Office of Grants & Research Development
Grants and Research Development is staffed by Charlotte Smith, University Grants Manager. She is available to assist faculty and staff with:
- Locating funding opportunities for sponsored projects
- Check out this spreadsheet of funding opportunities with grant deadlines* coming up this year. They are sorted by program area on individual tabs and listed chronologically beginning today. Keep in mind many grant programs repeat each year; so it is noted when they are/were due this year, to give you a general idea of when they might be due next year as well (especially for those with deadlines coming up quickly!)–to better aid you with planning ahead for future submissions. *When looking at submission deadlines, please remember that you will need to send proposals to Louis Toms, Associate Director of the Office of Research & Sponsored Programs (ORSP), at least 5 business days prior to the funding agency’s deadline.
- Subscribe to one or more topic-based email groups, in order to receive newly posted funding opportunity announcements based on those topics. If you would like to modify your subscriptions at any time, all you need to do is send your request to Charlotte Smith via email, and your subscription preferences will be updated.
- See an archive of funding opportunities sent to campus every other week.
- Request an account/profile in SPIN, a searchable database of over 40,000 federal, non-profit, and foundation funding opportunities.
- View funding opportunities for new and young faculty (source: UC Berkeley’s Sponsored Projects Office)
- Reading and interpreting sponsor’s guidelines for proposal submissions
- Connecting faculty and staff with program officers to discuss proposal ideas and/or clarify sponsor’s guidelines
- Creating timelines for developing complex proposal submissions
- Developing proposal materials, such as the scope of work, project description, budget, budget justification, supporting documents, etc.
- Providing feedback on draft proposal materials
- Note: If substantive feedback is requested, please submit materials no later than two weeks prior to the sponsor’s deadline. For feedback on technical/scientific content, faculty and staff are advised to seek peer review.
- Submitting all proposal materials to the Office of Research & Sponsored Programs (ORSP) for final review and required internal approvals prior to submission to the sponsor
- Note: Please submit materials to ORSP no later than five–seven full business days prior to the sponsor’s deadline.
- Ensuring faculty and staff meet sponsors’ reporting and stewardship requirements for awarded projects
Previous Grantsmanship Workshops
- Finding Grant Funding, September 23, 2022
- Grant Proposal Development, September 24, 2021
- Building a Budget for Grant Applications, October 1, 2021
Apply for the Preparation for Research Engagement Program
Apply for the Preparation for Research Engagement Program
In order to support faculty and staff success with grant seeking, the Preparation for Research Engagement Program (PREP) supports the costs of faculty/staff attending training opportunities such as workshops, conferences, and seminars on grant seeking, grant writing, community/partner engagement, project development, etc. Faculty/staff will provide the first $50 of the training from their departmental professional development funds, and PREP funds will pay the remaining amount, up to $450, on a reimbursement basis. Note: for trainings costing more than $500, the faculty/staff member would pay the excess amount from their personal funds.
After identifying a training opportunity you wish to attend, in person or virtually, just please complete the PREP application form here and submit it to the University Grants Manager, Charlotte Smith. After approval from the Provost, you will be provided with the information needed to proceed with your training opportunity registration and pre-approval in Chrome River.
PREP will accept applications for support on a rolling basis, up to 11 individuals this year. After attending the training opportunity, the University Grants Manager will be available to assist you with conducting funding searches and developing future grant proposals, as needed.
Helpful Links
Celebrating Scholarly and Creative Work
In 2021, Provost Kai Campbell invited the entire campus to the celebration of research awards and grants at UNC Asheville honoring faculty and staff willing to share their accomplishments. The following academic year, Interim Provosts Kimberly van Noort and Herman Holt expanded the original theme to include scholarly and creative works. The programs from the celebrations are listed below.
2022-2023 Grants, Awards, and Scholarly Work
Message from UNC Asheville Provost, Herman Holt
February 14, 2024
Please visit the Ramsey Library February 13-16 to view the extraordinary work of our colleagues including externally-funded grants, fellowships, publications, and scholarly work from the 2022-2023 academic year. The exhibit will be on display all week on the main floor of the Ramsey Library and includes 78 scholars with 131 submissions.
The works presented here are a culmination of effort that began with an idea that led to conversations with peers, students, and resulted in some really cool stuff. We acknowledge the time and effort that goes into these projects and creations. It is important, especially in times when we have limited resources, to establish external funding streams of support research and scholarly activities.
A few words from Chief Research Officer, Tim Elgren
February 10, 2024
Dear Colleagues:
Grant writing is one of the various ways in which we pursue our scholarly and creative interests. We write grants in support of innovating and cutting-edge projects that require resources and funding beyond what the university can provide. Writing proposals is a different aspect of our work as academics that allows us to think broadly and intentionally about our aspirations.
We gather annually to acknowledge the extraordinary time and effort that goes into submitting a grant proposal. Congratulations to all of you who have submitted proposals! Your creative and scholarly undertakings and commitments are a testimony to the extraordinary quality of our faculty and staff. The investment of the time and effort required to develope and submit a proposal can be daunting. A funded proposal is a particularly thrilling external validation of the quality of one’s ideas. Even with the disappointment of a denied proposal, there is an upside. The act of writing and crafting for yourself the trajectory of your scholarly work is an extremely useful exercise in developing a vision (a work plan) for this next period of your career. The collective numbers are truly impressive with over 100 proposals submitted in each of the last three years.
Fiscal Year |
Pending* |
Awarded |
Denied |
Total |
|
| 2021-22 | Proposals | 20 | 55 | 37 | 112 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Amount | $2.643 M | $5.678 M | $4.427 M | ||
| 2020-21 | Proposals | 11 | 62 | 40 | 113 |
| Total Amount | $4.401 M | $6.153 M | $4.6 M | ||
*at the end of the FY
And this year looks similarly impressive.
Fiscal Year |
Pending* |
Awarded |
Denied |
Total |
|
| 2022-23* | Proposals | 22 | 22 | 13 | 57 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Amount | $2.526 M | $2.795 M | $2.592 M | ||
*at the end January 2023
This is also an opportunity to thank our colleagues in the Office of Research & Sponsored Programs and Office of Grants and Research Development for their tremendous work in supporting your successes. Charlotte Smith, Louis Toms, and Steve Birkhofer are invaluable resources to all of us who submit proposals. They help us search for potential funding sources, communicate with program officers, work through proposal details, provide careful review of proposals, navigate compliance issues, and support our post-award obligations. It has been a real pleasure working closely with these folks and I am routinely amazed at the depth of their knowledge and commitment to serving our needs as grant writers.
Sincerely,
Tim Elgren, Chief Research Officer
Overview of Grants Activity
Sponsored Program Activity (Fiscal Year)
Note: Funding data aligns with Notice of Award date and may not accurately depict when FY funding began.
Funding Direct to Community Partners
Undergraduate Research & Education (FY 2023)
Grants Received July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Lead PI; Co-PIs |
Project Title |
Sponsor; Award Amount |
| Bogert, Kenneth | Army DAC Project – Evaluating Machine Compatibility in Human-Robot Interactive Teamwork | University of Georgia (prime: Dept. of the Army); $23,059.00 |
| Butera, Jake | EII American Passport Project | Institute of International Education; $4,125.00 |
| Couzo, Evan | Mapping air pollution disparities using low-cost particulate sensors | US Environmental Protection Agency; $24,939.00 |
| Elgren, Tim | Support for a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectrometer at UNC Asheville | Cannon Foundation; $150,000.00 |
| Filgueiras, Camila | Insects Everywhere: Closing the STEM Achievement Gap for Migrant Children | Burroughs Wellcome Fund; $175,917.00 |
| Filgueiras, Camila and Jonathan Horton | Herbivory and Stress Responses of Outplanted Wild-Type American and Backcross Hybrid Chestnuts in Western North Carolina | American Chestnut Foundation; $10,000.00 |
| Grosser, Melinda | Piloting the student-sourced construction of a Staphylococcus aureus CRISPR interference essential gene knockdown library | NC Biotechnology Center; $23,359.00 |
| Grosser, Melinda and Caitlin McMahon | The contribution of YqeK, a diadenosine tetraphosphate hydrolase, to pathogenic traits of Staphylococcus aureus | American Heart Association; $153,998.00 |
| Hale, Becca | MCA: Developing Molecular Tools to Explore Mating System Diversity in Salamanders | National Science Foundation; $218,472.00 |
| Helm, Rebecca | Observation of Neustonic Species with the Help of Citizen Scientists | University of Hawaii (prime: NASA); $6,696.03 |
| Jenkins, Blair | UNC Asheville Pre-College Programs | Buncombe County; $9,200.00 |
| Johnson, Kate | Food Pantry | Campus Compact; $1,000.00 |
| Kaplan, Sam | Marvelous Math Club Support | Tzedek Social Justice Fund; $50,000.00 |
| Kerpal, Christian | EAGER: Illuminating the consequences of membrane association on quantum-based magnetosensing | Furman University (prime: National Science Foundation); $20,465.00 |
| Klein, Eric | Gear Up UNC Asheville | Appalachian State University (prime: U.S. Dept. of Education); $144,000.00 |
| Lundgren, Britt | LSSTC Catalyst Fellowship Expansion Mentor Grant | LSST Corporation; $50,000.00 |
| Mann, Lisa | Enterprise Holdings Foundation; | |
| Marshall, Cate | SECU Public Fellows Internship Program | State Employees Credit Union Foundation; $110,000.00 |
| McMahon, Caitlin | Characterization of Bacterial Lectin-Carbohydrate Binding and Development of Anti-Adhesion Inhibitors | National Institutes of Health; $377,693.00 |
| Miller, Doug | Evaluation and Elucidation of SCaMPR Performance in Complex Terrain Leveraging GOES-R observations and Ground-based Precipitation Measurements – Supplement I | Cooperative Institute for Satellite Earth System Studies in North Carolina (CISESS NC); $26,290.00 |
| Mills, Sophie | Secret Histories and Dead Languages: The Discipline of Classics in Modern Fiction | National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipends; |
| Ramsey, David | NASA Robotic Mining Competition (RMC): Lunabotics | NC Space Grant; $5,000.00 |
| Rossell, Irene | Science on the Move Travel Support | SBurroughs Wellcome Fund; $2,500.00 |
| Sanchez Martinez, Juan | Consultant Services | McGill University; $2,236.51 |
| Steed, Ryan | Molecular mechanisms of dystonia and spastic paraplegia associated with mutations in ATP5G3 | SUNY at Buffalo (prime: National Institutes of Health); $56,857.00 |
| Tobias, Jennifer | STEM Research for Transfer Students | Walnut Cove Members Association; $11,880.00 |
| Wake, David | Probing the Gas in and around Local Galaxies Mapped with Integral Field Spectroscopy | Space Telescope Science Institute; $36,935.00 |
| Wake, David | 3D-DASH: A Wide Field WFC3/IR Survey of COSMOS | CSpace Telescope Science Institute; $39,503.00 |
| Weldon, David | Security Services | US Forest Service Southern Research Station; $18,231.00 |
| Wilcox, Jeff | Building research capacity in Southern Appalachian Mountain Wetlands | US Department of Energy; $50,315.00 |
| Wray, Amanda | Blue Ridge Pride LGBTQIA Archive Oral History Training Workshop: Sylva, NC | NC Humanities Council; $2,883.55 |
| Adcock, Trey | Native Voices Rising | CNH Capacity Building: Native-Led Advocacy and Philanthropy; $40,000.00 |
| Adcock, Trey and Jessica Huskey | SELU Mothering Program | Dogwood Health Trust; $60,000.00 |
| Adcock, Trey and Tara McCoy (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians), Levi West (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians) | ᎠᏏᎾᏏ ᏃᎴ ᎠᏙᎴᏆᏍᎩ “asinasi nole adolegwasgi” | Cherokee Preservation Foundation; $20,000.00 |
| Adcock, Trey and Tommy Cabe (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians) | Elohi Dinigatiyi (Earth Keepers) | Rights and Resources Initiative; $110,000.00 |
| Adcock, Trey, Matt West, and Louise Deroualle | ᎠᏏᎾᏏ ᏃᎴ ᎠᏙᎴᏆᏍᎩ asinasi nole adolegwasgi, the skilled one and the learner | South Arts; $10,000.00 |
| Clarke, David, Emily Beech, Bruce Hoffman, and Gary Krupnick | Guianas Global Tree Assessment | The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew/Botanical Gardens Conservation International; $9,000.00 |
| Ruffin, Tiece, Kathleen Lawlor, and Evan Couzo | Asheville Reparations and Environmental Justice Community Data Initiative | UNC Asheville; $33,800.00 |
GRANTS RECEIVED BY CENTERS July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
National Environmental Modeling and Analysis Center (NEMAC)
Grants received by NEMAC include PIs Karin Rogers, Jeff Bliss , G. Chein, Greg Dobson, Brian Drawert, M. Geiger, Ian Johnson, Sean Matthew, Dave Michelson, B. Rumsey, and Ashlyn Shore.
Project Title |
Sponsor; Award Amount |
| Geospatial Support Contract for Landslide Hazard Mapping Program | NC Department of Environmental Quality; $39,660.00 |
| Modeling Repository User Research | Water Institute of the Gulf; $68,102.00 |
| Resilience Internships | FernLeaf Interactive; $5794 |
| CCRE Steps to Resilience Training | FernLeaf LLC; $10,000.00 |
| Technical Support Contract for SouthFACT | Southern Group of State Foresters; $4,479.00 |
| Tools and technology with the Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center (EFETAC) | US Forest Service Southern Research Station; $160,000.00 |
| NEMAC Internships | Duke Energy Foundation; $50,000.00 |
| StochSS:A Next-Generation Toolkit for Simulation-Driven Bilogical | University of California – Santa Barbara (prime: National Institutes of Health); $209,543.00 |
| Resilient Florida Program Flood Vulnerability Assessment for the City of North Miami – Phase II | City of North Miami; $124,917.00 |
| CAKE (EcoAdapt) Website Update Phase 1 | EcoAdapt; $4,000.00 |
| Southwestern Commission Council of Governments Phase I | FernLeaf LLC; $2,475.00 |
| Land of Sky Resilience Assessment | FernLeaf LLC; $12,000.00 |
| Development and Support of NOAA Climate Products and Services (CISESS-NC) | NC State University (prime: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Research); $346,000.00 |
North Carolina Center for Health and Wellness (NCCHW)
Grants received by NCCHW include PIs Amy Lanou, Jeff Bachar, Ellen Bailey, Nadia Mazza, Alex Mitchell, Emma Olson, and Natasha Vos.
Project Title |
Sponsor; Award Amount |
| Implementation and evaluation of the NC Falls Prevention Action Plan and promote evidence-based falls prevention interventions | NC Department of Public Health; $49,933.00 |
| No Wrong Door System Governance: Improving Access to LTSS for Individuals and Family Caregivers | Administration for Community Living; $448,956.00 |
| A Statewide Approach to Connect North Carolinians to Arthritis-Appropriate Evidence-Based Interventions/td> | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; $305,345.00 |
| WNC Collaborative Network for Campus Community Peer Support & Health Education | Dogwood Health Trust; $173,845.00 |
| Building Our Largest Dementia (BOLD) Infrastructure Public Health Programs to Address Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia | NC Department of Health and Human Services; $1,838.00 |
| Building Our Largest Dementia (BOLD) Infrastructure Public Health Programs to Address Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia | NC Department of Health and Human Services; $68,615.00 |
| Social Isolation Mitigation through Social Bridging Program | NC Department of Health and Human Services; $157,648.00 |
| Community Health Worker Program Evaluation | Dogwood Health Trust; $60,000.00 |
Large Awards Closed Out July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Lead PI; Co-PIs |
Project Title |
Sponsor; Award Amount |
| Meigs, Ted and Herman Holt, Amanda Wolfe, Ryan Steed | NC GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Scholars Program at UNC Asheville | NC GlaxoSmithKline Foundation; $1,577,718 |
| Rogers, Karin and Greg Dobson, Ian Johnson, M. Geiger | Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center | U.S. Forest Service; $795,533 |
| Miller, Nicolle and Nadia Mazza | Sustaining CDSME programs through training, accreditation, technology and reimbursement among NC Area Agencies on Aging | Administration for Community Living; $836,121 |
| Bogert, Kenneth | Robust Inverse Learning for Human-Robot Collaboration | University of Georgia (prime: National Science Foundation); $165,568 |
| Helm, Rebecca | Observation of Neustonic Species with the Help of Citizen Scientists | University of Hawaii (prime: NASA); $483,507 |
Faculty and Staff Scholarly and Creative work July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Note: the following table shows a subset of UNC Asheville’s faculty and staff’s scholarly and creative work completed in the academic year spanning July 1, 2022 – June 30, 3023.
Citation |
Project Classification |
| Abrams Locklear, Erica. “Appalachia on the Table: Representing Mountain Food and People.” Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2023. | Book |
| Adcock, T. & Trier, J. (Summer 2022). “Détournement as Pedagogical War Paint: The Unsettling Artwork of Steven Paul Judd“. Journal of Thought. | Journal Article |
| Adcock, Trey. ᏄᏓ ᏩᎶᏏ ᎤᎩᏍᎪ: “the frog is swallowing the sun or moon” {translation from James Mooney} Accepted into the Permanent Collection of the Museum of the Cherokee Indians. 2022. |
Pottery |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. The Animals of My Earth School. New Jersey: Terrapin Books, 2023. | Book |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “The Human-headed Lion Seduces Three Lambs”. Another Chicago Magazine, Spring 2023. | Poem |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “How Can It Be a Cardinal Sin” and “The Meat-Loving God” Callaloo, Spring 2023. | Poems |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “I’ve Kept You Alive”, “The Man Who Changed His Name Twice”, and “Are You Now Afraid for Your Color?”. The Decolonial Passage. Spring 2023. | Poems |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “The Dog Is Quiet”. Boats Against the Current. Spring 2023. | Poem |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “Why I Wake up Early”. Amethyst Review. Spring 2023. | Poem |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “Will There Be Chickens in Paradise”. SWWIM Journal. Spring 2023. | Poem |
| Barya, Mildred Kiconco. “Little Wren”. About Place Journal. Fall 2022. | Poem |
| Beck, Judy. “Exploring our Sun: Science, Stories, and Solar Wax Melters,” in Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series Volume 533, Sharing Best Practices: Astronomy Teaching and Public Engagement ASP2021: A Virtual Conference, (2022) eds Greg Schultz, Joseph B. Jensen, Linda Shore, 233-237. | Conference Proceedings |
| Becker, Brett, Richard Blumenthal, Michael Goldweber, James Prather, Susan Reiser, Michelle Trim, Titus Winters. “Community Input for CS2023: Society, Ethics and Professionalism. SIGCSE 2023: Proceedings of the 54th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education”. Toronto CA. 3.6.2023.https://doi.org/10.1145/3545947.3573362 | Conference Talk |
| Cash, Wiley. When Ghosts Come Home (New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2022). | Book |
| Chinkangana, Fredy, “Birdsprings in the Wellsprings of Daydream“. trans. by Lorrie Lowenfield Jayne, in Siwar Mayu: A River of Hummingbirds, 2023. | Translation |
| Deroualle, Louise. Presentation. 12th Symposium Women Working With Clay, Hollins University, VA, June 12 to 15, 2023. | Invited Presentation |
| Deroualle, Louise. “Women Working with Clay”. Exhibition at Eleanor D. Wilson Museum. Hollins University, VA. June 8 – August 13, 2023. | Museum Exhibition |
| Diefenbach, D. “Cultivation Theory“. In The International Encyclopedia of Health Communication. (Eds E. Y. Ho, C. L. Bylund, J. C. M. van Weert, I. Basnyat, N. Bol and M. Dean). 2023. | Book Section |
| Diefenbach, D. L.. “Defining Blaxploitation and Black Voices in Horror Film: William Crain to Jordan Peele“. Nightmares from Monkeypaw: Virtual Symposium on the Works of Jordan Peele and Black Horror Cinema. 2022. | Symposium Presentation |
| DiPalma, Sonya. Book Review Editor, Journalism History, January 2021 – December 2024. | Editor |
| Duvernoy, Sophie, Karsten Olson, and Ulrich Plass. Representing Social Precarity in German Literature and Film. New York: Bloomsbury, 2023. | Book, Edited |
| Felix, Brian. Sideways. Recorded 2022. Slimtrim 2304, 2023. Streaming Audio. (Pam Miller, Cover Art) | Music and Cover Art |
| Felix, Brian. “Tempo, Diet Pills, and Mythology on the Grateful Dead.” Grateful Dead Studies 5 (2021-2022): 54-73. | Journal Article |
| Filgueiras, Camila C., Elson J. Shields, Brian A. Nault, and Denis S. Willett. “Entomopathogenic Nematodes for Field Control of Onion Maggot (Delia antiqua) and Compatibility with Seed Treatments.” Insects 14, no. 7 (2023): 623. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14070623 | Journal Article |
| Filgueiras, Camila C., Yongwoon Kim, Kyle G. Wickings, Faheim El Borai, Larry W. Duncan, and Denis S. Willett. “The Smart Soil Organism Detector: An instrument and machine learning pipeline for soil species identification.” Biosensors and Bioelectronics 221 (2023): 114417.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2022.114417. | Journal Article |
| Filgueiras, Camila Cramer. Exploring Soil Biodiversity: Interactions and Impacts. Appalachian State University. 2023. | Invited Speaker |
| Filgueiras, Camila Cramer. Exploring Soil Biodiversity: Interactions and Impacts. Western Carolina University. 2023 | Invited Speaker |
| Gillette, David P., David R. Edds, and Bibhuti R. Jha, “Identifying imperilled fish species and potential causes of decline in the Himalaya biodiversity hotspot,” Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 2023: 1–15, https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3914 | Journal Article |
| Grosser, Melinda R., Samantha K Sites, Mayara M Murata, Yolanda Lopez, Karen C Chamusco, Kyra Love Harriage, Jude W Grosser, James H Graham, Fred G. Gmitter, Christine D Chase. “Plant mitochondrial introns as genetic markers – conservation and variation“. Frontiers in Plant Science. Sec. Plant Breeding. Volume 14 – March 2023. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1116851 | Journal Article |
| Hasan, Sharmin, Nicholas F. White, Alicia C. Tagliatela, R. Taylor Durall, Katherine M. Brown, Gray R. McDiarmid, and Thomas E. Meigs, “Overexpressed G[alpha]13 activates serum response factor through stoichiometric imbalance with G[beta-gamma] and mislocalization to the cytoplasm,” Cellular Signalling, 102 (2023): 110534, doi: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2022.110534. | Journal Article |
| Holmes, Bert E. “Advice on Building an Undergraduate Research Program in Physical Chemistry to Secure Continual Funding from External Foundations” Physical Chemistry Research at Undergraduate Institutions Innovative and Impactful Approaches, Volume 1, Carol A. Parish and Todd A. Hopkins. Editors, Chapter 11, 2022, pp 177-185, ACS Symposium Series Volume 1428. | Book Chapter |
| Holmes, Bert E. “Reflections on a Career of Physical Chemistry Research at Undergraduate Liberal Arts Colleges: Overview of Research and Advice to Emerging Researchers.” in Physical Chemistry Research at Undergraduate Institutions Innovative and Impactful Approaches, Volume 1, Carol A. Parish and Todd A. Hopkins. Editors, Chapter 1, 2022, pp 1-18, ACS Symposium Series Volume 1428. | Book Chapter |
| Horvitz, Lori. Collect Call to My Mother: Essays on Love, Grief, and Getting a Good Night’s Sleep. New York: New Meridian Arts, 2023. | Book |
| Kaplan, Sam and Marta Alcalá. “Asset- and Justice-Based Practices with Exceptional Children”. Two workshops at the 71st Conference on Exceptional Children, Greensboro, NC. Nov 2 and 3, 2022. | Invited Presentation |
| Kaplan, Samuel R. “Mishnah Torah and Maimonides” in Global Humanities Reader: Premodern Worlds and Perspectives (Volume 2). Eds. Renuka Gusain, Keya Maitra, and Katherine C. Zubko, pp. 63–65. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2022. | Invited Presentation |
| Kaur, A. W. “Game-Based Teaching & Learning for Undergraduate Neuroscience.” Psychology Seminar Series. Davidson College. Davidson, NC. Feb 21. 2022 |
Invited Presentation |
| Kaur, A. W. “Supporting ADHD Students.” Invited presentation for UNC Asheville Student Support Staff. Asheville, NC. Dec 7, 2022. | Invited Presentation |
| Kaur, A. W. “Forbidden Neurds: a neuroscience themed vocabulary game that increases content knowledge”. Neuroscience Teaching Conference 2022. Winston-Salem, NC, July 21-22 2022. | Conference Presentation |
| Kaur, A. W. “Exploring Serious Games for Neuroscience Teaching”. Neuroscience Teaching Conference 2022. Winston-Salem, NC, July 21-22 2022. Workshop co-led with Liz Leininger (Associate Professor of Neurobiology, New College of Florida) and Olive Perry (Wickworks). | Workshop |
| Kim, Hwa-Jin. “Noontime Classical Music with Dr. Kim” Lecture/Recital Series. “Beethoven with His Women” 02.02.2023, “Chopin and His Friends” 3.21.2023. (Broadcast on UNCAET.) | Lecture and Recital Series |
| Klein, Eric. Fallow Lands of Plenty: Public Schools as Leaders in Rural Food System Relocalization. IAP, 2023. | Book |
| Kumar, Naren G.,Vincent N Nieto, Abby Kroken, Eric Jedel, Melinda R Grosser, Mary E Hallsten, Matteo Metruccio, Tim Yahr, David Evans, and Suzanne Fleiszig. “Pseudomonas aeruginosa can diversify after host cell invasion to establish multiple intracellular niches.” mBio. Dec 2022. Vol 13: Issue 6. doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02742-22 | Journal Article |
| Lanou, A. J., Jones, J., Noble, L., Smythe, T., Gambrill, L. A., Olson, E., and Woodall, T. (2022). Perspective Chapter: Social Distancing and Isolation: Unintended Consequences, Concerns, and Antidotes for Older Adults. In A. P. É. Gouveia, B. R. Gouveia, A. Marques, and A. Ihle (Eds.), Geriatric Medicine and Healthy Aging [Working Title]. IntechOpen. doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.104997 | Book Chapter |
| Manandhar Prajwol, Sulochana Manandhar, Adarsh M. Sherchan, Jyoti Joshi, Hemanta K. Chaudhary, Bimala Dhakal, Rajindra Napit, Bishwo Shrestha, Pragun G. Rajbhandari, Seily Shrestha, Saman M. Pradhan, Ashok Chaudhary, Dhiraj Puri, Smriti Khadka, Nikita Pradhan, Ajit Poudel, Jessie A. Moravek, Deepak Risal, Nilu Basnyat, Pablo Cardinale, David Philipp, Julie E. Claussen, David Gillette, Sushan M. Shakya, Genuine Prajapati, Laura Bertola, and Dibesh Karmacharya, “Environmental DNA (eDNA) based fish biodiversity assessment of two Himalayan rivers of Nepal reveals diversity differences and highlights new species distribution records,” PLOS Water 2(6): e0000099. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pwat.0000099 | Journal Article |
| Martin, Jackson. “Room in the Sky“. Part of City of Asheville Project – “Art in the Heart”, Steel, Wood, Nylon Fabric, Thread, Sand, Hardware, 2022. Pack Square Plaza, Asheville, NC. | Installation |
| Mason, Laura and Tracey Rizzo, eds and trans. The French Revolution: A Document Collection. Second Edition. Hackett Publishing, 2023. | Book |
| Matthews, Leah and Melissa Mahoney. “Humanizing the Dismal Science: Using Music to Improve Student Engagement and Enhance Economic Literacy“. February 2023. Southwest Popular Culture Association Annual Conference. Albuquerque, NM. | Presentation |
| Matthews, Leah and Melissa Mahoney. “Pop Culture as Pedagogy: Using Music to Improve Student Engagement, Humanize Economic Experiences, and Enhance Economic Literacy“. Annual Meeting of the Allied Social Sciences Association, Poster session hosted by the American Economic Association’s Committeee on Economic Education, January 2023. New Orleans, LA. | Poster |
| Matthews, Leah and Melissa Mahoney. “Springsteen-omics: Teaching Economics with The Boss“. Teaching workshop and presentation for high school educators from across the nation hosted by Econiful: Empowering Economic Thinkers, University of Arizona (online), September 2022. | Presentation |
| Matthews, Leah and Melissa Mahoney. “The Pedagogical Power in a Playlist“, 90 minute teaching workshop and presentation at March 2023. SXSW EDU Conference. Austin Texas. | Presentation |
| Mayorga, Sarah, Megan R. Underhill, and Lauren Crosser.” Aisle Inequality“. Contexts 22, no. 1 (2023): 24-29, https://doi-org.proxy177.nclive.org/10.1177/15365042221142831 | Journal Article |
| McGaha, Jennifer. Bushwhacking: How to Get Lost on the Trail and Write Your Way Out. San Antonio: Trinity University Press, 2023.. DOI:10.3764/ajaonline1254. | Book |
| McMahon, Caitlin M., Kimberly A. Choquette, S. Chantal E. Stieber, Erin E. Gray. “Remote Supergroup for Chemistry Undergraduates: An Inclusive Scientific Community for Primarily Undergraduate Institutions“. Journal of Chemical Education, 99, 9 (2022): 3187-3195. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.2c00507 | Journal Article |
| Millichap, Christian, Yeeka Yau, Alyssa Pate, & Morgan Carns. Modifying twist algorithms for determining the key length of a Vigenère cipher, 2023. Cryptologia, DOI: 10.1080/01611194.2023.2275583 | Journal Article |
| Murphy, K. E.; Thacher, M. K.; Young, E. C; Mojik, V.; Wolfe, A. L.. “Total Synthesis and Antibacterial Evaluation of Empetroxepins A and B and related analogs“. Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 2022, 75, 128955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bmcl.2022.128955 | Journal Article |
| Nawaz, Muhammad. “Labor Supply as a Buffer: The Implications of Credit Constraints in the US“. Presentation at the Southern Economic Conference, Nov 2022. | Conference Presentation |
| Nawaz, Muhammad. “Labor Supply as a Buffer: The Implications of Credit Constraints in the US“. Presentation at the Southern Economic Conference, Nov 2022. | Presentation |
| Noble, Louise and Emma Olson. “2023 North Carolina Dementia Caregiver Data Brief:Costs, Unique Challenges and Future Implications”. pp1-12. NCCHW’s Collaborative Research page. | Online Article |
| Noble, Louise and Emma Olson. “Caregiver Data Brief: Cost, Unique Challenges and Future Implications”. Action Team meeting of the Steering Committee of the Building Our Largest Dementia Infrastructure North Carolina Project. June 22, 2023. | Invited Presentation |
| Noble, Louise and Emma Olson. “Brain Health Risk Factor Data“. The Steering Committee of the Building Our Largest Dementia Infrastructure North Carolina Project. July 15, 2022. | Invited Presentation |
| Noble, Louise, Amy Lanou, and Emma Olson. “Social Bridging Project Brief“. pp 1-21. NCCHW’s Collaborative Research page. https://ncchw.unca.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/38/2023/04/SBP-Feb-2023-Caller-Brief.pdf?x55038 | Online Article |
| Palmer, M., Ruffin, T. “Embracing Equity: Black women in Academia“. International Women’s Day Panel”. Presented by the Pan-African Alumni Network and the Ohio University Women’s Center (virtual). March 2023. |
Invited Moderator |
| Pieraccini Lisa and Laurel Taylor. 2023. Consumption Ritual Art and Society : Interpretive Approaches and Recent Discoveries of Food and Drink in Etruria. Turnhout Belgium: Brepols. | Book, Edited |
| Pogozelski, W.K., West, K.J. Wasileski, S., Rodriguez, J., Mills, C., Margherio, C., Dembroski, D.“Creation of Virtual Affinity Groups to Provide Support to Women Faculty in STEM Across a Consortium of 29 PUIs/Public Liberal Arts Colleges.” (in Intentional Leadership session), American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, April 2023. | Invited Talk |
| Pogozelski1, Wendy, Sally A. Wasileski3, Chavonda Mills2, Karleen West1, Josephine Rodriguez4, Cara Margherio5, Erin Carll5, and Darci Demobroski1 (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3University of North Carolina at Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington), “Outcomes, Impacts, and Current Directions of NSF ADVANCE Partnership to Promote Equity for COPLAC Women STEM Faculty”, presentation to Provosts of COPLAC institutions at the American Association of Colleges and University Annual Meeting, January 20, 2023, San Francisco, CA. | Invited Talk |
| Pogozelski1, Wendy, Sally A. Wasileski3, Chavonda Mills2, Karleen West1, Josephine Rodriguez4, Cara Margherio5, Erin Carll5, and Darci Demobroski1 (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3University of North Carolina at Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington), “Outcomes, Impacts, and Current Directions of NSF ADVANCE Partnership to Promote Equity for COPLAC Women STEM Faculty”, presentation to the COPLAC Board of Directors at the American Association of Colleges and University Annual Meeting, January 18, 2023, San Francisco, CA. | Conference Presentation |
| Jeromy Rech named as one of Forbes 30 Under 30 in Science | Honor |
| Reiser, Susan. “CS+Art.” 2023 Algorithmic Arts workshop sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, College Park MD, May 15-16, 2023. | Invited Presentation |
| Reynolds, R.G., R.W. Henderson, L.M. Díaz, T.R. Rodriguez-Cabrera, and A.R. Puente-Rolón. Boas of the West Indies: Evolution, Natural History, and Conservation. New York: Comstock Publishing Associates, 2023. | Book |
| Rodriguez4, Josephine, Sally A. Wasileski3, Chavonda Mills2, Wendy Pogozelski1, Karleen West1, Cara Margherio5, Darci Dembroski1 (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3UNC Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington). “High Five: Talk Promoting Faculty Equity in Public Liberal Arts Colleges through the COPLAC ADVANCE Partnership”, Equity in STEM Community Convening Conference, June 2023 | Conference Presentation |
| Rodriguez4, Josephine, Sally A. Wasileski3, Chavonda Mills2, Wendy Pogozelski1, Karleen West1, Cara Margherio5, Darci Dembroski1 (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3UNC Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington). “Promoting Equity for Women STEM Faculty with an NSF ADVANCE Partnership for the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges”, 2022 Annual meeting of AAC&U Transforming STEM Higher Education, November 2022. | Invited Talk |
| Rodriguez4, Josephine, Sally A. Wasileski3, Chavonda Mills2, Wendy Pogozelski1, Karleen West1, Darci Dembroski1, Cara Margherio5, (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3UNC Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington). “Strategies from an NSF ADVANCE Partnership in Building Social Support Systems: Virtual Affinity Groups and a Summer Institute to Connect and Empower Women Faculty”, 2023 Faculty Women of Color in the Academy (FWCA) conference, April 20-24, 2023, Blacksburg, VA. | Conference Presentation |
| Rossell, I. M., K. Fabbro, and N. Moore. Science on the Move: A Summer Program on a College Campus. Workshop, National Migrant Education Conference, Albuquerque, New Mexico, May 2, 2023. | Presentation |
| Ruffin, T. “Audacious Action During Uncertain Times”. Martin Luther King Jr.Association of Asheville and Buncombe County Peace Rally and March (invited speaker). Pack Place, Asheville, NC. January 2023. | Invited Presentation |
| Ruffin, T. MAHEC Spirit of Martin Luther King, Jr. Award Celebration Keynote. (Virtual). January 2023. | Invited Keynote Presentation |
| Ruffin, T. “Revolutionary and Radical Enactment of Equity for Justice”. Life After Americorps Conference. Sponsored by the N.C. Commission on Volunteerism and Community Service. Americorps N.C., Office of Governor Roy Cooper. Lake Junaluska Conference Center. March 2023. | Invited Presentation |
| Sahoo, S. Political Posters Reveal a Tension in WhatsApp Platform Design: An Analysis of Digital Images From India’s 2019 Elections. Television & New Media, 23(8), 874-899, 2022. https://doi.org/10.1177/15274764211052997 | Journal Article |
| Sánchez Martínez, Juan Guillermo. Uranio / Uranium / ウラニウム, trans. Lorrie Lowenfield Jayne, Isana Kobayashi y Shinnosuke Niiro. (Tsukuba Japan: Cactus del Viento Press, 2023) 37-82. | Book and Translation |
| Shrestha, Rashmi K., Michael W. Founds, Sam J. Shepard, Mallory M. Rothrock, Amy E. Defnet, and P. Ryan Steed. “Mutational analysis of a conserved positive charge in the c-ring of E. coli ATP synthase“. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)-Bioenergetics 1864, no. 2 (2023): 148962. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2023.148962 | Journal Article |
| Smith, Carlton. # iBelong: The Stories of Sense of Belonging and Social Media from Black College Students. University of Georgia, 2022. | Conference Proceedings |
| Underhill, Megan R. “Expert Guided Antiracism among Progressive White Parents in the South.” Annual Meeting of the Southern Sociological Society, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. | Conference Proceedings |
| Underhill, Megan R. 2022. “Anti-Racist White Parents.” 30th Annual National Symposium in Family Issues, Racial/ Ethnic Inequalities in the U.S.: Family Socialization around Race/Ethnicity and Racism. Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania. | Presentation (invited) |
| Jen Rhodes Ward named Fullbright Scholar | Award |
| Wasileski, Sally A. “Partnership between an Academic Department and Student Affairs to develop a First Year Seminar course to holistically support first-year students in the transition to college: grant submission, course design & implementation, and impact on students”, COPLAC Annual Meeting, June 2023. | Conference Presentation |
| Wasileski3, Sally A., Josephine Rodriguez4, Chavonda Mills2, Wendy Pogozelski1, Karleen West1, Cara Margherio5, Darci Dembroski1 (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3UNC Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington). “Promoting faculty equity in public liberal arts colleges through the COPLAC ADVANCE Partnership: Many layers of change through top-down and bottom-up strategies”, Equity in STEM Community Convening, June 2023. | Conference Presentation |
| Wasileski3, Sally A., Josephine Rodriguez4, Chavonda Mills2, Karleen West1, Wendy Pogozelski1, Cara Margherio5, (1SUNY Geneseo; 2Georgia Gwinnett College; 3UNC Asheville; 4University of Virginia at Wise; 5University of Washington). “Challenges and strategies for promoting STEM faculty equity through Department Chair training in primarily undergraduate institutions” 2023 American Chemical Society National Meeting, Chemical Education Division poster session, March 26, 2023, Indianapolis, IN. | Poster Session at National Conference |
| Wasileski, Sally A., Jason Schmeltzer, and Amanda Wolfe. “Impact of a holistic student support program integrated into the major on student motivation in the academic major, academic behaviors, and persistence for early-career undergraduate chemistry majors”, 2023 American Chemical Society National Meeting, poster presentation in the Chemical Education Division, March 26, 2023, Indianapolis Indiana. | Poster Session at National Conference |
| Wingert, Jason R., Bassett, Gennie M., Terry, Caitlin E. Cheng, Kedai, and Lee, Jimin. “The effects of religious views and creationism on teleological reasoning, acceptance and understanding of natural selection: a preliminary mixed-methods study.” Evolution: Education and Outreach 16, 10 (June 2023). | Journal Article |
| Yubero Valdivielso, David, Christian Kerpal, Wieland Schöllkopf, Gerard Meijer, and André Fielicke. “IR spectra and structures of saturated ruthenium cluster carbonyl cations Run(CO)m+ (n = 1–6)” Dalton Trans., 2023, 52, 9929-9939 | Journal Article |
| Zubko, Katherine C. “Bringing the Introduction to Religious Studies Course to Its Senses,” in Teaching Critical Religious Studies, eds. Jenna Gray-Hildenbrand, Beverley McGuire, and Hussein Rashid (New York: Bloomsbury, 2022), 17-30. | Book Chapter |
| Zubko, Katherine C. “How Do Hindus Learn the Stories of Hinduism?” and “What Does Worship in Hinduism Look Like?” in Hinduism in 5 Minutes, ed. Steven Ramey (UK: Equinox, 2022), 97-99, 167-69. | Book Chapter |
| Zubko, Katherine C., “The Embodied Palimpsest: Dancing Kinesthetic Empathy in Bharatanatyam,” Body and Religion 5:1 (2021 [published in 2022]): 69-95. | Book Chapter |
| Zunguze, Jeremias, Tiece Ruffin, and Agya Boakye-Boaten, Eds. Moja Journal. Produced with support from Michael Gouge, Brandy Bourne, and Emily Herzog. |
Community Engagement Panel Resources
Are you considering writing a grant and want to include organizations/individuals from the community in your proposed project, but you are unsure of the best way to connect with them? Funding agencies like to see established partnerships, with evidence of mutual planning and goal-setting. But how can you find the right partners to work with, and how can you best engage with them for everyone’s benefit?
A panel of faculty and staff colleagues who have been successful in this work gathered Thursday, March 28, in the Laurel Forum for a special Panel Discussion about this topic. Panelists included Ameena Batada, Victoria Bradbury, Kate Johnson, Eric Klein, Ellen Pearson, Karin Rogers, and Irene Rossell.
Panelists shared their experiences on how to locate potential community partners, determine partners’ capacity, navigate relationship dynamics, and work together to build true, productive, and lasting collaborations.
Below is some background information on our panelists and their work with community partners.
View the Recording of the Panel Discussion
Ameena considers herself a “pracademic”, working closely with community organizations to co-conduct research for action, primarily program evaluations for improvement and funding and primary and secondary data collection to inform and advance policy change. Ameena utilizes approaches similar to community-based participatory research and action (CBPRA) and participatory action research (PAR) with partners and community researchers, identifying and implementing authentic and interactive methods, analyses, and sharing findings.
I have worked with community partners in my research and teaching since arriving at UNC Asheville in 2016. Like many early-career academics, I moved a lot to pursue degrees and teaching opportunities before embarking on my first tenure-track position at UNC Asheville. When I moved to a new place, I worked quickly to make contacts in my field so that I could conduct my research successfully there. When I started at UNC Asheville, I did the same, making contacts in the Asheville area, in arts and business, to build a network and conduct research. When I arrived, I was also inspired by the community-engaged teaching and scholarship that my departmental colleagues were already engaged in – including Lei Han and Curt Cloninger.
One of the first community partners I started working with in Asheville was Revolve Gallery in the River Arts District. I joined the board of Media Arts Project, which later became Revolve’s board of directors. Other community partners I have engaged with include the Center for Craft, Black Mountain College Museum and Arts Center, photographer Andrea Clark, The Asheville Art Museum, the Shiloh Community Association, Better than Unicorns, and recently, Asheville Creative Arts. Working with community partners begins with attending their events and introducing yourself. You need to show interest and a commitment to what they are doing and the values of their organization – volunteering first goes a long way to building trust and relationships. You also need to be aware of the dynamics between yourself as a representative of the university – one of the largest employers in Asheville – and the smaller nonprofit organizations or businesses.
Kate has worked in the field of Civic and Community Engagement in higher education for the past 15 years. Her responsibilities have included significant collaboration with community partners, including the coordination of ongoing networking and professional development opportunities for nonprofit partners at a previous institution. Currently, as the director of the Key Center for Community Engaged Learning, she supports partners via onboarding meetings, event and volunteer promotion, the Community Partner Database, and making campus connections.
Eric Klein has been crafting partnerships with public schools for more than a decade. For eight years, he worked on the school district side of those partnerships co-designing afterschool programs and summer camps as well as classroom and off-campus enrichment programs. Partners included higher education institutions, community organizations, individuals, small businesses, community members and large corporations. Before coming to UNC Asheville in 2022, he worked with a cohort of community colleges to design and implement academic enrichment programming with middle schools in their community. Here at UNC Asheville, Eric works to build and celebrate connections between the university and our neighboring communities through on-campus and in-district programming with their public schools.
In 2020, Ellen Holmes Pearson and Sarah Judson (History) founded “The 828 Digital Archives,” with a goal to center the voices of historically excluded individuals in the region by working with colleagues in New Media and Computer Science, as well as Asheville/Buncombe County community partners to design digital projects that craft a more inclusive and accessible history of western North Carolina. Their relationships with community partners such as the YWCA, St. John “A” Baptist Church, the South Asheville Cemetery Association, Kenilworth Residents Association, Buncombe County Special Collections, Southside Community Association, the Preservation Society of Asheville & Buncombe County, and local community and arts organizers and activists stretch back to the early 2000s. In recent years, Ellen and Sarah, along with Victoria Bradbury (New Media) have focused on co-creation of community histories related to African American women and the restoration and preservation of Asheville’s African American cemeteries. They and their students have worked with community partners in the Historic South Asheville and Shiloh neighborhoods to build digital exhibits highlighting African Americans’ contributions to their neighborhoods, to Asheville, and to the region’s society and culture. UNC Asheville student research helped Shiloh A.M.E. Zion church and Cemetery attain National Register designation in 2022. They continue to work with church and community members to create digital history projects on the community’s late-19th-century relocation from what is now Biltmore Estate property to its present location and on the history and contributions of prominent Shiloh families and individuals. In 2023, Ellen collaborated with the Land of Sky Council on a successful Americorps grant proposal to expand localized efforts to preserve African American cemeteries. This Cemetery Remembrance Project grant will establish a consortium of African American cemeteries in 15 western North Carolina counties to help reclaim, preserve, and restore our region’s cemeteries and to build richer and more diverse histories of our region.
NEMAC has a proven history of successful partnerships spanning academia, government agencies, non-profits, and private entities since our founding in 2003. Collaborations with organizations such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the US Forest Service, and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation have enabled us to develop tools and resources supporting climate resilience and adaptation efforts. We also work closely with state and local governments, regional planning organizations, and academic institutions to tailor solutions for specific environmental challenges through stakeholder engagement, co-designing tools, and providing training. Our commitment to collaborative problem-solving underscores our ability to bridge disciplines and sectors to achieve shared goals in environmental resilience and adaptation.
Irene Rossell is a Professor of Environmental Studies and Interdisciplinary Professor of the Mountain South. From 2018-1022, she directed Science on the Move, which brought Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) programming to children of migrant farmworkers. Science on the Move operated in close collaboration with the Buncombe County Schools’ Migrant Education Program and was funded by the Burroughs-Wellcome Foundation. Three UNC Asheville faculty and ten undergraduate students participated over four years, serving ~100 middle school and high school students, many of whom were not native English speakers and were newly arrived to western North Carolina. Activities took place on the UNC Asheville campus and throughout the region during the summer and academic year.