Celebrating Scholarship

Vassar Grants in Action highlights and celebrates the grant funding, principal investigators, and project leadership that enrich faculty research and scholarship, institutional programs and priorities, and the student experience at Vassar.

Photo portrait of Michael Mccarthy.

Michael H. McCarthy, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, is author of Liberal Education and Democratic Citizenship, published by Rowman and Littlefield. In the book, Professor McCarthy describes the many crises confronting American democracy and identifies their philosophical, cultural, and institutional origins. He argues that a liberal education, properly understood, can address several of these crises effectively.

National Science Foundation logo

Kariane Calta, Associate Professor of Mathematics and Statistics, and Benjamin Lotto, Professor and Chair of Mathematics and Statistics, together with colleagues from Skidmore College and Union College, received a grant from the National Science Foundation to co-host the Hudson River Undergraduate Mathematics Conference for the next three years.

Headshot of Joshua de Leeuw.

Josh de Leeuw, Associate Professor of Cognitive Science, received a grant from the National Science Foundation, together with his collaborators from MIT, MGH IHP, and Yale University, for their project entitled “POSE: Phase II: An Open-Source Ecosystem for Behavioral Experiments.” The funded project will create an open-source ecosystem for behavioral experiments centered around jsPsych, an established and highly-used tool for behavioral research.

Mootacem Mhiri wearing a light blue collared shirt and gray jacket against a gray background.

Thanks to the efforts of Professor Mootacem Mhiri, Senior Lecturer in Arabic, Vassar has once again been selected to host a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant (FLTA) in Arabic. Professor Mhiri will serve as the Academic Advisor of the FLTA. The presence of an Arabic language FLTA will continue to provide critical instructional support as well as cultural exposure to Vassar students.

Headshot of Lydia Murdoch.

Professor of History Lydia Murdoch is awarded an NEH Fellowship to undertake research for her book project, Children as Medical Subjects and the Early-Nineteenth-Century Global Spread of the First Smallpox Vaccines, which investigates the particular contributions of children to early nineteenth-century vaccination through microhistories of the London Foundling Hospital and East India Company programs in South Asia.

Exciting News from the Vassar Grants Office

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