home Millsaps College
Spacer Image
             
News & Event Releases         Calendar of Events        Publications        Media Center        speakers bureau         
Spacer Image
             
communications office        resources       Student News Forms        FEEDBACK       HOME         
 
 
 

Millsaps Professor Bey Wins National Teaching Award

George Bey, Professor of Anthropology and the Associate Dean of Sciences, has been awarded the AAA/McGraw-Hill Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching of Anthropology by the American Anthropological Association. The award will be presented to Dr. Bey at the AAA's annual meeting in San Jose, Calif., in November.

In their recommending letter to the AAA, Professors Michael Galaty and Julian Murchinson and Dean of Millsaps College Richard Smith said of Bey: "George is famous on the Millsaps campus for being a 'master' teacher... For George, the classroom is an extension of the field, and vice versa. Students react strongly and positively to this approach. They sense George's genuine excitement about anthropology and recognize that he is a respected, experienced scholar... many students describe wandering into one of George's classes by accident and leaving an anthropology major."

Upon learning of the award, Galaty added: "George Bey is an excellent scholar and a great colleague. More than that, he is a fantastic teacher and that is why he deserves this award. Former students from all over the country sent letters of support. All of them praised George’s efforts in the classroom as well as in the field; many described how he had ‘changed their lives.’ He is truly one of the best teachers of anthropology in the country."

Dean Smith added: “This award confirms something that we have long known at Millsaps: George is one of the finest teachers on campus and also in all of anthropology. In fact, in my thirty years in higher education, I’ve never seen any faculty member combine his research and teaching so creatively and effectively and, in the process, excite so many students. He is a role model for all of us in higher education.”

The AAA says of the award: "This award was established in 1997 to recognize teachers who have contributed to and encouraged the study of anthropology. The successful teaching of anthropology is at the core of producing successful anthropologists. By transferring knowledge and encouraging interest and study, the teacher is able to contribute significantly to the increasing success of the field of anthropology. Without such people the growth of anthropology would be stifled." Past winners include Richard H. Robbins and Scott A. Lukas (SUNY-Plattsburgh, 2005), Mathew Richard (Valdosta State, 2004), and Russell H. Tuttle (University of Chicago, 2003).

Professor Bey teaches a broad range of archaeology and anthropology courses, from the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt to American Popular Culture. His area of research interest is Mesoamerican Archaeology, the analysis of prehistoric pottery and the evolution of complex societies, such as the Maya and Toltecs. Since 1984, he has directed field projects in Yucatan, first at the Maya site of Ek Balam and, since 2000, at the site of Kiuic. Kiuic sits amidst a 4000-acre biocultural reserve created with the support of Millsaps College, offering students unique opportunities to study Maya archaeology, as well as the flora and fauna of the tropical forests of Yucatan.

Bey wrote to acknowledge his award from the jungle in Yucatan where he and a group of present and former Millsaps students are excavating the remains of an ancient Maya Palace at the archaeological site of Kiuic:

This award is an important validation of not just my efforts, but also those of my mentors and students. They have provided me with the ideas and energy I needed in order to learn how to teach. I believe in offering the highest quality of intellectual experiences for undergraduate students; too many of our research and learning resources are often focused on graduate education, especially in disciplines like anthropology. To provide undergraduates with significant research opportunities and to bring the world of “the field” into the classroom helps students to see the richness and importance of anthropological knowledge.

I want students to realize that thinking anthropologically is more valuable then ever before, no matter what career paths they might choose. I also try and show them that, if someone like me can find happiness and success as an anthropologist, then they can too if they work hard enough.


Links:
George Bey's website

American Anthropological Association

Calendar of events

Spacer Spacer Spacer
Spacer
         
Spacer
Spacer Spacer Spacer