The ASME Graduate Teaching Fellowship Program is a collaboration between ASME and mechanical engineering departments to encourage outstanding doctoral candidates in mechanical engineering education (and related engineering fields), particularly women and minorities. Awards are made for a maximum of two years and fellows are selected/renewed annually by the ASME Board of Education.
Past Woodruff School Graduate Teaching Fellows include:
1992 - Margueritte Patricia Brackin, Ph.D ‘97
1994 - Johné M. Parker, Ph.D, ‘96
1995 - Christopher C. Pascual, Ph.D ‘99
1996 - Stacey Angela Dixon, Ph.D ‘00
1998 - Laura Atkinson Schaefer, Ph.D ‘00
1999 - Stephanie Kladakis, Ph.D ‘02
2000 - Wayne Johnson, Ph.D ‘04
2002 - Phillip A. Vogelwede, Ph.D ‘04
2003 - Susan Stewart, Ph.D ‘03
2004 - Nathan D. Masters, Ph.D ‘06
2005 - Anne-Marie Lerner, Ph.D ‘08
2006 - Joshua Vaughn, Ph.D ‘08
2011 - Ashley Bernal, Ph.D ‘11
2012 - Brian Fronk, Ph.D ‘14
2013 - Thomas Stone, Ph.D ‘12
ASME is a not-for-profit membership organization that enables collaboration, knowledge sharing, career enrichment, and skills development across all engineering disciplines, toward a goal of helping the global engineering community develop solutions to benefit lives and livelihoods.