News Archive

Each year, Columbia’s Presidential Teaching Awards spotlight the most dedicated and innovative instructors at the University. The awards are given at Commencement to both faculty members and graduate student instructors.

The three 2011 graduate student award winners are:   Katherine Allen, a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; Tyler Bickford, who recently completed a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology; and Jae Woo Lee, a former Columbia College physics major who is now working toward a Ph.D. in computer science.   Established in 1996, the awards honor faculty members who play an important role in the development of their students and help maintain the University’s reputation for educational excellence. The criteria and procedures for the awards are developed by separate faculty award committees for faculty and graduate students.   Nominations come from faculty, students and alumni. Candidates for the graduate student awards, which include a prize of $8,000, must be enrolled in a Columbia degree program.  

Soon after graduating from college, Tyler Bickford taught music for a year at a rural Vermont elementary school. Years later, the same school would serve as a rich laboratory for his Columbia dissertation about how kids consume digital media.

On the way to earning his Ph.D. in ethnomusicology, Bickford returned to Vermont to take notes on how some 70 K-8 schoolchildren share earbud headphones and use MP3 players. Before long, he found himself recruited back into teaching music appreciation to the same group of youngsters.

“Running a second grade class, you learn that you have to have clear ground rules so that you can then back off a lot and be more exploratory,” says Bickford, whose dissertation was titled “Children’s Music, MP3 Players, and Expressive Practices at a Vermont Elementary School: Media Consumption as Social Organization among Schoolchildren.”

When he returned to Columbia to finish his degree, he was given a different kind of challenge: teaching the Core Curriculum seminar “Introduction to Contemporary Civilization in the West” to College sophomores. This year, his efforts were honored with the University’s highest teaching award.

The class navigated texts by the likes of Nietzsche, Aristotle and Kant, an unusual curriculum for someone who once lectured at Columbia on Bob Dylan. Bickford calls it the best job he’s ever had.

As he did in Vermont with his much younger students, Bickford aimed to foster open idea sharing by assigning ungraded, stream-of-consciousness journal entries in tandem with narrowly focused academic papers.

“Often students would write in their journals about connections they thought were too far out or would be inappropriate to write papers about—self-help books and Epictetus, the Harry Potter books and Hume, Hobbes and Judith Butler—but which were actually really smart,” Bickford recalls. “I'd try to show them how it could be a solid idea for a paper, and they'd run with it.”

Victoria Fox, a senior film studies major at the College, recalls being intimidated by philosophy in high school, but in Bickford’s seminar in 2009, she discovered how texts like Plato’s The Republic were relevant to her life. Now she’s working toward a philosophy concentration. “The free-form writing made me approach the papers a lot more creatively,” she says.

Raised in Puerto Rico by a pair of teachers, Bickford majored in music and modern studies at Bard College at Simon’s Rock, earning his B.A. in 2001. He now hopes to secure teaching work in a field related to his studies.

At the core of his research is a deep interest in the status of children in society. “There has been an explosion in the commercial power of kids buying media,” Bickford says. “That’s honest-to-goodness political power.”

Professor Aaron Fox, chair of the Music Department and no relation to Victoria, first met Bickford about seven years ago and supervised his dissertation. He says that Bickford’s dedication to the young subjects of his research mirrors the core values of Columbia’s ethnomusicology program.

“As confident as he is in his ability, his focus is always on the other person at the table,” Fox says.

Fox also notes that Bickford is a rare example of a Music graduate student teaching a seminar on contemporary civilization. But he adds: “I expect this will be a more and more common thing now, now that Tyler's example has demonstrated that students in Music can successfully contribute to Columbia's undergraduate Core Curriculum in ways that go beyond Music Humanities.\"

—by Elizabeth Thomas

Special from The Record

Over billions of years, Earth’s continents have split apart and rejoined, and ice sheets have disappeared. Although the natural world is full of drama, the problem for teachers is that it happens in geological time, not real time.

Earth and Environmental Sciences teaching assistant Kat Allen is seen here in her scuba gear.

Enter Columbia graduate student Kat Allen, who has developed a repertoire of techniques for bringing the popular introductory geology course, “The Climate System,” to life.

“Physicists can drop objects and roll model cars down ramps to demonstrate universal forces,” she says. “But geologists can’t fit an entire river delta into a lecture hall. If you’re stuck in a classroom, you need to be creative.”

She tries to make concepts tangible for her students, comparing the size of an iceberg to Central Park or the depth of an ocean trench to Mount Everest.

At Commencement, Allen received Columbia’s top teaching honor, which comes with an $8,000 prize.

In her lab at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Allen studies ancient plankton shells to learn about past ocean acidification. Her research has involved scuba diving off Puerto Rico and California’s Catalina Island to collect living plankton that she brings back to the lab and grows in glass jars.

She spends weeks measuring how the water’s temperature, acidity and other measures influence the growth of the plankton’s shell, the better to understand the ocean’s past chemistry and estimate how much carbon dioxide was in the air. Despite exotic fieldwork locations, most of the work involves long days in a lab, but Allen goes about her work “humming and whistling, always in a good mood,” says her colleague and adviser, Bärbel Hönisch.

Growing up, Allen liked exploring the tide pools and crags near her hometown of Falmouth, Maine, and says it was probably this early exposure to the outdoors that led her to study geology at Case Western Reserve University. At the suggestion of her rowing coach, she applied for and won a Churchill Scholarship to Cambridge University.

She came to Columbia in 2007 for her Ph.D., and is known at Lamont for her “coffee poems,” which put the latest journal studies into verse. Every Friday she sends an email to her colleagues with her latest effort, closing with an invitation to “come on down for coffee and cookies.” A study from the journalScience suggesting that dinosaurs could see in the dark led to this set of rhymes: “Eye shape and size just might/Show dinos prowled at night!/With great big teeth/And claws beneath:/They’d give me quite a fright!”

“I like to think of coffee hour as a social catalyst,” she explains. “I have no idea if the silly poems motivate people to come, but they’ve sparked some fun conversations.”

When it comes to teaching, Allen is a firm believer in getting students outdoors to learn about earth’s processes. At Columbia, she has led her fellow grad students on field trips to Iceland and brought New York City high school students to Piermont Marsh on the Hudson River to do their own research.

Two of her students this year made it to the finals of the prestigious Intel International Science and Technology Fair for original research on a threatened bayou fish. In the classroom, she explains how data are collected using specialized instruments, from satellites to air balloons. “I think it’s important for students to get in the habit of asking questions like: How was that measured? What’s the uncertainty?” she says. “In a world flooded with information, I want students to make informed decisions, whether they end up in a science career or not.”

—by Kimberly Martineau

 

Two Columbia News videos will air this month on NYC TV, the official television network of New York City.

Both videos highlight unique collaborations between the University and the local community, including Columbia Engineering’s Center for Technology, Innovation and Community Engagement and The Young Company, an effort spearheaded by the School of the Arts’ acting program to bring Shakespeare to middle and high school students.

Soon after Columbia Law School emptied out at the end of the spring semester, its Jerome L. Greene Hall filled up with representatives of some of the world’s most remote island nations. The topic of their three-day meeting was the danger posed by rising sea levels.

Richard Hamilton, Davies Professor of Mathematics, has won the 2011 Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences. The Shaw Prize is given annually in three areas: astronomy, life science and medicine, and mathematical sciences. This is the eighth year of the Shaw Prize; awardees will be honored at a ceremony on Wednesday, Sept. 28.

The Shaw Prize is awarded to individuals who have made outstanding contributions and significant advances in their current field of study. The award is dedicated to \"furthering societal progress, enhancing quality of life, and enriching humanity's spiritual civilization,\" according to the Shaw Prize website. Professor Hamilton is receiving the award for his work with Ricci flow in Riemannian geometry. The $1 million award will be shared equally with fellow winner Demetrios Christodoulou, professor of mathematics and physics at the ETH, a science and technology university in Zurich, Switzerland.

Hamilton's mathematical contributions are primarily in the field of differential geometry and more specifically geometric analysis. He is best known for having discovered the Ricci flow and suggesting the research program that ultimately led to the proof, by Grigori Perelman, of the Thurston geometrization conjecture and the solution of the Poincaré conjecture.

Hamilton was awarded the Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry in 1996 and the Clay Research Award in 2003. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1999 and to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2003. He also received the AMS Leroy P. Steele Prize for a Seminal Contribution to Research in 2009.

The Shaw Prize is an international award managed and administered by The Shaw Prize Foundation. Additional information can be found on the Shaw Prize website.

 

      SCHEDULE FOR DANCE INSTRUCTION

Thursday, June 23, 2011

6:30 p.m.: AFRO-SAMBA
with Quenia Ribeiro

7:30 p.m.: BELLY DANCE
with Arianna Al Tiye

8:30 p.m.: DANCE PARTY
with DJ Stormin’ Norman

Shall We Dance?

will feature free dance instruction followed by “feel-good” music spun by

DJ Stormin’ Norman

of Sundae Sermons. Absolute beginners in all styles are welcome. Lightweight clothing and athletic shoes are strongly recommended. SCHEDULE FOR DANCE INSTRUCTION

Thursday, July 21, 2011

6:30 p.m.: BOLLYWOOD
with Pooja Narang

7:30 p.m.: HIP HOP
with Tweety

8:30 p.m.: DANCE PARTY
with DJ Stormin’ Norman


COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK
Low Library, Rotunda, 535 West 116th Street | Take 1, M60, M4 or M104 to 116th and Broadway

This event is sponsored by Columbia University’s Office of Government and Community Affairs, School of Continuing Education-Summer High School Program, and the Arts Initiative at Columbia University.

Please e-mail questions to: [email protected] or visit the Office of Community Outreach website.

   

Not every child can dream up a smartphone application and see it come to life. But that’s what happened when 8-year-old William Belhumeur suggested his father make an app that identifies plants using visual recognition technology.

As a professor of computer science at the engineering school and director of Columbia’s Laboratory for the Study of Visual Appearance, Peter Belhumeur has worked on face recognition software since the mid-1990s. He quickly saw that the same algorithms that can process the curve of an eyebrow or the angle of a cheekbone could be applied to the shape of a leaf.

“The idea of building classifiers that say, ‘Is this person in the photo a man or a woman?’ or ‘Is that leaf a sugar maple or a silver maple?’ uses a lot of the same sort of math and technology,” says Belhumeur.

With the help of computer scientist David Jacobs at the University of Maryland and John Kress, research botanist and curator at the Smithsonian Institution, Belhumeur developed LeafSnap, an electronic field guide that is now available on the iPhone and iPad, and on Android phones later this year. It is easy enough for a child to use, but goes well beyond the basics for botanists.

The team started by photographing leaves from the Smithsonian’s vast library. But they soon realized a viable application would have to be able to recognize leaves in the wild, not just museum specimens. So Belhumeur’s student volunteers collected thousands of leaves from Central Park—up to 50 samples each from the park’s 145 species—and photographed them with their iPhones.

A leaf’s shape is its least variable feature and easiest to capture in a photo, so the team focused on characteristics like smooth versus jagged, many-lobed or single-lobed. They then programmed the computer to perform a sort of process of elimination. “The computer basically ranks images by most similar to least similar,” says Neeraj Kumar, a Ph.D. candidate in computer science who manages LeafSnap’s software coding and is in charge of the volunteer leaf identifying team.

Back in a Schapiro Hall lab, the team trained the computer to distinguish one species from another. “We pick one feature we extract from the leaf, and using that we can say, ‘This looks more like all of these maples I’ve seen and less like something else,’” says Kumar.

The app, which is free, allows a user to photograph a leaf, upload it and see a list of possible matches within seconds. There is also a complementary website (http://leafsnap.com) with profiles of each species. Initial interest is high; the app has been installed 150,000 times.

In addition to the Central Park trees, LeafSnap’s database covers the 160 species in Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Park; between the two parks, most native species in the northeast are represented. Belhumeur’s team hopes to eventually map species across the United States and use a crowd-sourcing element to let users add their own images to the database. “This is the sort of system we need because species are disappearing off the planet at an alarming rate, and the process of identification is very slow,” explains Belhumeur.

Belhumeur went to Brown as an undergraduate and received his Ph.D. in engineering sciences from Harvard. He came to Columbia in 2002 after eight years as an electrical engineering professor at Yale. For him, LeafSnap bridges his high-tech background and love of nature. As a child in Providence, R.I., he remembers looking up at trees with his parents and trying to identify leaves with a field guide. Now his family has a farm in Cornwall, Conn., where they raise cattle, sheep, pigs, geese and chicken. “It was fun to take that visual recognition technology and drop it into this domain, working with biologists and doing something I cared about as a kid,” he says.

His son is already thinking of new apps. “I think it is time for Fishsnap and Bugsnap,” says William, “so there is still a lot of work to do.”

—by Beth Kwon

 

A team of researchers from Columbia Engineering, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, and Rutgers University has now demonstrated that evaporation from the land surface is able to modify summertime rainfall east of the Mississippi and in the monsoonal region in the southern U.S. and Mexico.

After decades spent studying indoors in separate buildings, students from the Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation and Planning (GSAPP) and the School of the Arts got a chance to put theory in practice by collaboratively building a structure outside for public use on the Morningside campus.

Twenty years ago when Margaret Hamburg became New York City’s Commissioner of Health and Mental Hygiene, her great-aunt Winnie couldn’t believe that, after so much medical training, Hamburg would give up being a “real doctor.” Her family, including her parents who were both physicians, tried to convince Winnie, to no avail, that her then 36-year-old great-niece would be concerned with the health needs of more than 8 million people—the entire city population. But Hamburg, who shared the story on May 26 at Columbia’s Faculty House in a lecture on global health, remained undeterred by her great-aunt’s doubts. Two years ago, Hamburg was named commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and now serves more than 300 million people each day.   L-R: Stephen Morse, Margaret Hamburg and Matthew Connelly Hamburg’s lecture was the first of a summer speakers series, “The History and Future of Pandemic Threats and Global Public Health,” which will run weekly through August 11. Other notable speakers include Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Laurie Garrett, senior fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations; and John Lange, Senior Program Officer, Global Health Policy & Advocacy, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.   During her talk, Hamburg focused on the role of the FDA in combating global infectious disease. Her own research and work has primed her on this critical issue: She led a program in New York City that drastically reduced cases of tuberculosis, conducted research on HIV/AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and advocated for reforms to improve preparedness against such public health threats as pandemic flu.   “The challenges and emerging disease threats we face are more acute than ever,” said Hamburg. “But so are the opportunities—the opportunities of science and technology, but also brainpower and resources. There is a tremendous amount of knowledge and potential out there, and it is up to us to seize it. But, more importantly, to apply it to the issues that matter most.”   The free, public lectures are part of Columbia’s Hertog Global Strategy Initiative, a 12-week summer research program that strives to expand the understanding of present and future challenges. The Hertog Global Strategy Initiative invites experts and select graduate and undergraduate students to gather each summer at Columbia for intensive study, independent research, and collaborative writing on a specific critical issue in international affairs. Last year, participants explored “Nuclear Proliferation and the Future of World Power.”   \"It was a tremendous boon to our program to have Peggy Hamburg kick off the lecture series and meet with our students—the future historians, policy makers, and public health practitioners who will shape global public health in the 21st century,\" said Matthew Connelly, professor of history and director of the Hertog Global Strategy Initiative. Connelly is teaching the 12-week program in collaboration with Stephen Morse, professor of clinical epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health.   In her lecture, Hamburg discussed a range of efforts involving the FDA over the years to battle infectious diseases: fighting botulism in canned foods in the 1920s, producing penicillin during World War II, and reforming new drug approval in response to the AIDS epidemic. In fact, she credited changes initiated in the agency’s response to the AIDS epidemic with helping the FDA respond quickly, collaborate broadly, and think creatively in response to the U.S. H1N1 flu outbreak.   Hamburg also detailed both the reactive role the FDA plays—approving treatment and preventive vaccines—as well as the significant proactive role the agency plays in preparing to respond to future crises. Looking to the future, she emphasized the need for greater and more effective collaboration among government agencies, corporations, and research institutions. She called for “creative partnerships and a commitment to truly interdisciplinary ideas.”   Specifically addressing the students in attendance from the Hertog Global Strategy Initiative, Hamburg, who once taught at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health, urged their participation in her vision for a more collaborative effort to fight infectious disease.   “You, the leaders of tomorrow, have the chance to fulfill that vision. You can come together and play your part in creating a public health paradigm truly equipped for our modern world.”   The lecture series is cosponsored by the Hertog Global Strategy Initiative, the Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health, and The Global Strategy Seminar.   To view the full lecture schedule, visit the Hertog Global Strategy Initiative website.  
Kartik Chandran, an associate professor of Earth and Environmental Engineeringat Columbia Engineering, has been awarded $1.5 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for his project to develop a revolutionary new model in water, sanitation, and energy.   Working with his partners Ashley Murray, founder and director of Waste Enterprisers, and Moses Mensah, a Chemical Engineering professor at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Chandran is developing an innovative technology to transform fecal sludge into biodiesel and create the “Next-Generation Urban Sanitation Facility” in Accra, Ghana.   “We are delighted to be awarded this project,” Chandran says. “And we are especially pleased that the Gates Foundation has recognized the critical importance of sustainable sanitation by investing in our pioneering project. Thus far, sanitation approaches have been extremely resource- and energy-intensive and therefore out of reach for some of the world’s poorest but also most at-need populations. This project will allow us to move forward and develop practical technologies that will be of great value around the world.”    Chandran and his team aim to develop a bioprocess technology to convert the organic compounds present in fecal sludge to biodiesel and methane, two potent sources of energy, and thus convert a waste-processing facility into a biorefinery. The biorefinery will not only be an economical source of fuel, but, by minimizing discharge of fecal sludge into local water bodies, it will also contribute to improved human health and sanitation. Chandran says that potential outcomes of his work will also include integrating the bioprocess technology component into a social enterprise business model that will further promote widespread implementation of this approach and technology across the globe, especially in developing economies.   Chandran has been associated with Ghana for two years as the faculty advisor for the Columbia University Engineers without Borders Ghana team and expects to involve them in this project as well.   \"This project also affords a new path in engineering education, both in the United States and Ghana,\" he says. \"By training tomorrow’s engineers in sustainable approaches to ‘resource and energy recovery’ rather than ‘wastewater treatment,’ a sea-change can be achieved in the way we perceive of and manage human waste. In fact, the term ‘wastewater’ is already archaic. Wastewater is, after all, just water with a different chemical and biological composition.\"  

The report, “Climate Change and Cities: First Assessment Report of the Urban Climate Change Research Network (ARC3),” is a comprehensive study detailing the risks global cities face due to a warming world.

Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus and Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger today signed an agreement of their intention to reinstate Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) programs at Columbia for the first time in more than 40 years. The agreement was signed at a ceremony onboard the USS Iwo Jima, docked in New York for the Navy’s annual Fleet Week.

Sergeant John McClelland, a former special operations forces combat medic with the U.S. Army’s 1st Ranger Battalion, graduates this week with 22 other School of General Studies student veterans. T