Carol Bucher
Teaching on the education of students with exceptionalities, Bucher is the author of a series of books highlighting disabilities.
Teaching on the education of students with exceptionalities, Bucher is the author of a series of books highlighting disabilities.
Bos teaches a broad range of courses in U.S. national politics including political psychology, campaigns and elections, media and politics, and research methods; and engages in research regarding civic education, political participation, and effective pedagogy in political science.
An expert in macroeconomics, Moledina is a widely published author of articles on trade, agriculture, growth, and monetary economics. He is also the co-founder of Wooster’s Social Entrepreneurship program, an experiential learning opportunity for students.
Corral’s scholarship focuses on Latinx politics, immigration policy, and race and ethnicity. He has partnered with the Immigrant Worker Project to conduct research on Latinx immigrants in Ohio.
Neptune, a 2005 College of Wooster graduate, began her teaching career in Los Angeles and contributed to the curriculum content of the Nick Jr. show “Wallykazam!”
An expert in intercultural communication, Atay studies transnational communication and media studies, technology and new media, cultural identity and globalization, diaspora and postcolonial studies, cultural studies and media, and the representation of gender, race, ethnicity, and sexuality in media and visual culture.
Studying free-living eastern bluebirds and captive zebra finches, Lynn studies hormone-behavior interactions by studying stress hormone endocrinology from both a mechanistic standpoint and an evolutionary standpoint.
Beth has been the Administrative Coordinator for the department of Biology since 2004. Her main responsibilities are: maintaining the department budget, ordering department supplies, […]
Working with undergraduate students, Herzmann studies memory and cognition relating to facial recognition. Herzmann is especially interested in “the other race effect,” a phenomenon that describes the increased facial recognition of people of the same race as oneself.
Fraga works with students to study how proteins can be used to help address societal and economic problems including, environmental clean-up or the industrial synthesis of valuable compounds.
Using Drosophila melanogaster (the fruit fly), Kelly investigates the function of the “fly ZC3H14” gene (called Nab2 in flies), in nervous system development and function, especially as it relates to intellectual disability and IQ.
Stavnezer is interested in behavioral neuroscience and works with students to investigate the role of sex in the completion of complex tasks and the effect of environmental factors on learning and memory in mice and rats.