Faculty Advisors for Undeclared Students
Professor Ethan Baxter
Department of Earth Sciences
Professor Baxter has been teaching in the Department of Earth Sciences since Spring 2003. His classes include Mineralogy, History of the Earth, Geochemical Modeling, and Isotope Earth Science. His research involves the rates and timescales of solid earth processes, such as mountain building, metamorphism, and deformation. While much of his research happens in the lab, Professor Baxter and his students enjoy geological fieldwork which has taken them to field areas such as the Greek Isles, the Austrian Alps, California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains, and sites throughout New England.
Professor Charles Dunbar
Department of International Relations
Charles Dunbar joined the International Relations Department in September 2004. From 2001 to 2004, he taught at Simmons College and earlier was President of the Council of World Affairs in Cleveland where he taught at Case Western Reserve and Cleveland State Universities. As an American and U.N. diplomat and ambassador, he lived for 21 years in the Middle East between 1962 and 1998. He was Secretary-General Annan's special representative for the referendum in Western Sahara, U.S. Ambassador first to Qatar and Yemen, and head of the American embassy in Afghanistan. He has also lived and worked in Mauritania, Algeria, Morocco, and Iran. He is a bicycle commuter.
Professor Ashis Gangopadhyay
Department of Mathematics & Statistics
Professor Gangopadhyay teaches undergraduate and graduate level statistics courses, and serves as the Associate Chairman of the Department of Mathematics & Statistics. His research interests involve development of statistical methodologies with applications in business, economics, and actuarial science. Professor Gangopadhyay enjoys reading, listening to music, and spending time with his family.
Professor Elizabeth Godrick
Department of Biology
Professor Godrick teaches biology courses including a) Immunology for Biology/BMB majors, b) Human Disease: Aids to Tuberculosis, c) Introductory Biology for Health Sciences, and d) Principles of Biology for the BU Academy students. She conducted a graduate WABU telecast TV course for high school teachers. She reminds students that education is a journey not only a destination. Professor Godrick enjoys yoga, college basketball, traveling everywhere, and photography.
Professor Alya Guseva
Department of Sociology
Professor Guseva teaches courses in sociology of economic life, healthcare, and market transitions. Her research interests include the emergence of consumer credit markets in post-communist transitional societies and the rise of medical markets in the U.S. and globally. When she is not traveling to Europe, she can be found reading Russian and French literature, playing piano with her daughter, or chasing after her 2-year-old son.
Professor Paula Hennessey
Department of Romance Studies
Professor Hennessey is the CAS Foreign Language Advisor in the Ralph W. Taylor Academic Advising Center. She is the head of the French language program in the department of Romance Studies and has been actively involved in the development of Reading Sequence in French. Note: Professor Hennessey is only available for foreign language advising, not for course selection.
Professor Brian Jorgensen
Department of English/Core Curriculum
Professor Jorgensen teaches in Core Curriculum Humanities (CC101, 102, 201, 202) and the Department of English. His interests include Classical Literature, Greek philosophy, and Renaissance poetry. He cannot help but admire both Odysseus and Lao Tzu. He affirms the virtues of a liberal education.
Professor Pedro Lasarte
Department of Romance Studies (Modern Foreign Language)
Professor Pedro Lasarte's teaching and research center on Spanish-American literature and culture. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Society for Renaissance and Baroque Hispanic Poetry as well as the Associate Editor of Calíope and serves on the Editorial Boards of Revista Iberoamericana and Colonial Latin American Review. He received a John Carter Brown Fellowship and was Visiting Associate Professor at the University of Michigan. Professor Lasarte is a member of the Peruvian Academy of Language.
Professor Leland Monk
Department of English
Professor Monk teaches courses in Victorian and modern literature, gender and gay studies, and film. He is the advisor for the CAS Film Studies minor. Professor Monk encourages students to take advantage of the University¹s diverse offerings, noting that “a well-rounded education is almost as important as finding a particular area of specialization.” He enjoys swimming and bicycling, especially on Cape Cod.
Professor Stephanie Nelson
Department of Classical Studies and Core Curriculum (Humanities)
Professor Nelson teaches in the Core Curriculum and the Department of Classical Studies, where she specializes in Greek and Latin languages, literature, and philosophy. During the summer, she works on a small dairy farm in County Cavan, Ireland.
Professor Loren Samons
Department of Classical Studies
Professor Samons teaches Greek and Roman history and classical languages. His scholarship focuses on Athenian democracy and imperialism in the fifth century B.C. A native of Arkansas, Professor Samons spends most of his free time playing bluegrass or harassing the trout population of North America.
Professor James Siemon
Department of English
After many years in the College, Professor Siemon can be counted upon to know the "ins" and "outs" of course selection and registration procedures. He teaches courses in British literature and drama. His scholarship focuses on Shakespeare. Professor Siemon enjoys advising as it allows him to "get in contact with students." His interests have always been broad; he chose to concentrate in English as an undergraduate only after exploring a number of other fields. He therefore understands that undeclared students are sometimes faced with the twin prospects of vast choices and difficult decisions.
Professor Frederick Wasserman
(Senior Faculty Advisor)
Department of Biology
Professor Wasserman’s area of research is avian behavioral ecology with a focus on bird song and territoriality. He has lectured in the ecology, evolution, and behavioral component of the Introductory Biology Program for many years. Professor Wasserman and his family enjoy hiking in New Hampshire’s White Mountains.
Professor Roye Wates
(Senior Faculty Advisor)
Independent Major
Professor Wates teaches music history, music appreciation, and interdisciplinary courses in music, art and literature. Her recent research has centered on Mozart. A transplanted southerner, she enjoys traveling—inevitably and most frequently, to Austria and Germany. In her advising, Professor Wates tries to move beyond simple course selection to "help students find their way through the maze of offerings available to them and encourage them to build programs of study which exploit to the fullest the incredible resources of this university."
Professor Daniel Weiner
Department of Mathematics & Statistics
Professor Weiner’s research interests include probability and real analysis with applications to statistics, as well as the history of mathematics. He teaches courses at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, typically including mathematical analysis, probability, and elementary statistics. His personal interests include French language, literature and history (where he is currently working on a project involving the French crusader king Saint Louis) as well as classical music and opera.