Hofstra Biology - 2020 Alumni Newsletter

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To secure the global food supply under increasingly variable and extreme weather events, plant breeders must innovate new varieties of crops that are resilient to stressful environments. One approach to solve this problem is to establish a detailed understanding of the genetic architecture underlying plant stress responses. The Enders Lab aims to gain a better understanding of

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FACULTY SPOTLIGHT:

TARA ENDERS

• HOFSTRA BIOLOGY •

ALUMNI NEWSLETTER

LETTER FROM THE DEPARTMENT CHAIR DR. PETER DANIEL Professor and Chair Department of Biology Hofstra University

Since I started writing this update on what our department has been doing over the past academic year, events have taken a serious turn. Our area has been particularly hard hit by COVID-19. Biology instructors have scrambled successfully to put all classes online. Students will not be coming back to campus this semester to complete courses or to participate in the graduation ceremony. We have tried to do our part through donations of desperately needed PPE to our local hospital system. I hope by the time this newsletter reaches you we will be on the downward side of the infection curve. Our sincere wishes for safety go out to all of our alumni, families, and friends. What follows is the original message for this newsletter before COVID-19 had become a pandemic. It is my honor to introduce the second issue of our Hofstra Biology Alumni newsletter where you will learn about the latest goings-on in the department and what some of your fellow alumni have been doing since graduating. This has been a busy year preparing for the implementation of a completely overhauled curriculum next year. The new curriculum is inspired by the document “Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology Education: A Call to Action” (2011) (http://visionandchange.org/). It recommended 1) the integration of core concepts and competencies across the curriculum, 2) a focus on student-centered learning, 3) promotion of a campus-wide commitment to change, and 4) engagement of the biology community in the implementation of change. We had two goals. First, develop a more engaging, broader, first-year course and achieve vertical integration of concepts throughout the curriculum. Second, we aim to retain and enhance authentic research experience across the curriculum. Students will have more research experiences in and out of the lab classroom.

Tara Enders, who received her PhD from Washington University in St Louis and did a post-doc at the University of Minnesota, joined the department in September 2019.

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how plants respond to abiotic stresses over developmental time by linking genotypic information to phenotypic information in a variety of plant species. We are currently focusing our efforts using the model plant species Arabidopsis thaliana. Students are growing diverse varieties and single-gene mutants of Arabidopsis in a range of environmental conditions, such as extreme cold, heat, drought, and saline soils. Students build and use high-throughput imagebased phenotyping systems to analyze morphological and color changes over time in response to these stresses, and use genetic information to understand the molecular basis for variation among those responses.

This year, we welcomed a new geneticist and faculty member, Dr. Tara Enders, hired to help accommodate the forthcoming retirements of our two geneticists, Drs. Vallier and Clendening. Microbiology has become the upper-level lab course with the most demand thanks to the burgeoning Dual Entry BS/MS Physician Assistant Studies program. Add to that the news that the University is opening up a new BS in nursing program starting in fall 2021, and it is clear that two microbiology faculty, Drs. Nathan Rigel and Javier Izquierdo, are not enough instructors to meet demand. Therefore we are currently searching for a third microbiologist to join us in fall 2020.

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The department has also had discussions about the emergency financial situations some of our students encounter. For example, we have had students who are unable to apply for graduate school because they don’t have the means to pay for entrance examinations; others who are unable to afford textbooks one semester. In cases where need can be demonstrated, we can use our gift fund to provide small grants to cover these costs. Your donation to our gift fund of any amount could go a long way to help these students over a financial bump. Please go to hofstra.edu/giving and enter Biology in the “other” field under designation. – Dr. Peter Daniel, Professor and Chair


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