Professor Connect
First-Year Student Mentoring Program
Moravian’s Professor Connect is a 16-week experience during which curious and ambitious first-year students from all backgrounds are invited to work with and be mentored by select Moravian faculty.
During their first semester at Moravian, students in the Professor Connect experience will engage with a faculty member on research projects, creative work, or class production, and meet weekly for mentorship, academic guidance, and reflection. This is a perfect chance for students to explore their passions and learn about the academic opportunities at Moravian.
Students do not need any special knowledge or skills in the field of the professor's scholarship or creative work. We invite students of all areas of study, including and especially welcoming those who are exploring their academic options. This experience does not count for academic credit.
Eligibility
You must meet the following requirements to participate in Professor Connect:
- Be an incoming first-year student
- Have a minimum high school GPA of 3.0
- Able to commit 2-3 hours per week during the fall semester
- Have decided on your major or are still exploring your options and passions
- Have a curious and open mind
If you are interested in participating in Professor Connect or have any questions, please contact Josh Tehonica, Director of Recruitment at 610-861-1328 or tehonicaj@moravian.edu,
Professor Profiles
Akbar Keshodkar
Professor of Anthropology
Expertise: Politics of identities, Globalization and transnational mobility, Indian Ocean world, Tourism
Current Projects: East African Transnational trade networks in the Arabian Peninsula and China; Tourism directed involuntary immobility in rural communities
What you will be doing: You will engage in research analyzing emerging trends and developments tied to issues of mobility and immobility across different social landscapes and participate in weekly mentoring and analysis meetings with Dr. Keshodkar
Find out more about Dr. Keshodkar and his work >
Anastasia Thévenin
Assistant Professor of Biology
Expertise: Cancer Biology
Current Project: Science Children’s Books
What you’ll be doing: Help with outreach events at local schools and with curating the book collection. In addition, you’ll learn about Dr. Thévenin’s biochemistry and cancer biology research by shadowing her senior research students.
Find out more about Dr. Thévenin and her work >
Angela Fraleigh
Professor of Art
Expertise: Intersectional feminist read of art history, painting, and drawing.
Current Project: Site-specific exhibition at the Weatherspoon Art museum inspired by the famous collecting Cone sisters
What you’ll be doing: Participate in weekly meetings with other students collecting and interpreting various forms of visual language. You’ll attend mentoring sessions and experimental studio practices that may include printmaking, paper making, digital processes for an interactive digital video, painting, drawing, and more.
Find out more about Professor Fraleigh and her work >
Louise Keegan
Associate Professor of Speech-Language Pathology
Expertise: Communication after Traumatic Brain Injury
Current project: Virtual communication skills groups for individuals with TBI
What you will be doing: Participate on a team of students examining the linguistic/communication skills of individuals with TBI. You'll learn about common acquired communication difficulties and the interventions, as well as the processes involved in conducting applied clinical research.
Find out more about Dr. Keegan and her work >
Natasha Woods
Assistant Professor of Biology
Expertise: Plant Ecology
Current Project: Investigating impact of grass density on shrub encroachment into grasslands
What you’ll be doing: Attending weekly lab meetings with research students and assisting them with research projects.
Find out more about Dr. Woods and her research >
Heikki Lempa
Professor of History
Expertise: History of the body, history of emotions, most recently author of the book Spaces of Honor (2021)
Current project: A book-length study on a Global History of the German Dance, Sports, and Medicine
What you’ll be doing: Join a team of students collecting materials for the upcoming book, and a class on the history of the body. You’ll attend weekly individual mentoring meetings with Dr. Lempa.
Find out more about Dr. Lempa and his work >
Rebecca Malinski
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Expertise: Criminology, Bullying and Cyberbullying, Surveillance and Society
Current projects: Examining the use of location sharing applications (LSAs) as a tool of surveillance. In particular, we are examining the use of location tracking by parents of their adult children enrolled in college.
What you’ll be doing: You will be assisting with research examining the use of LSAs among university students, their parents, and their peer networks. This would involve assisting with recruitment, data collection, coding and analysis, and the development of peer-reviewed publications. You would also participate in regular meetings with the rest of the research team, which will include faculty, graduate students, and undergraduate students at 3 institutions (Â鶹¹û¶³, Ohio University, California State University Stanislaus Campus).
Find out more about Dr. Malinski and her work >
Jamie Paxton
Associate Professor of History
Expertise: Indigenous history, Early American history, Canadian history, Experimental Archaeology
Current projects: The Land of the Flint: An Ethnogeography of the Eighteenth-Century Mohawk Valley
What you’ll be doing: Contribute to an ethnogeography of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Mohawk Valley, New York, and Upper Canada (Ontario) and assist with developing a course on ethnogeography. You will research the ways people understood, used, and shaped the land in accordance with cultural values. Help with developing a course on ethnogeography. Identify and evaluate free software for presenting geographic information.
Find out more about Dr. Paxton and his work >
Sandra Aguilar
Associate Professor and Chair
Expertise: Latin American history, women, race, class, food and foodways.
Current Project: Nutritional policies, cooking and eating practices in Mexico (1920-1960)
What you’ll be doing: Explore and find out alternative sources of information (podcasts, blogs, documentaries, films, images, social media) in addition to traditional writing about the Latin American and LatinX experience to reflect critically upon it.
Find out more about Professor Aguilar and her work >
Nate Shank & Shannon Talbott
Professor of Mathematics & Associate Professor of Mathematics
Expertise: Analysis, probability, graph theory, and network reliability & combinatorics and algebra
Current Project: Mathematics Problem Session
What you’ll be doing: Mathematics research takes on many forms but is primarily solving problems and making arguments. In this project, we will work with several faculty and mathematics students to explore unsolved problems in mathematics as well as learn how to develop NEW mathematics. [Past sessions have been held weekly on Tuesdays or Thursdays]
Find out more about Professor Shank & Professor Talbott and their work >
Contact
Josh Tehonica
Director of Recruitment
610-861-1328
tehonicaj@moravian.edu
Heikki Lempa
Professor of History
610-861-1315
lempah@moravian.edu