Alumni inducted into Academy of Scholars
Henderson State University inducted three alumni into the Academy of Scholars Aug. 25 during a convocation ceremony in Arkansas Hall. The Academy is comprised of Henderson graduates who have gained distinction in their professional fields. Faculty excellence awards were also presented.
This year, Henderson celebrates 125 years of educating students and empowering them to achieve their dreams of success. The convocation is one of many events planned throughout the school year to mark the anniversary. A special book release, along with exhibits and musical performances, will highlight key events that have helped establish and maintain the Reddie Spirit.
Joining the Academy of Scholars are Amanda Smith Jones, Joyce Littleton Craft and Shannon Curtin.
Amanda Jones
Amanda Jones has been an educator for 15 years and currently teaches at Poyen High School. She was most recently invited to the White House to receive the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science Teaching, which is the highest honor for math and science teaching.
Jones, who graduated summa cum laude from Henderson with a biology degree, was named Arkansas’s Outstanding Biology Teacher of the Year in 2012, and Grant County Teacher of the Year in 2005. She served as Arkansas Senior Beta Club State Sponsor from 2013-2015.
Jones has collaborated with Vanderbilt University’s Aspirnaut Program to build an on-site afterschool science program for students in third grade through high school. She also mentors the robotics team and spearheads the Poyen Academic Banquet. Jones developed an ACT prep course for students and works closely with participants to prepare them for college.
She earned her M.Ed. in secondary education and science curriculum from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock where she received the dean’s award.
Joyce Craft
Joyce Craft is currently transitioning from superintendent of the Hot Springs School District to retirement. She began her educational career with the Hot Springs School District as a classroom teacher and went on to become an assistant principal, interim principal, interim director of the Arkansas School for Mathematics and Sciences, and assistant superintendent. She was named superintendent in 2007.
Craft holds a master’s degree from Henderson State, and Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. She continued graduate studies at Memphis State University, UALR, University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, and Ouachita Baptist University.
Craft is active in many community and civic organizations, as well as state level professional organizations.
Shannon Curtin
Shannon Curtin is group vice president and general merchandising manager for beauty and personal care at Walgreens corporate headquarters in Deerfield, Illinois. Curtin’s team is responsible for purchasing the beauty and personal care merchandise for Walgreen’s 8,229 stores.
Curtin, who earned a B.A. in business from Henderson State in 1999, joined Walgreens in 2009 after working for Walmart in Bentonville. She began her beauty career selling prestige fragrance in her hometown department store. Since then, she has held numerous merchandising positions.
Curtin serves on the board of CEW, and is a member of the Chicago Art Institute Auxiliary Board. In 2013, Beauty Inc. named Curtin one of its “Top 40 under 40,” and MMR noted her as one of the “Most Influential Women in Retail,” both in 2013 and 2014.
Diversity Magazine named Curtin to its 2014 Women Worth Watching List, and she was named one of the “50 Most Influential People in Beauty” by Women’s Wear Daily.
Excellence in Teaching awards
Six Henderson faculty members were honored with Excellence in Teaching awards during the ceremony, including Dr. Glenda Hyer (Teachers College), Aaron Calvert (fine arts), Dr. Suzanne Tartamella (liberal arts), Dr. Vincent Dunlap (science and mathematics), Dr. Victor Claar (School of Business), and Dr. Bradley Rowland (Outstanding New Faculty Member).
Glenda Hyer
Dr. Glenda Hyer, assistant professor of special education in the Department of Advanced Instructional Studies, has authored several articles for national publications and is actively involved in providing professional development for special education teachers in K-12 schools. She was instrumental in Henderson’s K-12 Special Education Program receiving national recognition by the Council for Exceptional Children.
Aaron Calvert
Aaron Calvert, associate professor of art, was selected to participate in the annual Delta Exhibit at the Arkansas Art Center where his sculptural ceramic work entitled “Drift” was prominently displayed in the prestigious juried exhibit. Calvert’s scholarly and creative activities include workshops, publications, lectures and exhibits.
Suzanne Tartamella
Dr. Suzanne Tartamella, assistant professor of English, has published both an article and a major work of scholarship about Shakespeare while excelling in teaching and service to students and the university. Her book Rethinking Shakespeare’s Skepticism: The Aesthetics of Doubt in the sonnets & Plays received a positive review in Choice magazine.
Vincent Dunlap
Dr. Vincent Dunlap, associate professor of chemistry, leads a large group of students in undergraduate research each year. His students have been selected to present research at the American Chemical Society national meetings, the Arkansas Idea Networks for Biomedical Research Excellence Conference, and at every annual Posters at the Capital event in Little Rock.
Victor Claar
Dr. Victor Claar, professor of economics, is active in scholarly work with publications in numerous major referred journals and has authored two books, Economics in Christian Perspective: Theory, Policy and Life Choices and Fair Trade? Its Prospects as a Poverty Solution. He is a frequent invited speaker and lecturer.
Bradley Rowland
Dr. Bradley Rowland, assistant professor of chemistry, serves on the university’s technology committee and is the chemistry department’s web master. As a researcher, he focuses on developing computer code to model Bohmian Quantum Trajectories.