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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. Amy Ward, a professor of biological
sciences at The University of Alabama who is leading a program
that’s becoming a national model for how to train future
scientists, is the winner of the University’s Blackmon-Moody
Outstanding Professor Award. She will be honored in a ceremony
at the UA President’s Mansion at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 29.
The award is one of the highest honors bestowed on UA faculty
and is presented annually to a faculty member whose,
“singular, exceptional, or timely work, whether in the form of
research, a product, a program or published material, has
brought national recognition to the faculty member and The
University of Alabama.”
The award was created by Frederick Moody Blackmon of
Montgomery to honor the memory of his grandmother, Sarah
McCorkle Moody of Tuscaloosa.
“You have brought distinction and recognition to yourself
and The University of Alabama in numerous ways,” wrote UA
interim President Barry Mason in notifying Ward, a freshwater
ecologist, of the award. “You help to make this institution a
special place.”
Ward, a faculty member in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences, founded and directs UA’s Center
for Freshwater Studies and heads a new graduate education
program to support students in freshwater studies. This graduate
program, made possible by a $2.7 million National Science
Foundation grant, is designed to meet the nation’s needs for
broadly trained Ph.D.s with multidisciplinary backgrounds. UA
was selected for the five-year program in 1999 and was one of
only 21 colleges and universities chosen from the more than 400
proposals submitted to NSF that year.
In the program, known as Integrative Graduate Education and
Research Training or IGERT, UA faculty from biological sciences,
geography and geology participate jointly with faculty in
similar areas from the University of New Mexico. The
inter-regional component of the program allows students from
each of the two universities to travel to the other region and
study freshwater environments in contrasting climates. The
students also participate in externships with state and federal
agencies where they apply what they’ve learned in dissertation
research to real-world problems.
Under Ward’s direction, the Center for Freshwater Studies
is dedicated to understanding and preserving water, the
environment in and around it, and the plants and animals that
depend on it, including people. The interdisciplinary teaching,
research and outreach program draws together faculty from the
College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Engineering, the
School of Law and the Culverhouse College of Commerce and
Business Administration.
“For over two decades, Dr. Amy Ward has been indefatigable
in her vision for the aquatic biology program here and for its
potential to be one of the top graduate programs in the nation
bridging ecosystem dynamics and biodiversity,” wrote Dr.
Martha Powell, professor and chair of the biological
sciences department, in support of Ward’s selection.
“Through the leadership Dr. Amy Ward has provided, our
IGERT program is becoming recognized as a model for how to
educate and train students as modern scientists who can study
and solve globally important problems of the future,” Powell
continued.
During her 21 years at UA, Ward has been principal
investigator on six National Science Foundation funded projects
and co-principal investigator on four others. Under her
leadership, the Center for Freshwater Studies has been awarded
$10 million in extramural research and education grants.
Praise for Ward also came from outside UA.
Dr. Ross A. Virginia, a professor of environmental studies at
Dartmouth College, wrote in support of Ward’s nomination.
“Amy represents the best of the teacher-scholar model that
most universities profess as their expectation from the
faculty,” Virginia wrote.
Virginia and Ward know one another through their affiliation
with the Association of Ecosystems Research Centers. Ward served
as president of this association for professional scientists in
1999-2000 and Virginia has served as an officer and a board
member of the group.
Born in Georgetown, Texas, Ward earned her bachelor’s
degree from the University of South Alabama and her master’s
and doctoral degrees from Michigan State University. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Ruthelle Jones, of Tuscaloosa, and the late Dr.
Ralph Wood Jones and is married to Dr. Milton Ward, also a UA
professor in the biological sciences department.
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