Students rated five instructors in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering among the best at Georgia Tech in the just-concluded semester.
The Center for Teaching and Learning has named the instructors to the Spring 2022 Honor Roll for excellence in teaching based on how students rated them on end-of-course surveys. The honorees are:
- Laura Christian – BMED 3600, Physiology of Cellular and Molecular Systems
- Ahmet Coskun – BMED 3520, Biomedical Systems and Modeling
- Maysam Nezafati – BMED 2110, Conservation Principles in Biomedical Engineering
- James Rains – BMED 4602, Capstone Design
- James Stubbs – BMED 4602, Capstone Design
The honor roll specifically accounts for how students rate their instructors’ level of enthusiasm about the course and ability to stimulate interest in the subject. It also includes ratings of instructors’ respect and concern for students. Only the teachers whose scores are in the top 25% are eligible for recognition, and only if most of their students complete the Course Instructor Opinion Survey.
Christian made both the fall and spring honor rolls for her instruction in Physiology of Cellular and Molecular Systems. Coskun also appeared on both lists — in the fall for BMED 4783, Introduction to Medical Image Processing.
Latest BME News
Researchers demonstrate stem cell treatment without chemotherapy and painful bone marrow procedure
BME researchers explore the critical role of mechanical force in rare genetic disorder
Researchers develop spatial transcriptomics toolkit that provides new insights into the molecular processes of life
Air Detectives take top prize to give department three straight victories in Expo competition
Coulter BME community gathers at the Fabulous Fox to celebrate anniversary of unique public-private partnership
Coskun pioneering new research area and building a company around iseqPLA technology
BME undergraduate student and competitive skater Sierra Venetta has found success on and off the ice
BME researcher Ankur Singh using new technology to uncover weakened response in cancer patients