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Bloomberg School

Golden Apple Award聽Winners

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The School will host its annual Honors & Awards ceremony on Tuesday, May 18, at 5 p.m. in the East Wing Auditorium of the Wolfe Street Building. The ceremony will be followed by a reception in the Gallery on the first floor of the Wolfe Street Building.

Awards recognizing the achievements of faculty, students and staff will be presented from individual departments, the School as a whole, the alumni association, the Interaction Community Outreach Program and the Student Assembly.

Among the many honors, three Golden Apple awards will be given by the Student Assembly to faculty chosen for excellence in teaching. These faculty members are highlighted below.

Golden Apple Award Winners

Ron Brookmeyer, PhD, Department of Biostatistics

Ron Brookmeyer, PhD

Ron Brookmeyer, PhD

gets up suddenly from behind his desk, strides to the whiteboard on his office wall and with a marker writes, "What is statistics?" Without thinking, a visitor immediately writes "What is statistics?" in a notebook.

鈥淪ee? You wrote it down,鈥 says Brookmeyer, a professor of Biostatistics at the School of Public Health, who just won his third Golden Apple Award. 鈥淎nd you were probably thinking, 鈥楬mmm? what鈥檚 next?鈥 If you鈥檙e taking notes from the blackboard, from the discussion, you take ownership of the material鈥攊t鈥檚 in your handwriting.鈥

Although he has been teaching at the School since 1981 and now uses computer simulations and the occasional PowerPoint presentation to teach complicated statistical concepts, Brookmeyer still waxes enthusiastic about the blackboard.

鈥淭he blackboard... there鈥檚 a participation that occurs when you鈥檙e working through your lecture together with the class. With the blackboard, everybody鈥檚 on a level playing field, interactive. With PowerPoint, there鈥檚 not the engagement or interaction鈥攜ou鈥檇 have read the 'What is statistics?' slide and said, 鈥業鈥檒l get the handout.鈥 鈥

Everything Brookmeyer does in class is aimed at grabbing his students鈥 attention and making sure that the technical concepts he鈥檚 explaining are made real for them. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too easy to hang your hat on a formula,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou have to explain, in a way that鈥檚 grounded in common sense, why they鈥檙e using that formula. Equations are helpful, but students need to have a gut understanding of them. Otherwise, the teacher is just hiding behind the equation.鈥

Students must internalize biostatistical concepts if they are ever going to be able to apply a statistical method to new situations. 鈥淚f the student is only able to plug data into a formula, that鈥檚 just a cookbook; a computer can do that,鈥 explains Brookmeyer. 鈥淏ut a computer can鈥檛 see how you can apply an old concept in a new way. The teacher is always trying to show the overall architecture of the ideas.鈥

And there鈥檚 an optimal architecture for every message. 鈥淭here are lots of messages out there, and the instructor鈥檚 job is not to compress more and more information into a short time or convey a sea of information, but rather to show what鈥檚 important, what鈥檚 not, and build to that architecture.鈥

Finally, Brookmeyer stresses that all teachers must find their own style, the classroom manner that feels most comfortable. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 fake it or force it,鈥 he says. 鈥淒on鈥檛 try to be something you鈥檙e not because what works for some won鈥檛 work for others. For instance, some are great at humor ... me, I can鈥檛 tell a joke.鈥 鈥擱od Graham

Thomas Burke, PhD, Department of Health Policy and Management

Dr. Thomas Burke

Thomas Burke, PhD

For winning this year鈥檚 Golden Apple was a great honor, because it represents recognition from the students. He views teaching as his 鈥渇undamental calling鈥 and it was the main reason he left a career in government years ago as a public health official for the state of New Jersey. Since joining the School of Public Health in 1990, Burke has received three Golden Apple awards for his teaching. The latest he won for his introductory course on risk science.

鈥淭his was a total surprise, but a wonderful surprise,鈥 said Burke, who is a professor of Health Policy and Management.

鈥淚t is great to be recognized by the students and it鈥檚 so great to teach here, because the students are so engaged and motivated. They are the public health leaders of the future.鈥

Burke teaches introduction to risk science, which is the principal tool to assess public health risks and turn that assessment into effective strategies and public policies. To motivate students, Burke designed the course around case studies of current public health problems and issues. This year, students examined the environmental health impacts of the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center in New York City.

In addition to teaching, Burke serves as associate chair of the School鈥檚 Department of Health Policy and Management. He also directs the Center for Excellence in Public Health Practice, the Center for Excellence in Environmental Health Tracking and the Risk Sciences and Public Policy Institute.鈥擳im Parsons

John McGready, MS, Department of Biostatistics

John McGready

John McGready, MS

, winner of one of this year鈥檚 Golden Apple teaching awards, never planned on being a teacher.

Instead, McGready, an instructor in the began his statistical career working as a quantitative policy analyst at a public policy institute after graduating from Harvard. It was there that he realized what he liked doing most. 鈥淲hat I really enjoyed was communicating with my colleagues and with other agencies,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to up the communication component of what I did.鈥

Teaching, he says, was the next logical step.

After teaching math at a Washington, DC, high school for a year, McGready stumbled upon the ad for his current Department of Biostatistics position on the American Statistical Association website. 鈥淚t was just serendipity,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 never went to that site.鈥

That was five years ago, and this is McGready鈥檚 second Golden Apple. He won his first in 2001 for the medium-sized class category. This year, McGready is the winner in the large-sized class category. 鈥淭eaching a large class requires more coordination, more energy, more assistance, and more time,鈥 he said.

The class is Statistical Reasoning in Public Health class, which he teaches both on campus and online. In addition to time spent teaching class and with students in office hours, McGready also spends much of his day answering email from students. The email, he says, is especially important for online students, since it is the only way to get to know them.

鈥淚 like interaction with students and different backgrounds. I love turning them on to something they can make germane to what they鈥檙e working on. I try to explain things in ways that are intuitive as possible,鈥 he says. 鈥淎lso, teaching keeps my own understanding high.鈥

Ever the statistician, McGready adds: 鈥淚 can鈥檛 quantify how much learning and relearning I鈥檝e done in the five years I鈥檝e been at the School.鈥 鈥擪risti Birch

Photos by Will Kirk