Michael Delahoyde
Department of English
Avery Hall 355
Washington State University
Pullman, Washington 99164-5020
509-335-4832
delahoyd@wsu.edu
EDUCATION
1989 — University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Ph.D. — Specialization: Medieval Literature1985 — University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
M.A. — Specialization: English Literature1983 — Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York
B.A. — cum laude English
B.A. — cum laude Music1983 — Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York
Secondary School Teaching Certification — English
TEACHING
1992-2015 — Washington State University, Pullman, Washington
Clinical Professor of English
- Humanities in the Ancient World
- Mythology
- Bible as Literature
- Medieval Arts and Humanities (Honors)
- Middle Ages and Renaissance
- Chaucer (Canterbury Tales, Minor Poems)
- Shakespeare (& for Non-English Majors & Cougar Quest)
- Edward de Vere Studies
- Love in the Arts
- Introduction to Literature (Honors)
- Survey of Early English Literature
- Monsters in Literature and Film (& for Cougar Quest)
- 20th-Century Humanities
- Science Fiction
- Domain of the Arts (Honors)
- Popular Culture (for Cougar Quest)
- Food Studies (Honors Seminar)
- Research and Writing (Honors)
- Composition (Computer Assisted, Honors)
- Expository Writing
1990-1992 — University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho
Visiting Assistant Professor of English
- Chaucer
- Middle English Literature
- Renaissance Sonnet Cycles
- Horror Literature and Film
- 19th-Century Novel
- Survey of British Literature
- Survey of World Literature (Honors)
- Critical Approaches to Literature
- Composition
1989-1990 — Millikin University, Decatur, Illinois
Assistant Professor of English
- Medieval and Renaissance Poetry
- Introduction to Literature
- Composition
- Film
1984-1988 — University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Graduate Student Teaching Assistant
- Composition (Introductory, Intensive)
- Introduction to Short Story and Novel
- Course Assistant/Grader
- Film
- Survey of British Literature
1981-1982 — Arlington Middle School, Poughkeepsie, New York
Student Teacher and Substitute Teacher
- Secondary School English
1979-1981 — Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York
Course Assistant/Grader
- Old and New Testament Studies
PUBLICATIONS
Antony and Cleopatra. [A paperback edition of the Shakespeare play from the Oxfordian perspective.]
Llumina Press: expected 2014.“Lyric Poetry from Chaucer to Shakespeare.”
Building the Case for Edward de Vere as Shakespeare, Vol. 9.
Ed. Paul H. Altrocchi and Hank Whittemore. iUniverse, 2014. Rpt.“Lyric Poetry from Chaucer to Shakespeare.”
Brief Chronicles V (2014): 69-100.“Preface: On Being Wrong.”
Brief Chronicles V (2014): 1-10.“Shakespeare’s Perspective Art.”
The Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter 50.3 (Summer 2014): 1, 13-16.Preface: Alan William Green’s I Shakespeare: The Holy Trinity Solution.
Los Angeles: Shakespeare Publishing, 2011. vii-ix.
http://www.amazon.com/Shakespeare-Unanimous-Anonymous-Trinity-Solution/dp/1450586139.Book Review: “Charles Beauclerk’s Shakespeare’s Lost Kingdom.”
Brief Chronicles: The Journal of the Shakespeare Fellowship 2 (2010): 237-244.
http://www.briefchronicles.com/ojs/index.php/bc/index.php.Note: “Pissing on Delia Bacon’s Grave.”
Shakespeare Matters 9.2 (Spring/Summer 2010): 12.
http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/Newsletter/NewsletterMain.htm.“Edward de Vere’s Hand in Titus Andronicus.”
Brief Chronicles: The Journal of the Shakespeare Fellowship 1 (2009): 186-204.
http://www.briefchronicles.com/ojs/index.php/bc/index.php.“Oxford’s Railing Muse.”
Shakespeare Matters 8.1 (Winter 2009): 1, 20-22.
http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/Newsletter/NewsletterMain.htm.“Edward de Vere’s Antony and Cleopatra.”
Discovering Shakespeare: A Festschrift in Honour of Isabel Holden.
Portland: Shakespeare Authorship Research Centre, 2009. 13-22.“Chaucer: General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales.”
The Literary Encyclopedia http://www.litencyc.com/. August 2008.“The Ending of Edward de Vere’s Othello.”
Shakespeare-Oxford Newsletter 44.2 (Spring 2008): 17-20.
http://www.shakespeare-oxford.com/?page_id=759“More Recent Publications in Oxfordian Studies.”
Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 61.1 (Spring 2007): 112-120.
http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/61.1/reviews/delahoyd.asp.“De Vere’s Lucrece and Romano’s Sala di Troia.”
The Oxfordian 9 (2006): 50-65.
http://www.shakespeare-oxford.com/?page_id=90.“Recent Publications in Oxfordian Studies.”
Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 60.2 (Fall 2006): 52-59.
http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/60.2/reviews/delahoyd.asp.“Music and Monkeys in de Vere’s Venice.” [Note.]
Shakespeare Matters 5.4 (Summer 2006): 12-13.
http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/Newsletter/NewsletterMain.htm.“Damon and Pithias: Oxford Juvenilia?” [Note.]
Shakespeare Matters 5.1 (Fall 2005): 8, 12.
http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/Newsletter/NewsletterMain.htm.“Thinking with Shakespeare.”
Chapter contributed to the WSU Critical Thinking Project’s proposed book.“A Perfume Advertisement as a Teaching Tool.”
The Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 58.1 (Spring 2004): 49-54.
http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/58.1/articles/delahoyde.asp.“The Shakespeare Enigma.”
Media Review for The Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 58.1 (Spring 2004): 60-62.
http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/58.1/reviews/delahoyde.asp.“Jurassic Park,””Stop-Motion Animation,” “E.T.,” “Back To The Future,” “Sha Na Na,” “Boston,””Scott Joplin,” and 9 other encyclopedia articles.
The Guide to United States Popular Culture. Ed. Ray B. Browne and Pat Browne.
Bowling Green, Ohio: Popular Press, 2001.
http://www.amazon.com/Guide-United-States-Popular-Culture/dp/0879728213.“‘Heryng th’effect’ of the Names in Troilus and Criseyde.”
The Chaucer Review 34.4 (2000): 351-371.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25096104.“#7: Medieval Humor.” Gladly Lerne and Gladly Teche: A Festschrift
by Students, Colleagues and Friends of Thomas Jay Garbàty in Honor of his Retirement.
Ed. Adam Brooke Davis.
http://www.amazon.com/Glady-Lerne-Gladly-Teche-Festschrift/dp/B003109QUQ.“Medieval Dragons and Dinosaur Films.”
Popular Culture Review 9.1 (February 1998): 17-30.“Chaucer: Life and Times. CD-ROM.”
Media Review for The Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 52.2 (1998): 75-77.
http://rmmla.wsu.edu/ereview/52.2/media_reviews/delahoyde.asp.“Creating Meat-Eaters: The Child as Advertising Target.”
Collaborative with Susan C. Despenich.
Journal of Popular Culture 28.1 (Summer 1994): 159-174.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.0022-3840.1994.2801_135.x/abstract.“Games for Girls: Girl Land Reconstructed.”
Collaborative with Susan C. Despenich.
Proteus: A Journal of Ideas: Special Issue–Gender in America 10.2 (Fall 1993): 49-54.“Toys for Girls: The New Sexism (‘We girls can do anything, right Barbie?’)”
Collaborative with Susan C. Despenich.
Popular Culture Review 4.2 (June 1993): 23-36.The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology. Ed. Robert K. Barnhart.
New York: H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
(Editorial Assistant to Professor Emeritus Sherman M. Kuhn.)
http://www.amazon.com/The-Barnhart-Dictionary-Etymology-Robert/dp/0824207459.
PAPERS
“Oxford’s Early Errors.”
Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Conference.
Madison, Wisconsin; September 2014.“Chaucer Hidden in Shakespeare’s History Plays.”
18th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2014.“Shakespeare’s Perspective Art.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Vancouver, Washington; October 2013.“Oxford’s The Two Noble Kinsmen.”
17th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2013.“Oxfordian Twelfth Night Epiphanies.”
16th & 17th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2012, April 2013.“The Meaning of Coriolanus.” A Panel Discussion.
16th & 17th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2013.“Oxford Wrote Richard the Second, Know Ye Not That?”
14th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2010.“Lyric Poetry from Chaucer to Shakespeare.”
13th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2009.“Edward de Vere’s Hand in Titus Andronicus.”
12th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2008.“Oxford Throughout Shakespeare.”
Department of English Colloquium Series.
WSU; November 2007.“Shake-speare’s The Winter’s Tale as Tudor Family Allegory.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Calgary, Alberta; October 2007.“The Ending of Edward de Vere’s Othello.”
11th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2007.“Edward de Vere’s Antony and Cleopatra.”
10th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2006.“The Mantuan Art of ‘Shake-speare’s’ Lucrece.”
Department of English Colloquium Series.
WSU; September 2005.“Visible Knowledge in the Shakespeare Classroom.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; October 2005.Keynote Address: “Implications of Oxford as Shakespeare.”
9th Annual Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2005.“Some Chaucer Gimmicks.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Boulder, Colorado; October 2004.“The Winter’s Tale as Tudor Allegory.”
8th Annual Edward de Vere Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2004.“Visualizing Shakespeare.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Missoula, Montana; October 2003.“The Vital Balance: Panel Discussion on Academic Goals and a Healthy Personal Life.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Missoula, Montana; October 2003.“Thinking with Shakespeare.”
American Association of Higher Education.
Seattle, Washington; June 2003.“Edward De Vere’s Lucrece.”
7th Annual Edward de Vere Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2003.“Shakespeare and Visual Knowledge.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Scottsdale, Arizona; October 2002.“Dinophobia.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Scottsdale, Arizona; October 2002.“De Vere’s Treasonous (Self-)Examinations.”
6th Annual Edward de Vere Studies Conference.
Portland, Oregon; April 2002.“Medievalism in Contemporary Popular Culture.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Vancouver, BC; October 2001.“Panel Discussion on Technology in the Classroom.” [Chair]
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Vancouver, BC; October 2001.“What Science Fiction Films Keep Telling Us.”
Visual, Performing, and Literary Arts “Future Visions” Lecture, Washington State University.
Pullman, Washington; October 2000.“Detoxing Your Bucket: Panel Discussion on Today’s Job Market.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Boise, Idaho; October 2000.“The Curse of the Mummy’s Text.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
San Diego, California; April 1999.“What Was Chaucer’s Book of the Lion?”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Salt Lake City, Utah; October 1998.“Soaps’ Sinister Sisters.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
San Antonio, Texas; March 1997.“All My Bastards: Paradoxical Child-Worship on the Soaps.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; April 1995.“Boys’ Toys: Perpetuating the ‘Ultimate Conflict.'”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
Chicago, Illinois; April 1994.“Daytime Drama: The Cult of Communication.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
New Orleans, Louisiana; April 1993.“1990s Dance Music: Glamorizing the Inorganic.”
Pacific North West Popular Culture Conference.
Bellevue, Washington; April 1993.“Medieval Dragons and Dinosaur Films.”
General Conference on Medievalism.
Tampa, Florida; October 1992.“Ravaging Reptiles and Paranoid Speciesism in Dinosaur Films.”
Pacific North West Popular Culture Conference.
Vancouver, British Columbia; April 1992.“Cavemen and Dinosaurs: The ‘Eat or Be Eaten’ Myth.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
Louisville, Kentucky; March 1992.“Creating Meat-Eaters: The Child as Advertising Target.”
Popular Culture Association Conference.
San Antonio, Texas; March 1991.“Toys for Girls: The New Sexism.”
Popular Culture Association in the South Conference.
Montgomery, Alabama; October 1990.
COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS
Master Class Lecturer: “The Shakespeare Hoax.”
California Shakespeare Theater.
July 2014.Invited Speaker: “Being Wrong with Shakespeare.”
Common Reading Lecture Series, WSU.
April 2014.Film Interview: Last Will. & Testament.
1604 Productions. Portland, Oregon. April 2010.
Showing on PBS stations November 2013 — .Panel Participant: “Approaches to Teaching Literature.”
WSU English Graduate Organization Workshop.
8 March 2013.Pianist.
Green Frog Café in Palouse, Pullman Regional Hospital, Bishop Place, Good Samaritan Nursing Home.
January 2007 — .Talk Radio Interview: “Zombies and Other Monsters.”
AM 900 CHML, Hamilton, Ontario
31 October 2012.Newspaper Interview: “Zombie craze mirrors modern-day anxieties.”
WSU News 29 October 2012.Invited Speaker: “Giant Insect Films.”
WSU Entomology Department Film Marathon. March 2012.Invited Speaker: “The Shakespeare Authorship Controversy.”
Potlatch Public Library. February 2012.Invited Speaker: “The Oxfordian Thesis.”
Introduction for the Kenworthy Theater showing of the film Anonymous.
Moscow, Idaho. January 2012.Workshop Instructor: “Assigning and Assessing Writing.”
Graduate Student Workshop.
WSU. January 2012.Film Interview: Last Will. & Testament.
First Folio Pictures, Inc. Shown at the Globe Theatre, London, and various conferences.
November 2011 – .Television Interview: “Shakespeare and Anonymous.”
KLEW Channel 3 News. Lewiston, Idaho. November 2011.Newspaper Interview: “A Monster Mash of Culture.”
Moscow-Pullman Daily News 31 October 2011: 1, 10A.Newsletter Interview: “Prof in Documentary about ‘Anonymous’ Film.”
WSU Today. October 2011.Guest Speaker: “Shakespeare,” “Popular Culture,” “Monsters.”
Lincoln Middle School, Pullman, Washington.
October 2011, October 2010, October 2008, September 2007, January 2005, September 2003, September 2002.Film Interview: On Literature and Science.
Maya Lessov Productions. Moscow, Idaho. October 2011. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaZM7PxUhmA.Invited Speaker: “The Oxfordian Borderlands.”
Talk for the Seattle Shakespeare Oxford Society. Kirkland, Washington.
May 2011.Instructor: “Shakespeare.”
Cougar Quest: academic week-long summer camps for high school and junior high school students.
July 2010.Invited Speaker: “Editing the Oxfordian Antony and Cleopatra.”
Talk for the Seattle Shakespeare Oxford Society. Kirkland, Washington.
May 2010.Film Interview: Alan Green’s Holy Trinity Solution.
Portland, Oregon. April 2010.Instructor: “Shakespeare for Teens.”
Cougar Quest: academic week-long summer camps for high school and junior high school students.
July 2009.Invited Speaker: “Edward de Vere’s The Tempest.”
Pre-production lecture before the Seattle Shakespeare Company’s performance. Seattle Center, Washington.
June 2009.Magazine Interview: “The Wolves Are at the Multiplex Door.”
by David Hiltbrand. Philadelphia Inquirer 8 February 2009: 1,3.Newspaper Interview: “Monstrous Manifestations.”
WSU Today 31 October 2008.Invited Speaker: “The Curse of the Mummy’s Text.”
Common Reading Lecture Series, WSU.
October 2008.Invited Speaker: “Edward de Vere’s All’s Well That Ends Well.”
Pre-production lecture before the Seattle Shakespeare Company’s performance. Seattle Center, Washington.
June 2008.Invited Lecturer: “The Shakespeare Hoax.”
Honors Student Advisory Council, WSU.
April 2008.Poster Designer: “The Oxfordian Edition of ‘Shake-speare’s’ Antony and Cleopatra.”
Collaborative Project with English M.A. Student Jacob Hughes.
WSU Academic Showcase Poster Session.
March 2008.Workshop Presenter: Graduate Teaching Workshop Series.
WSU Graduate School and Teaching Academy.
Spring 2008.Consultant: “Résumés and Cover Letters.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conferences.
Calgary, Alberta; October 2007.
Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; October 2005.
Boulder, Colorado; October 2004.
Missoula, Montana; October 2003.
Scottsdale, Arizona; October 2002.
Vancouver, BC; October 2001.Time Magazine Online Citation: “The Mystery of Shakespeare’s Identity.”
http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1661619,00.
13 September 2007.Newspaper Interview: “Shakespeare stirs age-old debate at WSU.”
The Argonaut 2 October 2007: by Alfredo Barnaby.Newspaper Interview: “WSU Prof takes ‘heretical’ view.”
WSU Today Online 9 September 2007: by Robert Strenge.Workshop Instructor: “Leading a Discussion Section.”
Getting Connected: New Graduate Student Orientation.
WSU: August 2006, 2007.Instructor: “Monsters in Literature and Film.”
Cougar Quest: academic week-long summer camps for high school and junior high school students.
July 2007.Invited Speaker: “Editing Antony and Cleopatra and Teaching Shakespeare.”
Seattle Oxford Society, Kirkland, Washington.
June 2007.Presenter: “The Shakespeare Authorship Controversy,” “Dinofilms.”
Sample class demonstration for WSU recruitment of Libby School students.
May 2007.Poster Designer: “Shake-speare’s The Winter’s Tale as Tudor Family Allegory.”
Joint Project with Honors Undergraduate Christina Watts.
Washington State University Academic Showcase.
March 2007.Senior Project Advisor, Pullman High School.
For Running-Start students.
2006, 2007.Honors Senior Thesis Advisor.
Including students awarded with distinction:
Chris Wang, Nate Hettick, etc.
WSU, 2005 – .Lecturer: “The Shakespeare Authorship Controversy.”
Sponsored by the English Club and Sigma Tau Delta.
April 2006, October 2006.Instructor: “Shakespeare.”
Cougar Quest: academic week-long summer camps for high school and junior high school students.
July 2006.Poster Designer: “The Mantuan Art of ‘Shake-speare’s’ Lucrece.”
Washington State University Academic Showcase.
March 2006.Invited Speaker: “Lucrece.”
Shakespeare Oxford Society of Seattle, Kirkland, Washington.
August 2005.Speaker: “Academic Success.” — Alive! at WSU.
Summer Orientation sessions with parents of new students.
June & July 2005.Workshop Instructor: “Résumés and Cover Letters.”
Rocky Mountain MLA Conference.
Boulder, Colorado; October 2004.Presenter: Discover Exceptional Academic Opportunities.
Sample class demonstration for WSU recruitment of local high school students.
June 2004.Designer: Holland Library Atrium Display.
Nine-panel display of the Shakespeare Authorship Controversy.
March-April 2004.Presenter: WSU Preview/Showcase.
Sample class demonstrations for WSU recruitment.
March 2004, May 2003, April 2002, April 2001, April 1999.Workshop Instructor: “Résumés and Cover Letters.”
University of Idaho, Human Resource Development.
February 2004, February 2003, March 2002.Workshop Instructor: “Business Writing.”
University of Idaho, Human Resource Development.
January 2004; October 2002.Instructor: “Popular Culture Studies.”
Cougar Quest: academic week-long summer camps for high school and junior high school students.
July 2003, July 2004.Instructor: “Shakespeare.”
Honors College Freshman Orientation sample classes.
August 2003.Guest Speaker: “The ‘Eat or Be Eaten’ Myth in Dinosaur Films.”
WSU Campus Involvement Lunchtime Lecture Series.
July 2003.Presenter: “Inquiry Exercises” & “Making PowerPoint Interactive.”
WSU Faculty Development Institute, Teaching Technologies.
June 2003, October 2002, June 2002.Instructor: “Shakespeare,” “Popular Culture.”
Libby Honors Program at WSU: middle school students.
May 2003.Speaker: “Thinking with Shakespeare.”
WSU Critical Thinking Project brown bag lunch talk.
March 2003.Panelist: “Page to Stage — On the Verge“; “Page to Stage — Front.”
University of Idaho Theatre Department Panel Discussion.
February 2003, October 2002.Speaker: “Visual Literacy, Popular Culture, and the University.”
WSU Center for Teaching, Learning, and Technology: Brown Bag.
November 2002.Guest Speaker: “Monsters.”
WSU McCroskey Hall Coffee Hour.
October 2002.Newsletter Interview: “Michael Delahoyde: From the Island of Misfit Toys.”
Skew 1.3 (Fall 2002): 4-5.Guest Speaker: “Principles of Successful Monsters.”
Washington State University Luncheon Series.
May 2002.Invited Lecturer: “Macbeth Dialogue.”
Undergraduate English Club and Lecture and Performing Arts Series.
November 2001.Workshop Instructor: “Writting and it’s Impotance Everyday.”
University of Idaho Organizational Training and Development.
September 2001.Workshop Instructor: “E-Mail Essentials.”
University of Idaho Organizational Training and Development.
September 2001.Guest Speaker: “The ‘Eat or Be Eaten’ Myth in Dinosaur Films.”
WSU Alumni Association, Inland Empire District in Spokane, Washington, February 2001.Radio Interview: “Science Fiction Films.”
KMAX-AM Talk Radio, Colfax, Washington, 7 October 2000.Newspaper Interview: “Pullman film festival portrays dark visions for man.”
Moscow-Pullman Daily News 10 October 2000: A1+.Newspaper Interview: “Sci Fi Guy.”
Lewiston Morning Tribune 6 October 2000: D1+.Web-Published Interview: “Mummies: keeping taboos under wraps.”
Discovery Channel Website http://exn.ca/Mummies/OnFilm.cfm. 13 April 2000.Guest Speaker: “The ‘Eat or Be Eaten’ Myth in Dinosaur Films.”
Moscow High School A.P. English Class, November 1999.Guest Speaker: “The ‘Eat or Be Eaten’ Myth in Dinosaur Films.”
Lewiston Rotary Club, Lewiston, Idaho, October 1997.Guest Speaker: “Chaucer and Chaucer Studies.”
Moscow High School, October 1995.Speaker: “Designing Assignments for English 101.”
Presentations to WSU composition instructors.
1994-1995.Guest Speaker: “Studying Popular Culture.”
Troy High School, October 1992.Humane Society of the Palouse Board of Directors.
Director, 1991-1992.
Chair, Education and Legislation Committee, 1992.
Fundraiser, Lentil and Pea Festival, 1991.
GRANTS, HONORS, & AWARDS
2014 Department of English Contingent Faculty Summer Research Fellowhip.
2010 Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference Award for Scholarship.
2007 Eagle Scout Mentor: Walter Sheppard.
2005 Outstanding Thesis Advisor Award, Honors College, WSU.
2005 Distinguished Teaching Award, English Department, WSU.
2001-2005. Visible Knowledge Project Grant. Georgetown University.
Research and publication on successful classroom teaching.2001-2004. CO-TEACH Grant: Collaboration for Teacher Education Accountable to Children with High Needs.
Development of web site for teachers of Humanities in the Ancient World and Mythology.1996 Honors Student Advisory Committee’s Invited Lecturer.
1996 Distinguished Teaching Award, English Department, WSU.
1989 Rackham Dissertation Fellowship.
1988 Patrides Memorial Dissertation Fellowship.
1983 Michigan English Teaching Apprenticeship.
1983 Phi Beta Kappa.
OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
Managing Editor, Brief Chronicles:
Journal of the Shakespeare Fellowship, 2012 – .Editorial Board Member, The Oxfordian.
The Shakespeare Oxford Society, 2006 – .Editorial Board Member, Brief Chronicles:
Journal of the Shakespeare Fellowship, 2008 – 2011.Department of English Scholarships and Awards Committee.
Chair, 2005 – 2013.Department of English Contingent Faculty Committee.
Elected Member, 2013 – 2014.Senior Editor, Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature and Rocky Mountain E-Review.
Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association, 1997 – 2012.WSU Faculty Senate, representing Non-Tenured CLA and International Programs, 2008 – 2011.
President’s Teaching Academy, Vice Chair, WSU, 2008 – 2010.
President’s Teaching Academy, Board Member, WSU, 2007 – .
Academic Advisor, Department of English.
20+ English majors with teaching emphasis, 2005 – 2009.Member, Department of English Scholarships and Awards Committee.
2001 – 2005.Course Development: Honors English 298 — Research and Writing.
Commissioned by Honors Dean, Summer 2004.Participant, Critical Thinking Project
2001 – 2004.Invited Editor/Reviewer for freshman composition readers, literature anthologies.
McGraw-Hill, West Publishing Co., others, 1995 – .Tutor, Washington State University Writing Lab: walk-ins, tutorial sessions, on-line.
Summer 1998, Summer 1997.English 101 Compact: Washington State University.
Served on small committee writing the handbook for new teachers of composition, 1993 – 1994.Correspondence Course: English 201.
Co-revised correspondence course packet for writing research essays.Millikin University’s Composition Handbook.
Edited and wrote the department’s first handbook for future distribution to all composition students, 1989 – 1990.
REFERENCES
Available upon request.