master’s in education. She has been a bilingual educator for 25 years, in addition to earning her Ph.D. in social, multicultural and bilingual foundations of education and bilingual teacher certification from San Diego State University. She has taught, supervised and led professional development activities at all educational levels (K-12, adult education and higher education) and has had substantial experience with culturally and linguistically diverse students, families and communities both in California and Colorado.

Terry Spehar-Fahey
Lecturer in Art, 2006
B.A., University of California, Los Angeles
M.B.A., Loyola Marymount University

Terry Spehar-Fahey earned her bachelor’s degree in painting, sculpture and graphic arts. She has held various teaching and corporate positions in the arts and in business. For the past 20 years, she has been represented by a number of galleries in California including Gallerie Barjur in Mammoth Lakes and High Studio Art Gallery in Moorpark. Spehar-Fahey teaches drawing, watercolor and visual arts in education hoping to inspire her students with the joy of making art that reflects their unique self. She is interested in the study of creativity, art and neuroscience and in the role that the arts can play in mental health. Her latest work is derived from that interest.

Mark Spraggins
Associate Professor of Music, 1998
B.A., Auburn University
M.A., Butler University
D.M.A., University of Southern California (ABD)

Mark Spraggins is active as a composer, musician, and educator. He has composed works for symphony orchestra, choir, wind ensemble, percussion ensemble and various chamber groups. He has received a number of notable awards for his compositions including first prize in the 2000 MACRO international choral competition. He has received commissions from the Indianapolis Youth Symphony and Indianapolis Children’s theater among others. In addition, his music has been performed live on KUSC Los Angeles (Public Radio). Dr. Spraggins has also written and produced music for television programs on the History Channel and the A&E Network.

Harry Starn Jr.
Executive in Residence in the School of Management, 2009
B.S., United States Military Academy, West Point
M.S., University of Colorado, Boulder

Harry Starn is Executive in Residence in the MBA in Financial Planning Program and serves as Associate Director of the California Institute of Finance. His professional certifications include the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and the Certified Financial Planner (CFP®) designations. Starn has taught in the online MBA in Financial Planning Program since 2005 and has more than 20 years of experience in the financial services industry. He manages the fee-only financial planning practice Action Financial Planning LLC. Prior to starting his own practice in 1996, he worked as a registered representative with Financial Network Investment Corporation and later served as the Manager of Special Directors’ Services with Lipper Analytical Services, Inc., a consulting department to the mutual fund industry.

Diana Stephens
Associate Professor in Education, 2006
B.A., California State University, Los Angeles
M.A., University of Redlands
M.A., Ph.D. Candidate, Fielding Graduate University

Diana Stephens teaches a variety of courses focused on the theoretical and practitioner skills of professional school counselors. She supervises counseling candidates in k-12 settings, fostering their skill development as school counseling leaders and regularly participates in regional, state and national conferences conducting professional development workshops and presentations. She serves as a Board Member for the Ventura County School Counselors Association and is a Board Institutional Representative for the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing, assessing school counseling programs throughout the state. As Project Coordinator for a grant-funded partnership between CLU and Ventura Unified School District, Dr. Stephens works collaboratively with the superintendent, principals, teachers and school counselors creating systemic change by infusing social emotional curriculum into schools.

Brian Stethem
Instructor in Art, 2005
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts

Brian Stethem has been a fine art photographer for more than 20 years and has exhibited throughout California. In addition to his fine art work, Stethem is a commercial photographer, creating portrait, event publication and advertising photographs. He also works as a professional retoucher for a commercial photography studio.

Bruce R. Stevenson
Associate Professor of English, 1996
B.A., California Lutheran University
M.A., Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder

Bruce Stevenson serves as Coordinator for the Humanities Division and teaches courses in American literature, history of the novel, literary criticism and early American fiction. His scholarship centers on the post-Revolutionary novel in America and on the ways the discourse of the period articulates social and political anxieties. Dr. Stevenson’s most recent project focuses on the Perez Morton/Frances Apthorp scandal in 1788 Boston and on the ways the scandal impacted the intentions behind the writing of the first American novel, The Power of Sympathy. Dr. Stevenson is also the faculty sponsor for CLU’s chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the international English honor society.

Walter K. Stewart
Professor of German, 1979
B.A., California State University, Northridge
M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles

A specialist in German language and literature, Walter Stewart also lectures on German and American film genres, film structure and criticism and in selected philosophy courses. Dr. Stewart publishes widely on various subjects including Goethe’s works, Nietzsche’s philosophy, European and American folklore and structuralism. He also maintains membership in the Goethe Society of North America, the Modern Language Association and other professional organizations.

Russell L. Stockard Jr.
Associate Professor of Communication, 1991
B.A., Harvard College
M.A., Harvard University
M.B.A., University of California, Los Angeles
Ph.D., Stanford University

Russell Stockard’s interests include new media, particularly marketing and advertising on the World Wide Web and use of new media by diasporic communities of color; sports-related marketing and media; media management; cultural studies; environmental communication; tourism and Caribbean and Latin American studies. His previous professional experience includes satellite communications, telecommunication and cable television. He is active in the Caribbean Studies Association and formerly served as president of the Southern California Chapter of the National Association of Minorities in Cable. Dr. Stockard has done broadcast journalism in Costa Rica and for KCLU-FM, a National Public Radio affiliate located on the CLU campus.

Jarvis Streeter
Professor of Religion, 1988
B.A., University of Southern California
M.Div., Luther Theological Seminary
S.T.M., Yale University Divinity School
Ph.D., Southern Methodist University

A specialist in historical, systematic and philosophical theology, Jarvis Streeter has particular interests in the Christian doctrines of Christology, soteriology, human nature and sin as well as historical Jesus studies and the relationship between science and theology. He has served as a parish pastor, taught high school in an East African village and worked on an archaeological excavation in Israel. Dr. Streeter also studied as a Research Fellow at Yale University and is a member of the American Academy of Religion.

John Tannaci
Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 2008
B.S., Stanford University
Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley

John Tannaci’s research is informed by both his undergraduate field of chemical engineering and graduate work in chemistry. Dr. Tannaci likes to teach chemistry within the context of simple biochemistry and/or technology, and is interested in developing interdisciplinary course materials on organic electronics, semiconductor processing, renewable energy, polymer chemistry and nanotechnology. His interest in science education has prompted him to participate in outreach programs to elementary and middle schools.

Victor Thasiah
Assistant Professor of Religion, 2011
Ph.D., Oxford University

Victor Thasiah earned a B.A. in psychology at University of California, Santa Cruz, an M.Div. at Princeton Seminary and, after a research fellowship in theology at the University of Tübingen in Germany, a Ph.D. in theology at Oxford University. His subsequent career included teaching at Oxford University and Elmhurst College, service in the parish at Holy Cross Lutheran Church in Ojai, an editorship at The Journal of Lutheran Ethics, and leadership in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America as assistant director for studies. In the latter role, he addressed “social issues theologically through policy research and development,” led the ELCA “in engaging immigration reform, criminal justice system reform and genetics issues,” and organized public discussions and lectures related to science and religion.

Samueal Thomas
Associate Professor of Religion, 2006
B.A., St. John’s University
M.A., University of Norte Dame
M.Div., Yale University Divinity School
M.A., Ph.D., University of Notre Dame

Samuel Thomas conducts research on the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish texts and traditions, focusing especially on the Dead Sea Scrolls. His interests also include archeology, the formation of early Christianity in its various manifestations, and the history of Jewish-Christian relations. He is the author of The 'Mysteries' of Qumran: Mystery, Secrecy and Esotericism in the Dead Sea Scrolls (Society of Biblical Literature / Brill, 2009). Dr. Thomas is Associate Director of the Center for Equality and Justice, is active in campus sustainability initiatives, and teaches a course in environmental ethics. In addition to his academic work, Thomas cultivates his passion for furniture making, poetry and literature, and service and social justice.

Nathan L. Tierney
Professor of Philosophy, 1990
B.A., University of Melbourne
Ph.D., Columbia University

Nathan Tierney’s main area of interest is ethics. Among other courses, he teaches ethical theory and social ethics in the undergraduate program and business ethics in the MBA program. He is the author of several papers on ethics and the book Imagination and Ethical Ideals (State University Press of New York, 1994). He is currently writing a book titled Global Justice in War and Peace. He serves on the advisory board of the Global Ethics and Religion Forum and is a partner in the ethics consulting service, Philosophy in the Real World.

Cecelia Travick-Jackson
Associate Professor of Education, 2003
B.S., Hampton University
M.Ed., University of Hartford
Ph.D., University of New Mexico

While earning a doctorate in language, literature and sociocultural studies, Cecelia Travick-Jackson focused her dissertation on the role and relationship of religion to academic success among African-American women in academia. With an undergraduate degree in theater and a master’s in secondary education, she has more than 20 years of experience as a high school teacher and drama director. At CLU, Dr. Travick-Jackson teaches courses in action research and advises master’s students with action research projects.

Diana Tsaw
Assistant Professor of Business, 1994
B.S., California State University, Long Beach
M.B.A., University of Southern California
J.D., Loyola Law School
L.L.M., New York University

Diana Tsaw has served as a human resources manager, a corporate and tax attorney and a senior international banking executive, including assignments in Singapore and Hong Kong. Her experience and areas of expertise include legal matters, organizational behavior and international business.

Janice Tucker
Associate Professor of Education, 2004
B.A., Memorial University of Newfoundland
M.Ed., Mount Saint Vincent University
Ed.D., Indiana University

Janice Tucker teaches courses in the master’s and doctoral programs in Educational Leadership that focus on educational policy, organizational change and leadership in the K-12 system. Her prior experience includes classroom teacher and administrator in K-12 schools, curriculum consultant in elementary education and eight years in administration at the district level as Assistant Superintendent of Elementary Education and Assistant Director of Programs (K-12). Dr. Tucker has taught at both Mount Saint Vincent University and Indiana University. In addition to teaching and advising graduate students at CLU, she coordinates the Professional Clear Administrative Services Credential Program and regularly presents papers at national and international conferences.

Gail E. Uellendahl
Professor of Education, 1997
B.A., Queens College
M.S., Hofstra University
Ph.D., New York University

Gail Uellendahl serves as Chair of the Counseling and Guidance Department where she teaches a variety of courses focused on the theory and practice of counseling. She came to CLU with more than 16 years of experience designing and implementing college counseling programs at Queens College of the City University of New York. Dr. Uellendahl has a long history of advocacy for students with disabilities and has received numerous grants and awards for her work in this area. Her current research focuses on school counseling practice. In addition to her duties in the Counseling and Guidance Program, she is a practicing licensed psychologist.

Rafaela Fiore UrÍzar
Assistant Professor of Languages and Cultures (Spanish), 2011
Ph.D., University of Chicago

Since completing her Ph.D. in contemporary Latin American literature at the University of Chicago, Rafaela Urízar taught at the Catholic University of America. She earned her B.A. in literature at Universidad Católica Nuestra Señora de la Asunción in Paraguay and her M.A. in Spanish languages and literatures at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her teaching and research interests include Latin American narratives of dictatorship and post-dictatorship; violence, memory and trauma; contemporary Transatlantic studies; relationships among visual arts, literature and popular culture; and women writers.

Seth Wagerman
Assistant Professor of Psychology, 2007
B.A., California State University, Northridge
M.A., Ph.D., University of California, Riverside

Seth Wagerman has published articles and made presentations on his research regarding the dynamic interaction of persons, situations and behavior. In ongoing research with students, he has attempted to create trait-based templates for all 12 astrological sun signs in order to examine the relationships between astrological predictions, self-reported personality, and the implications of social priming. He is also creating a protocol meant to validate a measure of “Academic Entitlement” across educational institutions of varying levels. Dr. Wagerman acts as adviser to the CLU Psychology Club and Chair of the Student Life Committee.

Bill Watkins
Associate Professor of Economics, 2009
B.S., California State University, Northridge
M.S., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara

Bill Watkins is Executive Director of CLU’s Center for Economic Research and Forecasting (CERF) and Director of the new M.S. in Economics program, which he helped to launch. Prior to coming to CLU, Watkins served as Executive Director of the University of California, Santa Barbara Economic Forecast Project. During his tenure, he expanded the project’s publications and geographic scope and enhanced its reputation. Previously, he served as an economist in the Monetary Affairs Division of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C. Watkins has been widely published in academic journals, traditional media and new media and is quoted regularly by news organizations throughout the world on the issues of demographic trends, economic development, workforce issues, equity and California economics.

Allison Wee
Associate Professor of English, 2008
B.A., St. Olaf College
Ph.D., University of Minnesota

Allison Wee received her doctorate in English, specializing in British literature from the Victorian and Modernist periods. A literary historian at heart, her research focuses on government censorship, specifically, the uneven application of Britain’s 19th-century obscenity law. Her wide-ranging teaching interests include classical literature, contemporary young adult literature, sex and gender studies, and general college writing skills. Before coming to CLU, she taught at several strong liberal arts colleges in the Midwest, including Carleton, Grinnell and Luther.

Sheridan Wigginton
Associate Professor of Languages and Cultures, 2011
Ph.D., University of Missouri

Sheridan Wigginton comes to CLU from Briar Cliff University, where she chaired the Department of Spanish. Previously she taught at the University of Missouri, St. Louis, where she directed the Foreign Language Teacher Certification program while teaching Spanish in the Department of Anthropology, Sociology and Languages. After earning her B.A. in Spanish at Eastern Kentucky University, Wigginton completed an M.A. in Spanish and a Ph.D. in foreign languages curriculum & instruction at the University of Missouri, Columbia. She currently is working on a study of the impact of shifting racial and ethnic ideologies on “representations of ‘black identity’ in the school textbooks of the Dominican Republic.”

Paul Williams
Associate Professor of Business Administration, 1992
B.S., Old Dominion University
M.B.A., Washington University
Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School

Paul Williams, a Chartered Financial Analyst and a Registered Investment Adviser, teaches classes in both the undergraduate and graduate programs, including Corporate Finance, Financial Analysis, Investments, International Finance and Financial Strategy. Prior to joining CLU, he spent more than 20 years with Atlantic Richfield in numerous management positions related to Marketing, Finance and Strategic Planning.

Joan Wines
Professor of English, 1976
B.A., M.A., University of Detroit
M.A., Ph.D., University of Southern California

In addition to her duties as Chair of the English Department, Joan Wines has been the adviser for CLU's award-winning literary publication Morning Glory for the past 12 years. She also directs the Writing Center and the Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL). The CTL provides CLU faculty with one-on-one and group support that includes integrating technology into course redesigns and a Thursday Teaching and Learning series. Much of her scholarship is centered in this area. Dr. Wines is active in the Aldous Huxley research community and was an organizer for the 2008 International Huxley Symposium co-convened by CLU and the Huntington Library.

Paul Witman
Associate Professor of Business, 2006
B.S., University of California, Los Angeles
M.S., Ph.D., Claremont Graduate University

Paul Witman teaches Information Technology Management. His research interests are in software development and reuse, information security, Internet value for businesses, and the scholarship of teaching and learning. . Prior to joining the CLU faculty, he served as Director of Integration Engineering for Digital Insight Corp. and as Director of Global Delivery Systems at Citibank.

Akiko Yasuike
Associate Professor of Sociology, 2006
B.A., Kwansai Gakuin University
B.A., Gonzaga University
M.A., California State University, NorthridgePh.D., University of Southern California

Akiko Yasuike is a sociologist whose research interests include gender, families, immigration, ethnic identity and Japanese society. Educated both in Japan and the United States, she brings international and cross-cultural perspectives into class discussions and raises awareness of global and cultural diversity in students. Dr. Yasuike is currently Program Coordinator of the Gender and Women’s Studies minor and Assistant Director of the International Studies program. She is actively involved in the Japanese community in Southern California and serves as a board member for the U.S. Japan Relationship Fund, Inc.