Curricular changes bring new faculty
An Arabic language professor is among the group of new faculty members hired for openings in seven departments
By: Matt Day, News Editor
Issue date: 3/30/07 Section: News
Beginning fall 2007, Macalester students will no longer have to venture off-campus to take courses in Arabic: an instructor in the language is among the nine faculty hired this spring, among the classics, international studies, English, math, music, chemistry, history, and hispanic studies departments.
Antoine Mefleh, who holds degrees from universities in Lebanon, France, and the United States, will teach an introductory Arabic course in the fall followed by an intermediate course in spring 2008.
He has taught Arabic locally at Minneapolis’ Roosevelt High School and at Minza, a local Arab American literature and language center. During his time at Roosevelt, Mefleh was the only high school Arabic instructor in Minnesota.
The courses will be listed in the classics department due to the Arabic’s shared historic roots with the department’s languages, Greek, Hebrew, and Latin.
The international studies department hired Smadar Lavie as the Hubert H. Humphrey Visiting Chair professor. Lavie will teach courses about the Islamic world.
The position lasts at least two years, with provisions for an extension. Mohammed Bamyeh, who holds the current Humphrey visiting professorship, is in his fourth year at Macalester.
International studies Chair David Chioni Moore said that Lavie stood out because of her “regional expertise within a global frame.”
Lavie, a native of Israel, has completed anthropological fieldwork in Jordan, Palestine, and the Sinai Peninsula. “She brings great range, both geographic and disciplinary,” Moore said.
The history department chose to hire current Macalester associate professor Andrea Robertson for the tenure track position in early U.S. colonial history. Robertson is teaching two courses this semester as an associate professor.
“I knew Mac’s reputation was excellent regionally and nationwide,” Robertson said of her initial decision to come to Macalester. Robertson grew up in northern Wisconsin and attended Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin.
Antoine Mefleh, who holds degrees from universities in Lebanon, France, and the United States, will teach an introductory Arabic course in the fall followed by an intermediate course in spring 2008.
He has taught Arabic locally at Minneapolis’ Roosevelt High School and at Minza, a local Arab American literature and language center. During his time at Roosevelt, Mefleh was the only high school Arabic instructor in Minnesota.
The courses will be listed in the classics department due to the Arabic’s shared historic roots with the department’s languages, Greek, Hebrew, and Latin.
The international studies department hired Smadar Lavie as the Hubert H. Humphrey Visiting Chair professor. Lavie will teach courses about the Islamic world.
The position lasts at least two years, with provisions for an extension. Mohammed Bamyeh, who holds the current Humphrey visiting professorship, is in his fourth year at Macalester.
International studies Chair David Chioni Moore said that Lavie stood out because of her “regional expertise within a global frame.”
Lavie, a native of Israel, has completed anthropological fieldwork in Jordan, Palestine, and the Sinai Peninsula. “She brings great range, both geographic and disciplinary,” Moore said.
The history department chose to hire current Macalester associate professor Andrea Robertson for the tenure track position in early U.S. colonial history. Robertson is teaching two courses this semester as an associate professor.
“I knew Mac’s reputation was excellent regionally and nationwide,” Robertson said of her initial decision to come to Macalester. Robertson grew up in northern Wisconsin and attended Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin.
2008 Woodie Awards
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