Faculty & Staff Posts | Today at 黑料不打烊 | 黑料不打烊 /u/news Thu, 04 Jun 2026 20:12:36 -0400 en-US hourly 1 London bridges 黑料不打烊 relationships /u/news/2026/06/04/london-bridges-elon-relationships/ Thu, 04 Jun 2026 14:16:38 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049571 This story was originally published in the February issue of The Leaflet, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 quarterly printed newsletter.


(Clockwise from top left) Jenny Gonzalez, Jackie Allred, Lisa Williams, Lauren Feeley and Hannah Southern pose for a picture on a glass floor at the Tower Bridge.

“What鈥檚 something neat that happened to you today?鈥 asked Lauren Feeley G鈥26. She was reflecting on a common conversation starter she had with fellow colleagues participating in the London Experience for 黑料不打烊 employees during the 2026 Winter Term. 鈥淎nd how much did we get rained on?!鈥

Feeley is a program assistant for student involvement and one of 22 participants in the most recent London Experience, a weeklong visit to England from Jan. 10-17, designed to give 黑料不打烊 employees who have limited international travel experience an opportunity for global engagement. Feeley said that the dreary January weather in London did not detract from a remarkable city with colleagues she now calls friends.

鈥淭his kind of experience shines a real big spotlight for every single person on the importance of being connected to other people on campus,鈥 said Senior Vice President for Advancement and External Affairs Jim Piatt, who facilitated the program for 2026.

He added that the London Experience is a distinctive feature to working at 黑料不打烊 鈥 an opportunity to support students as global citizens by offering employees a similar experience.

Jackie Allred 鈥94 serves as an administrative assistant for student life and was among those who traveled to London in January.

鈥淔rom sun up to sun down, we never stopped,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f there was something we could be doing, we were doing it.鈥

Allred said she felt like she shared these experiences with good friends rather than colleagues, a connection reflected in moments like sitting in the choir loft during mass at St. Paul鈥檚 Cathedral with a small group from 黑料不打烊.

Allred and Feeley both shared the importance of 鈥渉aving friendly faces to names鈥 across campus and the ability to pick up the phone when their work aligns. They also both have a deepened appreciation for students when they have international experiences 鈥 from the enrichment of global and cultural engagement to things like jet lag and fatigue from a long trip in a different time zone.

鈥淭he experience has broadened and strengthened my networks here at 黑料不打烊,鈥 added Allred.

A bakery reminded participants of home.

The group saw much of London and also ventured out to Cambridge. Employees saw staples like the Tower of London, the London Bridge, Westminster Abbey and Big Ben. They were given access to the war room made famous by Winston Churchill, visited the Hampton Court Palace and participated in guided tours across the city.

Dexter Chambers, a floor tech for the university, said he wouldn鈥檛 have had the same experience in London if he had traveled there on his own.

Dexter Chamber pauses during a run for a selfie.

鈥淭he guide, the itinerary, everything was impressive, and that was a joy,鈥 he said. Chambers made the most of the sites and foods that England offers and saw much of the city by foot with a small group of others, including one day that he estimates he ran four miles.

Chambers recalls calling his son and a number of his friends during his runs to share his excitement and disbelief of the places in London he was visiting. Now back at 黑料不打烊, he continues this excitement when he sees participants on campus, who, he says he loves to wave to and reminisce on the shared
experience.

Feeley is finishing her Master of Arts in Higher Education degree from 黑料不打烊 this spring and joined the London Experience, in part, to satisfy her international study away experience.

鈥淏ecause such a large population of our students here at 黑料不打烊 have some sort of study away experience, it鈥檚 really meaningful for me to have my own,鈥 she said. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 places such an emphasis on students being global citizens that it鈥檚 important that faculty and staff model that as well.鈥

Jenny Gonzalez poses by a telephone booth.

Jenny Gonzalez, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 assistant director of interior design, said the program underscores 黑料不打烊鈥檚 commitment to global education for the entire campus community, not only for students. 鈥淥ne of the best parts is getting to know people from across campus and build connections,鈥 Gonzalez said.

The application for the 2027 experience will open soon and be advertised through email. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e considering applying for this experience, do not hesitate, just apply and be open to the experience,鈥 Allred said. 鈥淒o everything you possibly can during the experience.鈥

The program is offered to 黑料不打烊 employees for a fee of $350, which includes passport, airfare, lodging, certain ground transportation, admission to various attractions and occasional group meals. Previous participants have generally incurred additional expenses for souvenirs, personal meals, and a tube pass as it suited them.

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Mid Level Professionals Institute 2026鈥27 cohort launches leadership journey at summer retreat /u/news/2026/06/03/mid-level-professionals-institute-2026-27-cohort-launches-leadership-journey-at-summer-retreat/ Wed, 03 Jun 2026 18:36:58 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049544 Thirty-four 黑料不打烊 employees gathered June 2鈥3 at The Inn at 黑料不打烊 to officially launch the Mid-Level Professionals Institute (MLPI) 2026鈥27 program year during the cohort鈥檚 annual Summer Retreat.

2026-27 MLPI participants during their retreat at the Inn at 黑料不打烊

Designed to support the growth and development of emerging and established leaders across the university, MLPI brings together professionals from a wide range of departments and divisions to engage in leadership development, networking, and collaborative learning. This year鈥檚 cohort includes 27 members of the 黑料不打烊 community聽representing聽diverse functional areas across campus.

The program is co-coordinated by Nita Skillman and Vicki Blocker, with facilitation support provided by Charlotte Williams, David Stout, Kelly Reimer, Laura Igaune Hill and Laura Kappert. Throughout the two-day retreat, participants began building relationships, exploring leadership concepts, and聽establishing聽a foundation for the year ahead.

Retreat programming featured several campus leaders and subject matter experts. Collier Lumpkin, associate director of career development for graduate school in the Student Professional Development Center, led a session titled聽Strengths as a Leader, helping participants explore how individual talents can enhance leadership effectiveness and team performance. Rochelle聽Stojnic, director of the Office of Professional Development, provided an introduction to the office and highlighted opportunities for continued professional growth across the university. Jim Piatt, senior vice president for advancement and external affairs, concluded the retreat presentations with聽黑料不打烊 “from a 50,000-foot view,” offering participants a broad perspective on the university鈥檚 history, strategic priorities, and future direction.

Collier Lumpkin, associate director of career development for the graduate school in the Student Professional Development Center, presents during the MLPI retreat the Inn at 黑料不打烊.

Throughout the program year, participants will engage with six core competencies that serve as the foundation of the MLPI experience: inclusive excellence, leadership, building meaningful relationships and mentoring networks, skills development for higher education professionals, wellness and well-being, and understanding university decision-making and culture. These competencies are designed to help participants strengthen their leadership capacity while expanding their understanding of the institution and their impact within it.

As the cohort begins its year-long journey, participants are encouraged to challenge themselves, build meaningful connections, and embrace opportunities for growth that will enhance both their professional development and contributions to the 黑料不打烊 community.

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Merricks & Bitting publish reflective writing rubric in Journal of College Science Teaching /u/news/2026/06/03/merricks-bitting-publish-reflective-writing-rubric-in-journal-of-college-science-teaching/ Wed, 03 Jun 2026 18:27:07 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049533
Jessica Merricks (left) and Kelsey Bitting (right)

Jessica Merricks, associate professor of biology, and Kelsey Bitting, assistant professor of environmental studies, recently published the article 鈥溾 in the聽Journal of College Science Teaching.

Reflection as a process helps students better understand themselves with respect to content and experiences they encounter in required science courses taken to fulfill distribution requirements, making that content more meaningful and more likely to shape students鈥 thinking and engagement in science-related topics as citizens. However, students may not arrive in the science classroom with the skills and habits of mind that lead to transformative insights via the reflective process, and tracking that skill development can allow instructors to tailor instruction about reflection according to students鈥 current understanding and practice. Nonetheless, Merricks and Bitting discovered that existing reflective writing instruments lacked the nuance to detect subtle shifts in students鈥 development across units in a single semester.

Using a dataset of students鈥 end-of-unit reflections in an introductory-level environmental science course serving mostly non-majors, Merricks and Bitting developed a refined rubric that recognized and codified incremental differences in student reflective thinking along the path to reflective writing. This analysis revealed that students frequently expressed personal connections to content and noted shifts in their perspective, even as they were still working to master the details of related scientific concepts.

The authors believe this instrument can help science instructors communicate about the goals and levels of reflection to students and allow them to recognize and encourage increasing reflective depth in student work across the progress of a single semester.

Support was provided by 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Center for Writing Excellence via a CWE Pedagogy Grant to Merricks in 2021 and a writing residency completed by Merricks in 2023.

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Phoenix Card Services director recognized nationally for leadership and service /u/news/2026/06/03/phoenix-card-services-director-recognized-nationally-for-leadership-and-service/ Wed, 03 Jun 2026 13:09:57 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049511 Janet Rauhe, director of Phoenix Card Services at 黑料不打烊, has been awarded the 2026 J. Paul Melanson Award by the National Association of Campus Card Users (NACCU). The award was presented聽on聽April 22 during the NACCU Annual Conference in Covington, Kentucky.

The J. Paul Melanson Award is NACCU鈥檚 highest honor, recognizing individuals who have made significant and lasting contributions to the campus card industry and to the professionals who support it.

At 黑料不打烊, Rauhe has spent decades guiding the聽growth聽of the Phoenix Card program,聽overseeing its聽development聽from聽an early聽implementation into a comprehensive system.聽What began as a functional tool has evolved under her leadership into a core part of the campus experience, supporting everything from accessing聽residence halls and campus facilities, dining and retail transactions, event participation, library services and more.

Her work has helped create a system that聽operates聽reliably and often behind the scenes, allowing students,聽faculty聽and staff to move through their day with ease. That consistency reflects both technical聽expertise and a steady, thoughtful approach to building systems that serve people well.

“Janet鈥檚 leadership is defined by a commitment to continuous learning and collaboration,” said Christopher Waters, associate vice president of Information Technology and chief information pfficer. “Through her engagement with colleagues across higher education and her active presence on campus, she brings forward ideas that strengthen and evolve the systems we rely on.”

Waters continued, “She聽doesn鈥檛聽stand still;聽she listens,聽learns聽and adapts, always with a focus on serving our community well. This recognition reflects both her influence within the profession and the meaningful impact of her work at 黑料不打烊.”

Beyond 黑料不打烊, Rauhe has contributed to the broader campus card community for聽nearly 30聽years through NACCU. Her service has included committee work, mentoring, conference聽leadership聽and time on the Board of Directors, including a term as Board President.

Colleagues across the industry recognize her for her聽leadership,聽expertise, generosity,聽humility聽and commitment to supporting others. These聽qualities聽are consistent markers that聽shape both her work at 黑料不打烊 and her impact nationwide.

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Geoffrey Claussen authors article on musar teachings amid mass violence /u/news/2026/06/01/geoffrey-claussen-authors-article-on-musar-teachings-amid-mass-violence/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:34:42 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049043 An article by Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies, and chair of the Department of Religious Studies, was published in the journal CrossCurrents.

The article is titled 鈥淜indness, Compassion, Love, and Generosity at a Time of Mass Killing: The Musar Teachings of Rabbi Amy Eilberg.鈥

In the article, Claussen analyzes the musar (virtue/character-focused) teachings of Rabbi Amy Eilberg, the first woman ordained as a rabbi within Conservative Judaism. He focuses on how Eilberg’s work has emphasized kindness, compassion, love and generosity and how her writing has developed in response to extreme violence and suffering in Israel/Palestine since Oct. 7, 2023.

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黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program leader joins Mecklenburg Bar Foundation board /u/news/2026/06/01/elon-law-flex-program-leader-joins-mecklenburg-bar-foundation-board/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:25:31 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049142 Emma Butterworth, staff director of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Flex Program in Charlotte, has been named to a three-year term on the Board of Directors for the .

directory portrait of Emma Butterworth
Flex Program Staff Director Emma Butterworth

The foundation is the charitable arm of the Mecklenburg Bar Association, dedicated to service, access to justice and community engagement in the Charlotte region.

The appointment reflects 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 growing engagement with Charlotte鈥檚 legal community and the law school鈥檚 emphasis on service and experiential learning through its existing part-time Flex Program and proposed full-time, 2.5-year J.D. program, which plans to enroll its first class in fall 2027.

Since the launch of the Flex Program in 2024, Butterworth has helped cultivate partnerships between 黑料不打烊 Law and nonprofit organizations across the Charlotte area, connecting students with volunteer opportunities, nonprofit organizations and community service initiatives. Those efforts have included collaborations with organizations such as Safe Alliance, Charlotte Center for Legal Advocacy and the Guardian ad Litem Program, as well as campus supply drives and events hosted by area agencies.

Many of those organizations have also met with Flex Program students during weekly Evening Docket events, providing students the opportunity to meet with and learn from legal professionals in the community.

Dean Zak Kramer said Butterworth has played an important role in establishing the Flex Program鈥檚 presence and growing the law school鈥檚 presence in Charlotte.

鈥淓mma has invested herself in the life of the Flex Program and the Charlotte community,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥淪he has made a real difference for 黑料不打烊 Law, our students, and our neighbors in Charlotte.鈥

Vice Dean and Professor of Law Alan D. Woodlief said Butterworth鈥檚 appointment reflects both her commitment to community engagement and 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 broader mission in Charlotte.

鈥淭he Mecklenburg Bar Foundation does important work throughout the Charlotte area, and Emma has been deeply committed to connecting our students with opportunities to serve and learn,鈥 Woodlief said. 鈥淗er leadership has strengthened 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 ties to Charlotte鈥檚 legal and nonprofit communities, and advanced our students鈥 professional lives.鈥

Butterworth said the role aligns closely with 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 mission and will create additional ways for students to engage with the legal profession in Charlotte.

鈥淚鈥檓 honored to serve alongside members of the Mecklenburg Bar Association in support of the Foundation鈥檚 mission of giving back to the Charlotte community,鈥 Butterworth said. 鈥淭he Charlotte legal community has warmly welcomed both the Flex Program and me personally, and that support has created opportunities for meaningful partnerships and collaboration. I look forward to continuing to build connections with local nonprofits while expanding opportunities for our students to engage in service and professional development.鈥

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Monteith publishes research about queer polyamorous marriage in a Christian boarding school /u/news/2026/06/01/monteith-publishes-research-about-queer-polyamorous-marriage-in-a-christian-boarding-school/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:23:29 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049155 Andrew Monteith in a blue shirt in front of the Alamance Building fountain
Associate Professor of Religious Studies Andrew Monteith

In 2023, Associate Professor of Religious Studies Andrew Monteith was at the Chicago Historical Society, hoping to find material related to the eugenics movement in the records of the Juvenile Psychopathic Institute. Much to his surprise, one of the folders contained nearly 150 pages of autobiographical text addressing sex between men in the 1910s-20s, authored by an inmate at Pontiac Prison. Homosexuality was illegal in this era, and in the late 1920s the Chicago police ran sting operations against gay men. 鈥淗enry鈥 was caught in one of these raids.

Appearing in the most recent edition of QTR: Trans and Queer Studies in Religion, Monteith鈥檚 article focuses on a critical section of Henry鈥檚 autobiography in which Henry explains a polyamorous marriage with two other boys at a Christian boarding school. Henry鈥檚 strict, religious parents boarded him at the Todd Seminary for Boys in Woodstock, Illinois, hoping the experience would “straighten him out.” Single-sex institutions (schools, prisons, etc.) have often had generative spaces for queer relationships, and boys at Todd Seminary were no different. Henry found a romantic triad with 鈥淲ill鈥 and 鈥淛unior,鈥 although Junior鈥檚 role in the marriage leaned asexual.

Monteith employs religious studies methodologies to make sense of the wedding. Rather than assuming the ceremony was satire simply because of the boys鈥 age, Monteith points to Henry鈥檚 own description of the wedding as serious business. The ritual objects involved鈥攑articularly a homemade wedding license that named all three boys鈥攈elped them define and validate their union. Henry鈥檚 account is tragic, however, since graduation meant separation, and Henry was never able to recover another union like it. The irony is that for someone with Henry鈥檚 personality, the Christian boarding school offered a more stable environment for queer romance than the more freewheeling life of gay Chicago did.

Henry鈥檚 imprisonment took a psychological toll, and his autobiography expresses ambivalence about his sexual orientation. On one hand, he defends his queer marriage as beautiful, but on the other, he explains that he wishes to undergo conversion therapy at an asylum. After leaving Pontiac Prison, Henry married a woman and raised multiple children.

The full open-access article can be found online:

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Campus safety & services available during summer break /u/news/2026/05/28/campus-safety-services-available-during-summer-break/ Thu, 28 May 2026 19:50:48 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049002 With the conclusion of the 2025-2026 academic year, many offices, programs and facilities are shifting their hours for the summer to adjust to having fewer students on campus and fewer events planned.

Emergency and Crisis Response

  • As a reminder, Campus Safety & Police will operate as normal, 24-hours per day, and can be reached at 336-278-5555.聽 They can also assist with connections to the Student Life on-call administrators, who are available 24/7 throughout the summer.
  • SAFEline is always available at 336-278-3333 for confidential support with sexual and relationship violence response 鈥 it can also be a confidential resource to access on-call violence responders.
  • For urgent mental health needs, the Counselor On-Call is available at 336-278-2222.
  • For any life-threatening emergency, call 9-1-1.

TimelyCare Virtual Medical and Mental Health Care 鈥 available all summer

  • Telemedicine and telemental health services through TimelyCare will be available to all 黑料不打烊 students, regardless of whether they are enrolled in summer classes, as long as they are in the United States.
  • Information is available on the TimelyCare page of the Division of Student Life website, and can also be accessed through the appointments pages of the Counseling Services and Student Health Services websites.

Campus services available during Summer Break

Below are the hours for student service operations during Summer Break.

Belk Library

  • Belk Library will be open 8 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m. on Tuesday, May 26, through Thursday, May 28.
  • Summer hours begin Saturday, June 1, and are as follows:
    • Mondays – Thursdays: 8 a.m.聽 鈥 9 p.m.
    • Fridays: 8 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
    • Saturdays: 9 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
    • Sundays: 12 p.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
  • Visit the for current library hours.

Campus Bookstore

  • Starting Tuesday, May 26, the bookstore will be open weekdays from 10 a.m. 鈥 4 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. 鈥 2 p.m. It will be closed on Sundays and holidays coinciding with university closures.
  • Visit the for information about hours or online shopping.

Campus Recreation

  • Koury will be closed for an operations reset on Thursday, May 21, starting at 2 p.m., and will reopen on Monday, June 1, at 11 a.m. Summer hours for Campus Recreation facilities are the following:
    • Koury Center
      • Mondays 鈥 Fridays:聽 11 a.m. 鈥 7 p.m.
    • Driving Range
      • Mondays 鈥 Fridays: noon 鈥 7 p.m.
      • Saturdays and Sundays: 9 a.m. 鈥 7 p.m.
      • Last bucket at 6 p.m.
  • Visit the Campus Recreation website for more information.

Counseling Services

  • No clinical appointments are available Monday, May 26, through Friday, May 30. Starting Monday, June 2, hours will include the following:
    • Administrative Office Hours: weekdays, 8 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
    • Clinical Hours: Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m. 鈥撀 4 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. 鈥 1 p.m.
    • Closed weekends and holidays
  • Call 336-278-7280 during administrative office hours or visit the Counseling Services website to schedule an appointment.
  • Important updates on available services and聽online scheduling are available on the Counseling Services website.
  • On-demand mental health support is available 24/7 throughout the summer using TimelyCare鈥檚 鈥淭alkNow鈥 service. For information about how to access the service, visit TalkNow on the Counseling Services website.

黑料不打烊 Dining

  • Starting Tuesday, May 26, Lakeside Dining Hall will be open weekdays, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. It will be closed on most weekends and holidays coinciding with university closures.
  • Additional hours may be available based on the camps and conference schedule.
  • Menus and hours are always available .

黑料不打烊 Express and Campus Transportation

  • All 黑料不打烊 Express routes will stop service at the end of Wednesday, May 20 at 10 a.m. 黑料不打烊 Express will resume routes in August with the start of the Fall semester.
  • 黑料不打烊 Express schedules and routes and E-Ride Services are available online.

Moseley Center

  • Starting Tuesday, May 26, the Moseley Center’s hours of operation are as follows:
    • Mondays through Fridays, 8 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
    • Saturdays, 9 a.m. 鈥 1 p.m.
    • Closed on Sundays
  • Irazu Coffee will be open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. 鈥 noon.
  • Updated building hours of operation are available on the Moseley Center website.

Mail Services

  • Weekdays: 8:30 a.m. 鈥 5 p.m.
  • Closed weekends and holidays coinciding with University closures
  • If you are in 黑料不打烊 for the summer (June & July) and would like to continue receiving mail and packages, you MUST complete the Summer Address Notification Form in .
  • Visit the Summer Mail page for more information. This only applies to returning students, not students who have graduated.

Student Health Services

  • Starting Tuesday, May 26, 2026:
    • Appointments with a provider are available every Monday and Tuesday, 9 a.m. 鈥 4 p.m. and every other Wednesday beginning June 3 from 9 a.m. 鈥 11:30 a.m. in the office and in Francis Center for SHS grads only from 12:40鈥4:30 p.m.
    • Closed weekends and holidays.
    • Administrative staff will be available by phone Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. 鈥 4 p.m.; closed for lunch from noon 鈥 1 p.m.
  • Call 336-278-7230 during operational hours to schedule an appointment or make an appointment online through the PhoenixHealth portal (instructions online).
  • TimelyCare medical telehealth service is available 24/7 throughout the summer.
  • For information about how to access the service, visit the appointments page of the Student Health Services website.
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English professor wins international Book Prize /u/news/2026/05/28/english-professor-wins-international-book-prize/ Thu, 28 May 2026 14:59:07 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049075 The British Association for American Studies has awarded the 2026 Arthur Miller First Book Prize to聽Erin Pearson, an associate professor of English, for her book聽鈥淕rievous Entanglement: Consumption, Connection, and Slavery in the Atlantic World鈥.聽 Pearson published the academic monograph with the聽University of Virginia Press in 2025.

鈥淕rievous Entanglement鈥 explores the most common way that people in the Atlantic world came to understand their personal connection to, and complicity with, slavery in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries: consumption. It exemplifies the interdisciplinary approach of American Studies by examining聽a wide variety of media, including poetry, political cartoons, blackface minstrelsy, slave narratives, and novels produced from the late eighteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries.

According to the prize committee,聽鈥淕rievous Entanglement鈥澛“brings new insights to well-trodden topics 鈥 from abolitionism to blackface minstrelsy. The new insights may well shape the way that we teach this period of history…”聽 The committee praised the book’s “rigorous research, creation of a new methodological approach, and the connections it draws between multiple different fields of study” as well as its “clear and engaging prose.”

Pearson is grateful for the many ways 黑料不打烊 has made this work possible, including financial support from the Department of English, Faculty Research & Development, and the Dean’s Office in 黑料不打烊 College, the College of Arts and Sciences.

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2025-26 黑料不打烊 employee retirees recognized /u/news/2026/05/22/2025-26-elon-employee-retirees-recognized/ Fri, 22 May 2026 12:58:43 +0000 /u/news/?p=1048462 黑料不打烊 recognized 28 retirees on May 12 during the faculty and staff awards. Linda Dunn, Anthony Hatcher, Charity Johansson, Sharon Moss LaRocco, Beth McCain, Robert Moorman, Patrick Murphy and Jana Lynn Patterson each elected to have a colleague speak on their behalf. Additional retirees shared what they will miss about working at 黑料不打烊 and what they look forward to during retirement.

Patrick Murphy G鈥01

Assistant vice president for financial aid

Patrick Murphy speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

Patrick Murphy joined 黑料不打烊 at the beginning of 1994 as bursar for 黑料不打烊 College to find a career that would, as he put it, add positivity to his day. Retiring at the end of the month, Murphy has served in a myriad of roles at 黑料不打烊, including director of financial aid, senior associate dean and director of financial aid and assistant vice president for financial aid.

During the Faculty/Staff Awards Luncheon, Greg Zaiser, vice president for enrollment, credited Murphy with quietly and deliberately supporting 黑料不打烊鈥檚 growth from a regional college to national and international distinction.

鈥淲hat I know now is because of Pat鈥檚 patience, accessibility and strong desire for success,鈥 added Zaiser.

After retirement, Murphy looks forward to spending more time with his wife and his five grandchildren, who are all under the age of six. He says his favorite memory at 黑料不打烊 was picking up astronaut and former senator John Glenn and his wife from the airport and guiding them across campus to multiple events.

鈥淚 will miss the people I work with,鈥 he said. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 has been the only place I worked where my friends are also people I work with.鈥


Beth McCain

Assistant teaching professor of accounting

Beth McCain speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

Beth McCain joined 黑料不打烊 in 2016 teaching part-time as an adjunct after teaching at a community college. She was hired permanently in 2021 as a lecturer and also served as the director of the Master of Science accounting program. She retired on December 31, 2025.

While at 黑料不打烊, McCain led January Term study abroad courses to Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam and was the inaugural faculty member for the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business study abroad program in Singapore.

At the Faculty/Staff Awards Luncheon, Catherine Chiang, professor of accounting and chair of the department of accounting, described McCain as one of the most dedicated and student-centered educators she had the privilege of knowing. 鈥淵our decade of service has shaped careers, strengthened our programs and raised the standards for what it means to be an 黑料不打烊 educator,鈥 said Chiang.

McCain returned the compliments to her department chair and gave a shoutout to Linda Poulson, who gave McCain 鈥渁 chance鈥 and also to her husband, who was in attendance.

Now retired, McCain is volunteering for Guilford County Animal Services in Greensboro and taking a French course at 黑料不打烊 in preparation for a three-month trip to France in the fall. Reflecting on her time at 黑料不打烊, McCain said, 鈥淚 will greatly miss the amazing faculty and staff that I worked with as well as relationships that I developed with my students over the years.鈥


Linda Niedziela

Associate professor of biology and chair of the Department of Biology

Linda Niedziela

Linda Niedziela joined 黑料不打烊 in 2001 excited to teach courses in genetics and biotechnology. She was attracted to the university鈥檚 strengths in undergraduate education and undergraduate research. She will retire at the end of May after serving in a myriad of roles, including biology department chair, assistant professor, associate professor, director of the science branch of 黑料不打烊 College Fellows and the Japheth E. Rawls chair for undergraduate research in science.

Niedziela said she will miss what she calls the 鈥渄aily therapy sessions.鈥 She shared that every day during the semester, whoever is able will meet for lunch on the first floor of McMichael and discuss wide-ranging topics, including teaching tips, research reports, personal stories about families and pets and anything else that is on the mind of lunch attendees.

She said, 鈥淚 will miss the wonderful faculty and staff colleagues in the biology department who have become like family to me.鈥

After retirement, Niedziela and her husband, Carl, an adjunct assistant professor of biology at 黑料不打烊, who will also be retiring, will travel with their dogs in an airstream travel trailer and spend time in their woodworking shop. She will also be devoting more time training and competing with her Shetland sheepdog in performance dog sports.


Anthony Hatcher

Professor of journalism and chair of the Journalism Department

Anthony Ha

Anthony Hatcher joined 黑料不打烊 in 2002 and has served as associate professor of journalism, full professor of journalism and the inaugural chair of the Department of Journalism.

Hatcher said he did not have a passport until he joined 黑料不打烊 in his early 40鈥檚. 鈥淪ince 2004, I have taken students to Hong Kong, South Africa and multiple European countries,鈥 he reflected. Hatcher also created a religion and media course in his first year, which he taught every year since.

One of those colleagues, Harlen Makemson, professor of communication design, praised Hatcher at the Faculty/Staff Luncheon for Hatcher鈥檚 empathy and humanity during what he described as a time of upheaval in the media world, brought on by new technologies. 鈥淎nd while it’s true that Anthony Hatcher serves on virtually every major standing committee at 黑料不打烊, it’s his humanity, his warmth and his care, that is his most impactful service to his university.鈥

鈥淚 will miss being with students, and I will miss seeing my colleagues 鈥撀爉y friends 鈥撀燿aily or weekly,鈥 said Hatcher. During the ceremony, he added, 鈥淚 hope in addition to teaching all those wonderful students I鈥檝e had over the past nearly quarter century, I hope in some small way, I made their lives a little better because God knows they helped me be better.

After retirement, Hatcher looks forward to biking, hiking, travel and spending time with his granddaughter. 鈥淲riting will be part of retirement as well, since I can鈥檛 sing or paint,鈥 he added.


Robert Moorman

Frank S. Holt, Jr. professor of business leadership and professor of organizational behavior

Robert Moorman holds up a pamphlet during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026 to praise the employees being praised during the ceremony. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊

Robert Moorman joined 黑料不打烊 as the Frank Holt Jr professor of business leadership in 2011, a title he held throughout his time at 黑料不打烊. Retiring in May, Moorman has also served as the department chair for the Department of Management, Entrepreneurship and International Business.

During the Faculty, Staff Awards Luncheon, Haya Ajjan, dean of the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business and professor of management information systems, shared that Moorman has a gift few others do 鈥撀爐he ability to ask the types of questions that 鈥渕ake you stop walking, look around at where you actually are and suddenly see it鈥 question that stays with you for the rest of your life.鈥 Ajjan offered Moorman a golf club afterwards in the spirit of his retirement.

During the ceremony, Moorman shared that education is so much more than reading books and looking at stats. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really about the relationships we have,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t’s the relationships with our students and the utter joy of seeing people cycle through during this really important time of their lives, you know, touching you and stepping in and stepping out and then seeing them grow as they go.鈥

Moorman said his favorite memories are those involving friendships with colleagues and partnerships with students. 鈥淚 have fond memories of a few colleagues congregating in my office talking about the joys and frustrations of the day,鈥 he said.聽 鈥淚 also have fond memories of holding classes that just seemed to 鈥榳ork鈥 that day and then talking with students afterward about how they continued thinking about our discussions.鈥

After retiring at the end of this month, Moorman looks forward to what he calls unstructured adventure. 鈥淚 am looking forward to a time of boredom that then grows into something new, unplanned and adventurous. What fun!鈥


Charity Johansson

Professor of physical therapy education and chair of the Doctor of Physical Therapy Department.

Charity Johansson speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

In 1999, Charity Johnsson joined what would become the Doctor of Physical Therapy program as one of its first faculty. She retired in December 2025 after decades of service in which she held positions of associate professor, full professor, faculty administrative fellow, interim associate department chair, interim department chair and program director, department chair and program director and university parliamentarian.

Johansson said she is already missing the 鈥渄aily exchanges with colleagues whose brilliant minds and genuinely kind hearts鈥 have shaped her over nearly three decades. Likewise, she will miss the students, and their 鈥渋nfectious enthusiasm, their compassion and the joy of watching them transform in ways they hadn鈥檛 even imagined possible.鈥

During the Faculty/Staff Awards Luncheon, Crystal Ramsey praised Johansson as a 鈥渃ornerstone of the 黑料不打烊 academic community, whose legacy is defined not just by the position she has held, but by the enduring way she has nurtured the hearts, minds and professional identities of future healthcare providers.鈥 Ramsey is an associate professor of physical therapy education and a former student of Johansson鈥檚.

At the ceremony, Johansson reflected on the retirement of Gerry Francis, who served as professor emeritus of mathematics and provost emeritus.

鈥淕erry Francis told me he doesn鈥檛 miss the work, but he really misses the people 鈥 and I get that,” she said.

She also said it was a privilege working with so many in the 黑料不打烊 community who have encouraged her, challenged her and made her laugh to help her be a better a human. 鈥Fred Rubeck, you鈥檙e among those,鈥 Johansson added, honoring the late professor of performing arts and chair of the Department of Performing Arts.

Now retired, Johansson said she is enjoying time outdoors with family and close friends, planning travel and trying new ventures, including fiction writing.


Marcia Dodson

Program assistant for the Station at Mill Point Neighborhood

Marcia Dodson

Marcia Dodson joined 黑料不打烊 in 2015 and is the proud mother of three sons who graduated from 黑料不打烊. She will be retiring at the end of May and has served as a service desk analyst for facilities management, program assistant in the Danieley Neighborhood and Station at Mill Point.

A favorite memory of Dodson鈥檚 while at 黑料不打烊 is joining the London Experience for staff, where she built relationships with colleagues she had not yet had the opportunity to meet while working at 黑料不打烊. 鈥淲hat an awesome experience!鈥 she reflected.

After retirement, Dodson looks forward to being a traveling grandparent with her husband.


Rosemary Haskell

Professor of English

Rosemary Haskell

Rosemary Haskell joined 黑料不打烊 in 1985 and will be retiring in August. She has held the roles of temporary instructor and assistant, associate and later, full professor of English.

Haskell said she will most miss her kind and interesting colleagues, as well as the 鈥渆nergizing power of the new class of bright-eyed and bushy-tailed first-years each August.鈥

One of Haskell鈥檚 favorite memories at 黑料不打烊 is during the transition of the Fighting Christians to the Phoenix. She enjoyed the papier-mache birds and eggs in trees around campus that offered a clue to the new mascot.

After retirement, Haskell said she plans to spend time with her family and do some home improvement work.


Cheryl Riley

Custodian

Cheryl Riley

Cheryl Riley joined 黑料不打烊 in 2013 as a custodian and will retire at the end of May. 鈥淚 will miss the people I work with,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I look forward to spending time with my grandkids.鈥


Linda Dunn

Adjunct assistant professor of Peace and Conflict Studies

Linda Dunn speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

Linda Dunn joined 黑料不打烊 in 1998 as the director of the Alamance County Dispute Settlement Center, where she trained a group of students and returned to train several faculty members in mediation skills, who later became volunteer mediators for the center. Dunn鈥檚 official start date on record is 2001, when she taught a two-credit mediation and conflict resolution skills course as part of a new minor called Nonviolent Studies. She retired at the end of December, 2025.

Federico Pous spoke on behalf of Dunn during the Faculty/Staff Awards luncheon, praising Dunn鈥檚 ability to teach hands-on peaceful conflict resolution skills and strategies across different social backgrounds.

鈥淟inda’s way of teaching and interacting with students, staff and professors, makes you feel that you are equal to her in the same community space,鈥 he shared.

鈥淚 will miss the students and their passion the things I teach,鈥 said Dunn. Two of her students attended the luncheon.

After retirement, she plans to attend cultural events on campus and potentially assist in future facilitated discussions on campus. She will also continue to volunteer as a mediator at the Alamance County District court, continue restorative circle skills and mediation and training skills with Restorative Justice Durham and the Orange County District County District court.

鈥淚 will continue to be an activist for restorative justice and peacemaking organizations as we navigate the chaos and violence in our world,鈥 she added.


Elizabeth Bailey

Assistant teaching professor of exercise science

Elizabeth Bailey

Elizabeth Bailey began her career at 黑料不打烊 in 2004 and, enjoying the vibe of the community, wanted to be 鈥減art of it all.鈥 She started as a lecturer for the required wellness course, lectured for the School of Education before joining Exercise Science.

Retiring at the end of Spring semester, Bailey said she will most miss her colleagues and all the 鈥渇riends among the faculty and staff鈥 she has made while at 黑料不打烊.

鈥淚 will also miss the opportunities to continue to learn that are available at 黑料不打烊, whether it be through taking classes or participating in workshops or going abroad,鈥 she added. She said, while at 黑料不打烊, he has learned a lot.

Bailey said her retirement plans continue to evolve, and she still intends to exercise classes and do some research on the side.


Kim Giles, 鈥11 G鈥16

Associate director of communications for the Student Professional Development Center

Kim Giles

Since her first role in 1995, Kim Giles has served in various roles at the university, including data entry in admissions and accounting, budget clerk in the physical plant, program assistant for Biology, Chemistry, Environmental Studies, Engineering, Chemistry, and Physics, and assistant director of communications in the Student Professional Development Center.

Giles retired during the summer of 2025. She said she cherishes the opportunity to earn an MBA at 黑料不打烊 along with her daughter. She said about the experience, 鈥渨hat an unforgettable experience that was in crossing the stage along with my daughter to get our MBA鈥檚 together 鈥撀爄t was quite surreal.鈥

Giles also reflected on traveling with peers and faculty to Vietnam and Singapore, the many evolutions of Staff Appreciation Day, and being honored as the staff member of the year 鈥撀燼n experience she said she will cherish forever.

Since retiring, Giles has taken nine cruises and has done kayaking, camping and gardening. She looks forward to continuing to spend time with family.


Sharon Moss LaRocco

University accompanist and instructor in music

Sharon Moss LaRocco speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

Sharon Moss LaRocco was recognized at the Faculty/Staff Awards Luncheon by Hallie Hogan, associate professor of music. LaRocco joined the 黑料不打烊 Music Department in 1988 as a pianist for musical theater productions, music ensembles and student recitals.

Hogan shared, 鈥淎lthough she kept a very low profile, there was never any doubt about this, because she never missed a beat, much less a note, and maintained high quality for every performance she gave,” Hogan said.

She shared that students developed a strong admiration for LaRocco鈥檚 talent and a deep love for her kind and understanding nature.

Beyond 黑料不打烊, Sharon has devoted herself to advocating for people with autism, through her work as a leader in the Office of Society of North Carolina, notably promoting autism awareness for the Native American communities of Western North Carolina.

At the awards ceremony, LaRocco shared that one of her favorite memories was the construction of Rhodes Stadium, which signaled to her the emergence of a marching band.

鈥淲ho doesn鈥檛 love a marching band?鈥 asked LaRocco to the audience. 鈥淎nd the spirit and the energy it creates walking through the campus, en route to the games.鈥


Jana Lynn Patterson

Associate vice president for Student Life/dean of student health & well-being/assistant professor

Jon Dooley, right, looks on as Jana Lynn Patterson speaks during the 2026 Faculty-Staff Awards at Alumni Gym on May 12, 2026. (Photo by Grant Halverson/黑料不打烊)

During the Faculty/Staff Awards Luncheon, Jon Dooley, vice president for Student Life and associate professor of education, described Patterson as someone who is consistent in how she shows up for others, patient when a young leader makes a mistake, honest with students and colleagues even when it is hard and someone who not only believes in others, and one who helps others believe in themselves.

鈥淪he supported students in college through tragedy, advised student organizations, and celebrated their success,鈥 said Dooley. 鈥淪he has created spaces of welcome and belonging, and met the students in their darkest hours, helping them piece together on plans to move forward.鈥

Patterson was also recognized for her 40 years of service and held back tears while addressing the audience. A first-generation student from Hope Mills, North Carolina, Patterson said her parents could have never dreamed where she is today.

鈥淭o my staff and colleagues, you are the A-Team,鈥 she shared. “But to everyone in this community, I want you to know that every day has been an honor and a pleasure to be a part of this community and to have worked with you.鈥


Also retiring

Retiring staff members will be recognized on May 29 as part of Staff Appreciation Day.

  • Joan Barnatt
  • Mona DeVries
  • Chris Dockrill, head women’s golf coach
  • Sharon Hodge
  • John Chinnici, community service officer
  • David “DD” Donohue, painter
  • Kelly Elliston
  • Gloria Graves, custodian
  • William “Tom” Hall, telecommunications technician
  • Rhonda Kosusko, associate director of career services, education and 黑料不打烊
  • Katherine Rodriguez, assistant director for application processing
  • Michelle Stephens, custodian
  • Ed Williams, service desk analyst
  • Donna Wood , electronic services/ acquisitions librarian
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