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John W. Ryan Awards for Distinguished Contributions to International Programs and Studies



Flynn
Photo by Heather Hill

Beverly C. Flynn

School of Nursing, IUPUI

Action research, in the words of Beverly Flynn, "takes place in community settings and involves community partners in the design and implementation of research projects...Action research aims to provide information the community needs for its decision making."

Flynn has devoted her career to this synergistic combination of service and scholarship, leading to the improvement of public health conditions in Indiana and around the world.

She is the founding director of the Institute of Action Research for Community Health (IARCH), headquartered at IUPUI. The institute promotes, develops and conducts interdisciplinary research relevant to community health issues in the state, nation and world; provides new opportunities for community health research, public service, and education for students and faculty; and collaborates with communities in identifying solutions to health concerns. Soon after its establishment in 1990, IARCH was designated by the World Health Organization (WHO) as the first Global Collaborating Center in Healthy Cities. This is also the first WHO Collaborating Center in the history of IU.

Related Links:

http://www.iupui.edu/~nursing/faculty/bflynn.html

http://www.iupui.edu/~citynet/cnet.html



Wertheim
Photo by Heather Hill

"A network of postcolonial scholars exists because of his passion for the material, his commitment to change, and his outgoing, caring personality."

--Nancy Topping Bazin, professor of English, Old Dominion University


Albert Wertheim

Departments of Comparative Literature, English, and Theatre and Drama, IU Bloomington
Associate Dean, Research and the University Graduate School

The son of refugees from Nazi Germany, Albert Wertheim spent the first years of his life believing that "you used one set of words with your parents and another with your friends." The languages he moved between were German at home, and English in his New York neighborhood. But the words he used with his parents slipped occasionally into the parlance of the streets, and the friends brought up on World War II radio dramas and movie newsreels identified his German words with the atrocities of Hitler. He stopped speaking German for 12 years. Since his 1940s childhood, however, Wertheim has not only recaptured his ability to speak German fluently, he has been instrumental in internationalizing the study of English. The street-smart kid who explored the politically charged boundaries between two languages has become the professor who taught American studies to German high school teachers and who is a pioneer in the study of the non-American, non-British literature of the English-speaking world.

He began his career expecting to do research in England and the major U.S. libraries. Instead, his research and teaching interests span the globe and connect diverse eras, genres and cultures: Elizabethan and Restoration English drama; modern British, Irish and American drama; and postcolonial drama and other literature in English from all over the world. He's as comfortable writing about Shakespeare's Macbeth as he is teaching South African playwright Athol Fugard's A Lesson from Aloes.

As a witness to World War II and the fall of the Berlin Wall, Wertheim has focused his commitment to change on educating German teachers. As director of a German-U.S. teacher exchange project sponsored by the German Marshall Fund from 1986 to 1997, Wertheim coordinated and hosted the concluding week of the exchange, an intensive American studies seminar in Bloomington.

"He has affected directly more than 500 German teachers and affected many more indirectly," said Marianne Lais Ginsburg, German Marshall Fund program officer. "It is his care and devotion to the program that makes it such a special and rewarding effort for everyone involved, especially the teachers."

During his tenure at IU, Wertheim has won four teaching awards, including the Herman Frederic Lieber Distinguished Teaching Award. He likens his own philosophy of teaching as a performance art to that of the dramatist Fugard: "Acting is going onstage, but it should also serve as a call to action in your real life. The teaching that's happening onstage is part of the teaching that should be occurring in the classroom."

Related Link:

http://www.indiana.edu/~complit/werth.html

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