College of Nursing Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Wed, 22 Apr 2026 13:06:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png College of Nursing Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 Sharon Tucker Named Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing /news/sharon-tucker-named-orlando-health-endowed-chair-in-nursing/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 18:48:43 +0000 /news/?p=152585 The prestigious appointment from the 麻豆原创 Pegasus Partner will bolster Tucker鈥檚 nationally recognized research focused on helping practitioners and patients thrive.

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麻豆原创 Pegasus Partner Orlando Health has named , dean of 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Nursing, the Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing.

The prestigious endowed faculty position, which will support Tucker鈥檚 nursing research, teaching and scholarly activities, is just the latest example of how 麻豆原创 is leveraging industry partnerships to drive real-world impact.

Tucker is a distinguished scholar in both psychiatric mental health nursing and evidence-based practice who has made sustained impacts on the field, for nurses and patients alike. She is nationally board certified as an adult psychiatric-mental health clinical nurse specialist and integrative nurse coach.

Her research, which has been published in more than 100 peer-reviewed publications and presented around the world, focuses on behavior change through mental health and wellness interventions and organizational change through evidence-based practice.

鈥淲ith its partnership, Orlando Health is elevating excellence in education and research to support future Knight nurses and improve the health of our communities.鈥 鈥 Sharon Tucker

鈥淚 am incredibly honored to be named to this esteemed endowed position, and grateful for Orlando Health鈥檚 support of the college,鈥 says Tucker. 鈥淧artnerships are powerful and with its partnership, Orlando Health is elevating excellence in education and research to support future Knight nurses and improve the health of our communities.鈥

In addition to the new endowed chair appointment, Tucker holds the prestigious distinctions of fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and fellow of the National Academies of Practice in Nursing.

Orlando Health has been a long-standing partner of 麻豆原创 and the College of Nursing. The Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing was established in 2009, and Tucker is the second faculty member to be named to the appointment. It was formerly held by Professor Emerita Mary Lou Sole, the previous dean and a renowned critical care researcher.

Kelly Edmondson, Orlando Health鈥檚 senior vice president of nursing and patient care services, says the partnership speaks to the organization鈥檚 mission to improve the health and quality of life of the individuals and communities they serve.

鈥淒r. Tucker鈥檚 research supports our efforts to empower nurses and elevate clinical excellence to deliver compassionate, evidence-based care,鈥 Edmondson says. 鈥淚t is an honor to continue to partner with 麻豆原创 to strengthen the nursing workforce and create a healthier future for all.鈥

In 2023, Orlando Health became one of 麻豆原创鈥檚 inaugural Pegasus Partners with a $5 million commitment to support the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion as well as provide tuition assistance and additional paid internships for 麻豆原创 nursing students.

to support the College of Nursing

Philanthropic support is critical to the creation of endowed faculty positions, helping 麻豆原创 attract and retain nursing experts, and support groundbreaking research that impacts the profession and the health of communities. Help launch more faculty experts to lead nursing into the future by joining 麻豆原创鈥檚 Go for Launch campaign.

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麻豆原创 Recognizes Faculty Excellence With 2026 Promotion and Tenure Awards /news/ucf-recognizes-faculty-excellence-with-2026-promotion-and-tenure-awards/ Thu, 16 Apr 2026 13:17:42 +0000 /news/?p=152490 One hundred faculty members are recognized for excellence in teaching, research and service.

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麻豆原创 has recognized 100 faculty members with promotion and tenure for the 2025鈥26 academic year, marking a significant milestone in their academic careers and contributions to student success and the university.

Over the course of nearly a full academic year, peers, departmental and college leadership, and the university promotion and tenure committee engaged in a rigorous, multi-stage review to ensure candidates met 麻豆原创鈥檚 high standards in teaching, research, and service. Ultimately, they recommended 100 faculty members for promotion, including 23 for tenure.

Following the review process, the president and provost make final decisions on promotions, while the 麻豆原创 Board of Trustees provides final approval for tenure candidates. These decisions directly advance 麻豆原创鈥檚 strategic plan and its focus on recruiting and retaining highly qualified faculty 鈥 especially those who elevate student success, accelerate discovery and research, and strengthen the talent pipeline that drives innovation and economics for the state of Florida.

鈥淎t 麻豆原创, promotion and tenure reflects a thoughtful, rigorous review process and the high standards we set as an institution and state,鈥 says John Buckwalter, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a significant moment for these faculty, not just for the years of hard work it recognizes, but for what promotion and tenure represents: a sustained commitment to excellence, a deep dedication to student success, research that boldly improves lives, and the future we鈥檙e building together.鈥

Promotions and tenure conferrals annually take effect on Aug. 8.

The faculty members recognized below represent the continued strength and momentum of 麻豆原创.

Promotion to Associate Professor with Tenure

  • John Gardiner, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Tadashi Ishikawa, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Sara Raffel, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Jeffery Redding, College of Arts and Humanities
  • John Bush, College of Business
  • Seongho An, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Cynthia Williams, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Jiannan Chen, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Chinwendu Enyioha, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Ozlem Garibay, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Yao Li, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Miguel Bandres, College of Optics and Photonics
  • Robert Fitak, College of Sciences
  • Shyam Kattel, College of Sciences
  • Kelsey Larsen, College of Sciences
  • Kangsang Lee, College of Sciences
  • Xialing Lin, College of Sciences
  • Emily Zavodny, College of Sciences
  • Kayode Aleshinloye, Rosen College of Hospitality Management
  • Carissa Baker, Rosen College of Hospitality Management
  • YunYing Zhong, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Promotion to Associate Professor of Medicine with Tenure

  • Taj Azarian, College of Medicine
  • Thomas Kean, College of Medicine

Promotion to Professor (Tenured)

  • Thaddeus Anderson, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Ann Gleig, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Lanlan Kuang, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Sandra Sousa, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Mel Stanfill, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Melanie Guldi, College of Business
  • Xin He, College of Business
  • Laurie Campbell, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Eric Merriam, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Woo Hyoung Lee, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Thomas Wahl, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Yang Yang, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Jacqueline Towson, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Romain Gaume, College of Optics and Photonics
  • Jacopo Baggio, College of Sciences
  • Matthieu Baudelet, College of Sciences
  • Karin Chumbimuni Torres, College of Sciences
  • Geoffrey Cook, College of Sciences
  • Amy Donley, College of Sciences
  • Hsin鈥慔siung Huang, College of Sciences
  • Brigitte Kovacevich, College of Sciences
  • Arkadiy Lyakh, College of Sciences
  • Peter Smith, College of Sciences
  • Xiaohu Xia, College of Sciences

Promotion to Associate Professor of Medicine

  • Maria Farooq, College of Medicine

Promotion to Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine

  • Naziha Slimani, College of Medicine
  • Sharon Wasserstrom, College of Medicine

Promotion to Clinical Professor of Medicine

  • Mariana Dangiolo, College of Medicine

Promotion to Research Associate Professor

  • Crystal Maraj, Office of Research

Promotion to Associate Lecturer

  • Jonathan Barker, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Sara Willox, College of Business
  • Elizabeth Yost, College of Business
  • Michael Gilbrook, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Alison Redd, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Michael Redd, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Michael Chetta, College of Sciences
  • Heather Edwards, College of Sciences
  • Seongchun Kwon, College of Sciences
  • Adam Parrish, College of Sciences
  • Jamie Vega, College of Sciences
  • Tong Wan, College of Sciences
  • Rong Zhou, College of Sciences

Promotion to Senior Lecturer

  • Christy Flanagan鈥慒eddon, College of Arts and Humanities
  • David Head, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Deborah Leitch, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Amanda Snyder, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Jeanine Viau, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Constance Goodman, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Daniel Stephens, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Shane Trenta, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Marino Nader, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Sudeshna Pal, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Rachid Ait Maalem Lahcen, College of Sciences
  • Cynthia Bayer, College of Sciences
  • Martha Hubertz, College of Sciences
  • Tamra Legron鈥慠odriguez, College of Sciences
  • Hyung Park, College of Sciences
  • Widaad Zaman, College of Sciences

Promotion to Associate Instructor

  • Meeghan Faulconer, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Yukari Nakamura, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Carolina Salazar, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Punam Desormes, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Jorri Bright, College of Sciences
  • Richard Hall, College of Sciences
  • Nicholas Zuccarello, College of Sciences

Promotion to Senior Instructor

  • Rita De Luca Guerriero, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Steven Ton, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Todd Fix, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Julie Matura, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Lance Speere, College of Sciences
  • Abigail Ferreira, 麻豆原创 Global

Promotion to Associate Instructional Designer

  • Rebecca McNulty, Division of Digital Learning

Promotion to Senior Instructional Designer

  • Amy Sugar, Division of Digital Learning

Promotion to Associate Librarian

  • Renee Montgomery, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Promotion to University Librarian

  • Sai Deng, 麻豆原创 Libraries
  • Sarah Norris, 麻豆原创 Libraries
  • Andrew Todd, 麻豆原创 Libraries
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Bank of America Grant Helps 麻豆原创 Reach Goal to Fund Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion /news/bank-of-america-grant-helps-ucf-reach-goal-to-fund-dr-phillips-nursing-pavilion/ Thu, 09 Apr 2026 15:00:34 +0000 /news/?p=152242 The pivotal investment closes a $30 million private-funding campaign, which together with $43 million from the State of Florida, has brought a bold vision for the College of Nursing’s new home to life.

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Bank of America has awarded 麻豆原创 a $500,000 grant to support the on 麻豆原创鈥檚 Academic Health Sciences Campus in Lake Nona. The funds will propel critically needed nursing talent and healthcare innovation at the state-of-the-art facility.

The pivotal investment closes an aggressive and purposeful capital campaign to raise more than $30 million in private funding, which together with $43 million from the State of Florida, has brought 麻豆原创鈥檚 bold vision of a new home for its College of Nursing to life.

鈥淧urposeful partnerships are what move our people and ideas forward to shape the future,鈥 says 麻豆原创 President Alexander N. Cartwright. 鈥淥ur mission with this campaign was clear: to address Florida鈥檚 nursing shortage head-on by significantly increasing 麻豆原创鈥檚 capacity to prepare compassionate and highly skilled Knight nurses. Together, with the generous support of state leaders, donors and partners, we are moving healthcare forward by fueling talent and innovation.鈥

Opened in Fall 2025, the 90,000-square-foot Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion increases access to 麻豆原创鈥檚 accredited and nationally ranked nursing degree programs. One in four Florida nursing graduates already receive a degree from 麻豆原创, more than any other university in the state.

With the opening, 麻豆原创 will graduate an additional 150 newly licensed eligible nurses annually and directly impact Florida communities. Of the more than 17,000 Knight nurse alumni, 85% live and work in the Sunshine State and nearly 60% remain in Central Florida.

The facility comes at a critical time for the profession and state, which is facing a projected shortage of 37,400 registered nurses by 2035. To meet demand spurred from Florida鈥檚 rapidly growing and aging population, an estimated 2,300 RNs are needed to enter the workforce annually.

鈥淲e are incredibly grateful to Bank of America Central Florida for their support that will impact generations in Central Florida and beyond,鈥 says College of Nursing Dean Sharon Tucker. 鈥淭hrough philanthropic support and partnerships, 麻豆原创 has turned a challenge into opportunity 鈥 one that improves lives with increased access to a high-quality education and increased collaboration to innovate patient care. Together we are ensuring a healthier future for all.鈥

In addition to expanding classroom space, the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion dramatically expands space for simulation and immersive technologies to prepare future healthcare providers in the Helene Fuld Health Trust STIM Center. 麻豆原创 is a global leader in healthcare simulation, and the first in Florida with three global accolades in the innovative field.

With an optimal location in Lake Nona, adjacent to 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine and in a hub of industry activity, the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion is fueling greater collaborative research and learning opportunities. 麻豆原创 students gain hands-on clinical experiences at neighboring healthcare facilities and real-life practice in interdisciplinary care with the new 麻豆原创 Health Mobile Clinic.

鈥淭his building is positively impacting how my peers and I learn, as community support is at the forefront and motivates our studies,鈥 says Raquel Vargas, a current accelerated second degree BSN (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) student at 麻豆原创. 鈥淚n addition, the advanced technology in the simulation center is improving my ability to analyze and anticipate real-life patient scenarios, preparing me for my future clinical practice.鈥

The capital campaign launched in November 2022 anchored by a generous $10 million gift from Dr. Phillips Charities. Other founding donors of the facility include the Helene Fuld Health Trust, 麻豆原创 Pegasus Partners AdventHealth, Orlando Health, Nemours Children鈥檚 Health and Addition Financial, Zaby and Suree Vyas, and many others.

鈥淭hrough this grant, the Bank of America is bolstering the backbone of healthcare in one of our nation鈥檚 fastest-growing regions,鈥 says Naveed Shujaat, president, Bank of America Central Florida. 鈥淓ducation and healthcare are powerful forces in communities 鈥 catalysts that transform lives. This support for the education of future 麻豆原创 nurses will have an immeasurable impact on the patients and families they serve, especially in Florida.鈥

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麻豆原创 Graduate Programs Climb in U.S. News’ 2026 Rankings, Reflecting Strength in Serving National Needs /news/ucf-graduate-programs-climb-in-u-s-news-2026-rankings-reflecting-strength-in-serving-national-needs/ Tue, 07 Apr 2026 13:01:22 +0000 /news/?p=152125 As 麻豆原创鈥檚 graduate programs continue to rise, they reinforce the university鈥檚 role as a national leader preparing professionals to tackle society鈥檚 most urgent challenges.

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麻豆原创 continues our upward momentum in the 2026 U.S. News & World Report Graduate Programs Rankings, earning 14 recognitions in the top 50. From emergency management and counseling to nursing and aerospace engineering, 麻豆原创鈥檚 rise highlights a university-wide focus on faculty excellence, hands-on learning, and preparing graduates to lead in high-impact careers across critical workforces.

Two people posing for a photo in an emergency operation center
Boardman Endowed Professor of Environmental Science and Public Administration Christopher Emrich (left) and founding Director of 麻豆原创’s Emergency and Crisis Management Program Claire Connolly Knox (right) in the university’s Emergency Operations Center.

The National Leader in Emergency and Crisis Management

麻豆原创 earned the No. 1 Homeland/National Security and Emergency Management Graduate Program ranking in the nation for the聽 third consecutive year.

At the forefront of this year’s ranking is the College of Community Innovation and Education (CCIE)’s online emergency and crisis management program, signaling 麻豆原创鈥檚 long-standing leadership in programs that keep people safe from disasters of all kinds.

鈥淭o maintain the U.S. News No. 1 ranking of graduate programs in homeland security and emergency management is truly a team endeavor,鈥 Associate Professor of Public Administration Yue ‘Gurt’ Ge says. 鈥淚t reflects our nationally and internationally renowned faculty in education and research, our stellar students and alumni 鈥 who have become the backbone of the emergency management profession in Florida and beyond 鈥 and our signature staff members and advisory board representing government, nonprofit, and business sectors across Central Florida.鈥

That strong connection to practice is central to the program鈥檚 success. Faculty research influences policy nationwide, while students gain real-world insight through close partnerships with emergency managers at the local, state and federal levels. Graduates leave prepared to respond to complex crises, from natural disasters to public health emergencies, at a time when the need for highly trained professionals continues to grow.

Sejal Barden, left, and a student sit across from each other in matching blue armchairs in a counseling room as they engage in conversation.
Sejal Barden helps counselor education students gain real-world counseling experience through initiatives like Project Harmony and the 麻豆原创 Community Counseling and Research Center.

A Top-10 School Preparing Student Counselors

麻豆原创’s College of Community Innovation and Education also earned the No. 9 ranking for Student Counseling and Personnel Services Graduate Programs in the nation.

Recognition for CCIE’s student counseling聽 graduate program reflects 麻豆原创鈥檚 high-touch faculty mentorship model and its emphasis on integrating research, service, and professional preparation.

For Benoit Aubin, a first-year doctoral student in counselor education, that support has been transformative. A former firefighter and medic, Aubin now works as a mental health clinician for his former fire station while serving as a graduate research assistant with 麻豆原创鈥檚 Marriage and Family Research Institute (MFRI).

With guidance from Department of Counselor Education and School Psychology Chair and MFRI Executive Director Sejal Barden, Aubin has conducted clinical research focused on trauma and relationship stress among first-responder couples. His work has already contributed to a funded grant, conference presentations, a published book and the development of a training program 鈥 achievements he credits to a highly supportive learning environment.

鈥溌槎乖 knows how to prepare us to compete professionally,鈥 Aubin says.

Acute Care Nurse Practitioner DNP students demonstrate skills in the health assessment lab during the opening tour of the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in Lake Nona.
Acute care nurse practitioner DNP students demonstrate skills in the health assessment lab during the opening tour of the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in Lake Nona.

A 34-Spot Rise in Advanced Nursing Education

麻豆原创’s College of Nursing jumped 聽34 spots to No. 37 for Doctor of Nursing Practice Graduate Programs in the nation 鈥 the highest ranking in the college鈥檚 history.

麻豆原创’s Doctor of Nursing Practice program (DNP) improved ranking reflects a continued investment in academic rigor, faculty expertise and hands-on clinical training designed to address the nation鈥檚 growing need for nurse practitioners.

Graduates from the DNP program consistently outperform national first-time pass rates on nurse practitioner certification exams. They also often receive job offers before they even complete their degrees, according to Christopher Blackwell 鈥00 鈥01MSN 鈥05PhD, director of 麻豆原创鈥檚 adult-gerontology acute care nurse practitioner program. All full-time faculty hold at least one doctoral degree, more than half remain actively practicing clinicians and many are nationally recognized fellows. Through partnerships with healthcare organizations across Central Florida students gain applied experience alongside expert preceptors in varied clinical settings.

鈥淭he incredible amount of support I鈥檝e received from 麻豆原创鈥檚 nursing professors and the opportunities to make an impact through my research and clinical practice solidified that I made the best choice in my graduate degree,鈥 says Mimi Alliance 鈥21, a family nurse practitioner doctoral student who provides care and conducts research on the 麻豆原创 Mobile Health Clinic.

Some of that training is anchored in the college鈥檚 Helene Fuld Health Trust STIM Center, an internationally recognized simulation facility that strengthens clinical skills and decision-making before students enter patient-care environments. The STIM Center, as well as 麻豆原创鈥檚 nursing programs, are housed in the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion, which opened in Lake Nona in Fall 2025 thanks to generous state and industry support 鈥 a proof point of 麻豆原创’s ability to solve real-world issues.

Two researchers working in a lab with green light
Postdoctoral scholar and alum Rachel Hyvotick ’24MS ’25PhD (left) working with Trustee Chair Professor Kareem Ahmed in the 麻豆原创 HyperSpace Center.

Building on a Legacy of Aerospace Engineering Excellence

As Florida鈥檚 Technological University, 麻豆原创 continues to build on our strength in technology-driven fields by ranking No. 38 for Aerospace Engineering Graduate Programs in the nation.

The 麻豆原创 College of Engineering and Computer Sciencesaerospace engineering graduate program ranking reinforces the university鈥檚 legacy in a field deeply tied to Florida鈥檚 Space Coast and NASA’s recent Artemis II launch.

鈥淚t is gratifying to see the hard work and exciting research of our faculty and students recognized by our peers,鈥 says Associate Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Jeffrey Kauffman, noting that since launching the aerospace engineering doctoral program in 2019, 麻豆原创 has steadily climbed in rankings while program enrollment has grown to more than 100 doctoral students.

Fueling that growth are advances in hypersonic flight, space exploration and defense research, with 麻豆原创鈥檚 HyperSpace Center serving as a catalyst for interdisciplinary collaboration. Faculty success in securing competitive federal research funding has strengthened infrastructure and expanded opportunities for both graduate and undergraduate students.

The result is a vibrant research environment where students engage directly in cutting-edge projects and build industry connections well before entering the workforce.

Across disciplines, 麻豆原创鈥檚 growth in the U.S. News & World Report’s graduate rankings reflects a shared commitment to student success 鈥 driven by faculty who mentor closely, curricula that align with real-world needs and an institutional culture focused on impact. As 麻豆原创鈥檚 graduate programs continue to climb, they reinforce the university鈥檚 role as a national leader preparing professionals to tackle society鈥檚 most urgent challenges.

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麻豆原创_Emergency Management_2025 Sejal Barden-MFRI Sejal Barden helps counselor education students gain real-world counseling experience through initiatives like Project Harmony and the 麻豆原创 Community Counseling and Research Center. 麻豆原创_College of Nursing_Grad Students Acute Care Nurse Practitioner DNP students demonstrate skills in the health assessment lab during the opening tour of the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in Lake Nona. 麻豆原创_HyperspaceCenter_2025 Postdoctoral scholar and alum Rachel Hyvotick '24MS '25PhD (left) working with Trustee Chair Professor Kareem Ahmed in the 麻豆原创 HyperSpace Center.
麻豆原创 Nursing Expert Honored for Contributions to Critical Care /news/ucf-nursing-expert-honored-for-contributions-to-critical-care/ Mon, 06 Apr 2026 14:00:49 +0000 /news/?p=152100 Associate Professor Brian Peach is the only nursing expert in Florida to earn the prestigious distinction of fellow of Critical Care Medicine in 2026.

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During the 2026 Society of Critical Care Medicine Congress, thousands of healthcare professionals gathered to advance patient care and recognize the experts leading the way 鈥 including 麻豆原创 Nursing Associate Professor Brian Peach.

麻豆原创 Nursing Associate Professor Brian Peach onstage during the induction ceremony for the American College of Critical Care Medicine.

Peach was the only nursing expert in Florida inducted into this year鈥檚 class of fellows of the American College of Critical Care Medicine, a prestigious distinction recognizing healthcare leaders who鈥檝e made outstanding contributions to critical care through clinical excellence, program development and scholarly activities.

Improving Patient Outcomes

Peach has dedicated nearly two decades to improving critical care 鈥 from the patient bedside as an intensive care unit (ICU) nurse and leader to advancing the field as an educator and researcher.

“… the best patient care and research outcomes are achieved through interdisciplinary teamwork.”

His clinical career spanned three teaching facilities 鈥 the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, University of Florida Health Shands Hospital and Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center 鈥 where he advanced into leadership roles and collaborated across disciplines to improve patient outcomes and drive quality initiatives, including improving time-sensitive sepsis care to save lives.

鈥淚 firmly believe that the best patient care and research outcomes are achieved through interdisciplinary teamwork, where each professional鈥檚 expertise enhances the collective effort,鈥 Peach says. 鈥淢y experiences have reinforced my commitment to fostering collaborations that drive meaningful improvements in healthcare.鈥

Advancing Education and Science

While his clinical work laid the foundation, Peach recognized a broader purpose: preparing future nurses and advancing the science behind critical care.

At 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Nursing, he鈥檚 led a critical care course that emphasizes essential concepts through case-based learning that prepare future nurses for real-world practice. He also serves as the college鈥檚 Honors Undergraduate Thesis liaison, advising nearly 25 undergraduate and graduate students in independent research in the field.

Nationally, Peach extends his impact through leadership and service. He’s served as a reviewer for multiple critical care publications and collaborates with experts on projects like the next tier of the Society of Critical Care Medicine鈥檚 Centers of Excellence program, which will recognize hospitals for excellence in ICU care.

His award-winning research, shared globally through publications and presentations, focuses on improving outcomes for septic patients and, more recently, advancing care for ICU delirium and post-intensive care syndrome (PICS).

Advocating for Intensive Care Survivors

PICS 鈥 a syndrome involving new or worsened physical, cognitive and mental health impairments following an ICU admission 鈥 affects a significant portion of survivors. Of the more than 5.7 million Americans admitted to ICUs each year, about 70% survive, and it鈥檚 estimated that more than half experience lasting impairments.

Peach has become an advocate for critical illness survivors, dedicated to raising awareness and improving care. He currently leads a virtual reality exposure therapy trial for the treatment of PICS in critical illness survivors and frequently speaks on the topic at conferences, healthcare facilities and to the media.

鈥淗elping shed light on the hidden burden carried by ICU survivors 鈥 and the gap between survival and true recovery 鈥 motivates my work,鈥 he says.

As a member of the PICS Advocacy Network, he was inspired to co-found Orlando鈥檚 Walk-4-PICS campaign in 2024. It鈥檚 now one of the largest events in a global effort to raise awareness and connect survivors and their families with resources and research opportunities.

“… by allowing researchers to track data nationwide, [the diagnostic code] could help make the case that PICS research warrants greater investment.”

Earlier this month, Peach presented a proposal to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advocating for a PICS ICD-10 diagnostic code. If approved, the code would allow providers to formally diagnose PICS and enable researchers to track its prevalence. A decision is expected by Summer 2026.

鈥淭his code has the potential to dramatically influence health policy and research funding,鈥 Peach says. 鈥淢illions of people across the U.S. suffering from PICS conditions will officially be able to receive a diagnosis. Furthermore, by allowing researchers to track data nationwide, it could help make the case that PICS research warrants greater investment.鈥

For Peach, it鈥檚 the people behind the statistics that inspire his work. It鈥檚 the personal stories of the ICU survivors he meets, the achievements of the students he mentors and the thought leaders he collaborates with to create change.

鈥淚 look forward to [continuing] to advance critical care through collaboration and mentorship,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd to improving care for patients, survivors and their families.鈥

If you’re a critical illness survivor living with new or worsened physical, cognitive or mental health conditions, you may qualify for one of Peach鈥檚 studies.

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Brian-Peach_fellowship induction 麻豆原创 Nursing Associate Professor Brian Peach stands onstage during the induction ceremony for the 2026 fellows class of the American College of Critical Care Medicine.
Founders’ Day 2026: Faculty Recognized for Excellence /news/founders-day-2026-faculty-awards/ Wed, 01 Apr 2026 17:30:00 +0000 /news/?p=152007 The annual event spotlights approximately 280 faculty for excellence, years of service, and other contributions that drive what鈥檚 next at 麻豆原创.

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麻豆原创 will highlight approximately 280 faculty members for academic excellence and service at Wednesday鈥檚 annual Founders鈥 Day Faculty Honors Celebration in the Student Union鈥檚 Pegasus Ballroom.

Recipients will include this year鈥檚 awardees of some of the highest honors the university bestows, including: Pegasus Professor; the鈥疢edal of Societal Impact; the Reach for the Stars Award; the Big 12 Faculty Member of the Year Award; and the Champion of Student Success and Well-Being.

Also being honored are university excellence award winners; those who recently reached milestone years of service; Faculty Senate service awardees; faculty granted鈥别尘别谤颈迟耻蝉鈥辞谤鈥别尘别谤颈迟补鈥status; and retired or retiring faculty members.

This year鈥檚 celebration includes recognition of Chuck Dziuban, one of the longest-serving and most trailblazing faculty members in school history. His remarkable 55-year-career includes being 麻豆原创鈥檚 inaugural Pegasus Professor and founding director of the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning.

Starting this year at Founders鈥 Day, the Chuck D. Dziuban Award for Excellence in Online Teaching will be given to underscore the talented faculty behind 麻豆原创鈥檚 nationally renowned reputation as a leader in in online teaching and learning.

Here are this year鈥檚 faculty honorees.

2x2 grid of portraits of Hassan Foroosh (upper left), Carmen Giurgescu (upper right), Annette Khaled (bottom left) and Matthew Marino (bottom right)
Hassan Foroosh (upper left); Carmen Giurgescu (upper right); Annette Khaled (bottom left); and Matthew Marino (bottom right) are the recipients of the 2026 Pegasus Professor Award. (Photos by Antoine Hart)

Pegasus Professor Award

Hassan聽Foroosh,聽College of Engineering and Computer Science

Carmen聽Giurgescu, College of Nursing

Annette R. Khaled, College of Medicine

Matthew Marino, College of聽Community Innovation and Education

3 x 3 grid of portraits of six Reach for the Stars award winners
Reach for the Stars Award winners: Hao-Zheng (top left), Ana Carolina de Souza Feliciano (top right), Soyoung Park (middle left), John Bush (middle right), Kevin Moran (bottom left), and Shyam Kattel (bottom right).

Reach for the Stars Award

John Bush, College of Business

Ana Carolina聽de Souza Feliciano, Office of Research

Shyam Kattel, College of Sciences

Kevin Moran, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Soyoung Park, College of Community Innovation and Education

Hao Zheng, College of Engineering and Computer Sciences

Zhihua Qu

Medal of Societal Impact Award

Zhihua Qu, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Champion of Student Success and Well-Being Award

Suha Saleh,聽College of Health Professions and Sciences

Deborah Beidel
Deborah Beidel

Big 12 Faculty Member of the Year

Deborah Beidel, College of Sciences

Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching

College Awardees

Tanvir Ahmed, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Norine Blanch, College of Community Innovation and Education

Matthew Bryan, College of Arts and Humanities

Peter Delfyett, College of Optics and Photonics

Nyla Dil, College of Medicine

Katia Ferdowsi, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Murat Hancer, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Deborah Horzen, College of Arts and Humanities

Richard Jerousek, College of Sciences

Betsy Kalin, College of Sciences

Evelin Pegoraro, College of Arts and Humanities

Richard Plate, College of Community Innovation and Education

Alfons Schulte, College of Sciences

Nicholas Shrubsole, College of Arts and Humanities

Daniel Stephens, College of Community Innovation and Education

Wei Sun, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Danielle Webster, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Sara Willox, College of Business

Xiaohu Xia, College of Sciences

Widaad Zaman, College of Sciences

University Winner

Norine Blanch, College of Community Innovation and Education

Excellence in Graduate Teaching

College Awardees

Shaurya Agarwal, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Kim Anderson, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Christopher Blackwell, College of Nursing

Shannon Carter, College of Sciences

Sasan Fathpour, College of Optics and Photonics

Murat Hancer, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Dana Joseph, College of Business

Magdalena Pasarica, College of Medicine

Mel Stanfill, College of Arts and Humanities

Vassiliki Zygouris-Coe, College of Community Innovation and Education

University Winner

Christopher Blackwell, College of Nursing

Excellence in Research

College Awardees

Sarah Bush, College of Community Innovation and Education

Zixi (Jack) Cheng, College of Medicine

Enrique Del Barco, College of Sciences

Romain Gaume, College of Optics and Photonics

Nan Hua, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Kevin Mullally, College of Business

Matthew Stock, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Ladda Thiamwong, College of Nursing

Subith Vasu, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Cyrus Zargar, College of Arts and Humanities

University Winner

Enrique Del Barco, College of Sciences

Brunette woman wearing glasses, green shirt and plaid skirt stands in conference room with large table and yellow chairs
Nicole Lapeyrouse 鈥16MS 鈥18PhD (Photo by Antoine Hart)

Chuck D. Dziuban Award for Excellence in Online Teaching

Nicole Lapeyrouse, College of Sciences

Excellence in Faculty Academic Advising

Emily Proulx, College of Arts and Humanities

Excellence in Professional Service

Linda Walters, College of Sciences

Excellence in Librarianship

Katy Miller, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Excellence in Instructional Design

Amy Sugar, Division of Digital Learning

University Award for Excellence in Mentoring Doctoral Students

Engineering, Physical Sciences and Life Sciences

Subith Vasu, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Social Science, Humanities, Education, Business, Art and Health

David Boote, College of Community Innovation and Education

University Award for Excellence in Mentoring Postdoctoral Scholars

Kausik Mukhopadhyay, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Thomas Wahl, College of Engineering and Computer Science

20 Years of Service

Haiyan Bai, College of Community Innovation and Education

Brian Barone, College of Arts and Humanities

Aman Behal, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Corinne Bishop, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Joseph Brennan, College of Sciences

Mark Calabrese, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Li-Mei Chen, College of Medicine

Baiyun Chen, Division of Digital Learning

Joshua Colwell, College of Sciences

William Crampton, College of Sciences

Richard Curcio, College of Business

Donovan Dixon, College of Sciences

Martin Dupuis, Burnett Honors College

Michelle Dusseau, College of Sciences

Dorin Dutkay, College of Sciences

Kirk Gay, College of Arts and Humanities

Deborah German, College of Medicine

William Hagedorn, College of Community Innovation and Education

Joseph Harrington, College of Sciences

Fayeza Hasanat, College of Arts and Humanities

Bobby Hoffman, College of Community Innovation and Education

Elizabeth Hoffman, College of Community Innovation and Education

Alisha Janowsky, College of Sciences

Abdelkader Kara, College of Sciences

David Kwun, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Stephen Lambert, College of Medicine

Peter Larson, College of Arts and Humanities

Joseph LaViola Jr., College of Engineering and Computer Science

Edgard Maboudou, College of Sciences

Kevin Mackie, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Iryna Malendevych, College of Community Innovation and Education

Jonathan Matusitz, College of Sciences

Holly McDonald, College of Arts and Humanities

Florin Mihai, College of Arts and Humanities

Olga Molina, College of Health Professions and Sciences

George Musambira, College of Sciences

Nina Orlovskaya, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Talat Rahman, College of Sciences

25 Years of Service

Laura Albers-Biddle, College of Community Innovation and Education

Steven Berman, College of Sciences

Tarek Buhagiar, College of Business

Melissa Dagley, College of Sciences

Sabatino DiBernardo, College of Arts and Humanities

Mark Dickie, College of Business

Ivan Garibay, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Anthony Grajeda, College of Arts and Humanities

Bari Hoffman, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Steven Hornik, College of Business

Anna Jones, College of Arts and Humanities

Mikhail Klimov, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Stefanie Mayfield Garcia, College of Business

Rudy McDaniel, College of Arts and Humanities

Rachel Mulvihill, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Christopher Niess, College of Arts and Humanities

Eugene Paoline, College of Community Innovation and Education

Sumanta Pattanaik, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Tison Pugh, College of Arts and Humanities

Walter Sotero, College of Sciences

Suren Tatulian, College of Sciences

Nizam Uddin, College of Sciences

Lei Wei, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Graham Worthy, College of Sciences

Shin-Tson Wu, College of Optics and Photonics

30 Years of Service

Charlie Abraham, College of Arts and Humanities

Helen Becker, College of Business

James Campbell, College of Arts and Humanities

Karl X. Chai, College of Medicine

Ratna Chakrabarti, College of Medicine

Jill Fjelstul, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Barbara Fritzsche, College of Sciences

Nora Lee Garc铆a, College of Arts and Humanities

Linwood Jones, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Alexander Katsevich, College of Sciences

Kuotsai Tom Liou, College of Community Innovation and Education

Lisa Logan, College of Arts and Humanities

Humberto L贸pez Cruz, College of Arts and Humanities

Eric Martin, Office of Research

Kevin Meehan, College of Arts and Humanities

Charles H. Reilly, Office of the Provost

Timothy Rotarius, College of Community Innovation and Education

Peter Spyers-Duran, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Alexander Tovbis, College of Sciences

Laurence von Kalm, College of Sciences

Linda Walters, College of Sciences

Bruce Wilson, College of Sciences

Hong Zhang, College of Arts and Humanities

Ying Zhang, 麻豆原创 Libraries

35 Years of Service

Issa Batarseh, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Alain Kassab, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Mansooreh Mollaghasemi, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Robert Peale, College of Sciences

Chung-Ching Wang, College of Sciences

40 Years of Service

Ahmad Elshennawy, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Michael Georgiopoulos, College of Engineering and Computer Science

David Hagan, College of Optics and Photonics

Anna Lillios, College of Arts and Humanities

Mubarak Shah, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Kalpathy Sundaram, College of Engineering and Computer Science

45 Years of Service

Robert Rivers, College of Arts and Humanities

55 Years of Service

Chuck Dziuban, Division of Digital Learning

Faculty Emeritus and Emerita

Lynn Casmier-Paz, College of Arts and Humanities

James Clark, College of Arts and Humanities

Teresa Dorman, College of Sciences

Chuck Dziuban, Division of Digital Learning

Amy Giroux, College of Arts and Humanities

Glenda Gunter, College of Community Innovation and Education

Michael Hampton, College of Sciences

Richard Hofler, College of Business

Robin Kohn, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Piotr Mikusinski, College of Sciences

Ram Mohapatra, College of Sciences

Donna Neff, College of Nursing

Alice Noblin, College of Community Innovation and Education

Robert Peale, College of Sciences

Trey Philpotts, College of Arts and Humanities

Robin Roberts, College of Business

Sherron Killingsworth Roberts, College of Community Innovation and Education

Lisa Roney, College of Arts and Humanities

Sybil St. Claire, College of Arts and Humanities

Terry Ann Thaxton, College of Arts and Humanities

Deborah Weaver, College of Arts and Humanities

Retired Faculty

Ahlam Al-Rawi, College of Sciences

Donna Breit, College of Nursing

Martha Brenckle, College of Arts and Humanities

Chinyen Chuo, Student Success and Well-Being

Therese Coleman, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Robertico Croes, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Juli Dixon, College of Community Innovation and Education

Teresa Dorman, College of Sciences

Chuck Dziuban, Division of Digital Learning

Philip Fairey, Office of Research

John Fauth, College of Sciences

Amy Giroux, College of Arts and Humanities

Glenda Gunter, College of Community Innovation and Education

Michael Hampton, College of Sciences

Roger Handberg, College of Sciences

C. Keith Harrison, College of Business

Randall Hewitt, College of Community Innovation and Education

Rebecca Hines, College of Community Innovation and Education

Richard Hofler, College of Business

Charlie Hughes, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Alvaro Islas, College of Sciences

Mourad Ismail, College of Sciences

David Jenkins, College of Sciences

Michael Johnson, Office of the Provost

Dayle Jones, College of Community Innovation and Education

Denise Kay, College of Medicine

Gary Leavens, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Mary Little, College of Community Innovation and Education

Humberto L贸pez Cruz, College of Arts and Humanities

Michael Macedonia, Office of Research

Wasfy Mikhael, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Piotr Mikusinski, College of Sciences

Roslyn Miller, Division of Digital Learning

Ram Mohapatra, College of Sciences

Vicki Montoya, College of Nursing

Brian Moore, College of Sciences

Donna Felber Neff, College of Nursing

Alice Noblin, College of Community Innovation and Education

Peggy Nuhn, 麻豆原创 Libraries

Joyce Nutta, College of Community Innovation and Education

Jeffrey O鈥橞rien, College of Business

Bendegul Okumus, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Fevzi Okumus, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Robert Peale, College of Sciences

Trey Philpotts, College of Arts and Humanities

Brian Plamondon, Office of Research

Michael Proctor, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Enrique Puig, College of Community Innovation and Education

Pedro Quintana-Ascencio, College of Sciences

Mark Rapport, College of Sciences

Sherron Roberts, College of Community Innovation and Education

Kelly Schaffer, College of Community Innovation and Education

Elzbieta Sikorska, College of Sciences

Jo Smith, Division of Digital Learning

Sybil St. Claire, College of Arts and Humanities

Mark Steiner, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Raymond Surette, College of Community Innovation and Education

Terry Ann Thaxton, College of Arts and Humanities

Patti Thielemann, College of Nursing

Cheryl Van De Mark, College of Community Innovation and Education

Martine Vanryckeghem, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Jane Vaughan, College of Arts and Humanities

Scott Warfield, College of Arts and Humanities

Debbie Weaver, College of Arts and Humanities

Philip Wessel, College of Community Innovation and Education

James Whitworth, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Boguslawa Anna Wolford, College of Community Innovation and Education

Laine Wyatt, College of Arts and Humanities

Cherie Yestrebsky, College of Sciences

Martin Klapheke, College of Medicine

Stephen Lambert, College of Medicine

Olga Molina, College of Health Professions and Sciences

Euripides Montagne, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Darlin’ Neal, College of Arts and Humanities

Michael Pape, College of Business

Tison Pugh, College of Arts and Humanities

David Young, College of Sciences

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FoundersDay-ucf-2026 Hassan Foroosh (upper left); Carmen Giurgescu (upper right); Annette Khaled (bottom left); and Matthew Marino (bottom right) are the recipients of the 2026 Pegasus Professor Award. (Photos by Antoine Hart) 麻豆原创 reach for the stars awards 2026 Reach for the Stars Award winners 麻豆原创_Zhihua-Qu_2026_3 麻豆原创_Deborah-Beidel_2025 Deborah Beidel ucf-Nicole Lapeyrouse-online-award Nicole Lapeyrouse 鈥16MS 鈥18PhD (Photo by Antoine Hart)
Founders’ Day 2026: Employee Excellence, Years of Service Awards /news/founders-day-2026-employee-awards/ Wed, 01 Apr 2026 16:22:12 +0000 /news/?p=151962 The annual event spotlights nearly 600 staff members for their commitment, dedication and relentless work that powers 麻豆原创 everyday.

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麻豆原创 honored approximately 580 staff members on Founders鈥 Day, our annual celebration of employees, faculty and students who fuel 麻豆原创鈥檚 excellence and impact.

The university recognized employees who reached milestone years of service, along with those recently retired or about to be. 麻豆原创 also presented a Champion of Student Success and Well-Being Award and excellence awards in recognition of employees who made exceptional contributions to benefit the campus community.

鈥淲e celebrate your service, your dedication, and the impact you make across this university. But behind that recognition is something even more powerful: the daily commitment, the steady work, and the consistency that build momentum over time,鈥 says 麻豆原创 President Alexander N. Cartwright. 鈥淭he future we talk about at 麻豆原创 is not something that begins someday. It is already taking shape in the work you do, in the systems you support, and in the experiences you create for our students.聽Thank you.鈥

麻豆原创 this year brought a new category of Employee Leadership Excellence Awards, recognizing non-faculty administrative leadership at the director level and above. They joined the expanded Employee Excellence Awards, which highlighted the remarkable contributions of full-time employees up to an associate director level.

The employee event kicked off a Founders鈥 Day celebration that also included faculty and student celebrations. Combined, more than 900 honorees were recognized during the three ceremonies this year.

Here are the honorees from this year鈥檚 Employee Honors Celebration.

Excellence Awards

Employee Excellence Awards for Operational Excellence

Arijeta Kavaja, Public Safety

Cecily McCoy-Fisher, Office of Research

Anna Nye, Office of Risk and Safety

Cindy Prophitt, Facilities and Business Operations

Employee Excellence Awards for Student Success

Cynthia Almanzar, Student Success and Well-Being

Laura Czerkies, Burnett Honors College

Michael McKee, College of Optics and Photonics

Donna Mercado, College of Nursing

Employee Excellence Awards for Community Well-Being

Jodi Reinhart, College of Sciences

Lorna Rodriguez, College of Engineering and Computer Science

David Stoneburner, Office of Institutional Resources

Mykhael Walker, Analytics and Integrated Planning

Employee Excellence Awards for Service and Partnership

Drew Barnes, College of Graduate Studies

Faith DeLorenzo, Digital Learning

Lovelyn Findley, Advancement and Partnerships

Antoine Hart, University Strategic Communications

Employee Excellence Awards Nominees

Sadia Afrin

Cynthia Almanzar

Michelle Anchel

Otto Argibay

Anthony (Joey) Asti

Drew Barnes

Alexandra Barraza-Oliphant

Davalda 鈥淒ee鈥 Bellot

Jim Bennett

Miryana Blesso

Monique Carter

Laura Czerkies

Faith DeLorenzo

Lovelyn Findley

Amanda Greaves

Antoine Hart

Christina Hussey

Alexis Hutchins

Erica Hutton

Kat Jones

Arijeta Kavaja

Marsha Kernica

Melina Kinsey

Keanna Machado

Jay Malcolm

Chuck Mannella

Samantha Mason

Cecily McCoy-Fisher

Michael McKee

Donna Mercado

Traci Mibuta

Anna Nye

Steven Pardo

Diana Perez

Anthony Piazza

Cindy Prophitt

Frances 鈥淔ran鈥 Ragsdale

Matthew Rall

Jodi Reinhart

Lorna Rodriguez

Ashley Samson

William Self

Maricel Soto

Jennifer Stalzer

Emily Stettner

David Stoneburner

Jeremiah Taylor

Rebecca Underhill

Mykhael Walker

Denise Whiteside

Maria Williams

Employee Leadership Excellence Awards

Employee Leadership Excellence Award for Strategic Execution

Andre Watts, Analytics and Integrated Planning

Employee Leadership Excellence Award for People Leadership and Talent Stewardship

Andrea Withington, College of Community Innovation and Education

Employee Leadership Excellence Award for Advancing Collaboration and Partnership

Germayne Graham, Student Programs and Outreach

Employee Leadership Excellence Award for Innovation, Improvement, and Bold Action

Kim Smith, Office of Research

Employee Leadership Excellence Awards Nominees

Drew Andrews

Morgan Bauer

Austin Bott

Brian Boyd

David Canova

Megan Carrigan

Shafaq Chaudhry

Sherri Dixon

Madi Dogariu

Michael Duong

Amy Ellis

Gerard Flood

Steven Freund

Andrea Gandy

Delia Garcia

Germayne Graham

Stephanie Heron

Dana Juntunen

Kerlene King

Ashley Longoria

Ayanna Lopez

Carla McCabe

Rudy McDaniel

Amy Perry

Charlie Piper

Candida Richards

Elizabeth Richner

Cesar RiveraCruzado

Rex Roberts

Anastasia Salter

Wendy Sarubbi

Basma Selim

Kim Smith

Meghan Truhett

Suzzette Turner

Michael Wainstein

Tyler Walsh

Andre Watts

Danta White

Andrea Withington

Champion of Student Success and Well-Being Award

Rosemarie Mendoza, Facilities and Business Operations

Emerita Status Awardee

Amy Giroux, College of Arts and Humanities

Employee Service Awards

45 Years of Service

Donna Hickson

35 Years of Service

Tina Maier

Michael Reed

Patricia Trovillion

30 Years of Service

Sharon Bady

Travis Cain

Adrianne Demetry

Francisco Dionisi

Joel Lavoie

Elizabeth Rivera

25 Years of Service

Herlinda Bedoya

Michael Bell

Abdulbaset Benwali

Terri Bigham

Bruce Boutwell

Olivia Bridges

Amy Buford

Cristina Caamano

Carlos Chardon

Keith Coelho

Janny Colon

Elizabeth Costello

Al Davis

Steven Dick

Rafael Durand

Sira Giron

Rebecca Hammond

Jonathan Hanie

Keith Honaker

Davina Hovanec

Latchmin Jaggernauth

Susan Jefferson

Georgia Kent

Michelle Matthews

Andrew O’Mara

Jennifer Opper

Naya Ramirez

Gail Raymond

Brenda Rodrigues

Timothy Ryan

Maria Santiago

Heather Simeon

Carl Truesdell

Meena Turner

Maria Williams

Dela Williams

Andrea Withington

20 Years of Service

Michael Aldarondo-Jeffries

Lindsay Archambault

Gloria Bastidas

Renee Bence

Eric Brewington

Daren Caine

Michael Callahan

Marc Cassidy

Robin Chan

Karen Cox

Kelley Dietrich

Matthew Dunn

Scott Eberle

Cecilia Elias

Samuel Ensenat

Marelis Figueredo Garcia

Matthew Fitzgerald

Scott Freeman

Glenn Gaborko

Tyniesia Gandy

Kelly Gill

Lindana Gomez

Brian Graham

Timothy Haduch

Jenny Hartman

Elizabeth Herrera

Sarah Hunt

Tamara Jomarron

Carreen Krapf

Ellaine Leodones

Marlene Lugo

Carlos Martinez

Deysi Mercedes

Heather Murphy

Uday Nair

Perla Ongy

Robert (Bob) Opdahl

Haresh Patel

Rachel Perry

Omesh Persaud

Sandy Pouliot

Christine Pugh

Luz Quintero

Maria Quintero

Christopher Rains

Tim Reid

Elizabeth Rodriguez

Terrance Rooth

Diana Santiago

Saul Santiago

Kathy Sapp

Basma Selim

Romeo Sibayan

Jeff Smith

George Taylor

Lynda Toussaint

Shreya Trivedi

Reina Vazquez

Tonya Walker

15 Years of Service

Marlene Agostini

Jose Arce

Lucy Bautista

Randy Beck

Aiza Beguez

Miryana Blesso

Carolyn Castro

Silvia Cerro

Lorinda Clark

Patricia Colyer

Theresa Davis

Dani Draper

Jennifer Elliott

Tamara Gabrus

Ernie Gemeinhart

Jessica Glaspie

James Grant

Lisa Haas

Allison Henderson

Maribel Herrera

Jason Kennedy

Ann Kershner

Usha Lal

Dora Laureano

Hank Lewis

Ujjwala Magdum

Jennifer Mark

Jessica Matos

Meghan McCollum

Amanda Miller

Tracey Morrison

Kimberly Nassoiy

Beth Nettles

Hoang Nguyen

Jorge Olmedo

Minh Phan

Rhett Proctor

Elida Prophete

Michael Pugh

Ligia Ramirez

Rebeca Richards

Maria Rodriguez

Daniel Sagendorf

Kimberly Sargent

Wendy Sarubbi

Nick Schenk

Dave Schreier

Lori Shuff

Jacob Skinner

Terri Smith

Suzanne Stalvey

Brian Strickland

Christy Tant

Freddie Tirado Jr.

Joanne Toole

Roger Tripp

Matthew Vaccaro

Tamara Vassallo Soto

Martha Wiggins

Wanda Wint

10 Years of Service

Danielle Adams

Terrell Alexander

Julissa Alicea

Lindsey Anderson

Nadine Arentz

Jose Ayala Torres

Morgan Bauer

Shaun Black

John Boehm

Kate Brinister

Danilo Canlas

Megan Carrigan

Melissa Choinski

Madhavi Chokshi

Lorine Cisch-Taylor

Lisa Clendenning

Shannon Colon

Robert Connors

John Cooke

Todd Coon

Richard Cortez-Satterlee

Joanna Couch

Brandon Couts

Meghan Crowther

Summer Davis

Katherine Del Cid

Vanessa Delgado

Gerald Dillon

Kerri Drylie

Mirvate El Jerdi

Shajira El Masri

Amy Ellis

Jerad Engel

Damian Fagan

Marites Falkenhausen

Sarah Farrell

Jessica Fasano

Ben Fauser

Melissa Fawcett

Janet Feliciano

Valentina Fernandez

Jason Francis

Neftali Garcia

Eileen Garner

Christopher Gase

Kristina Gomez

Agustin Gonzalez

Adriel Gonzalez Gutierrez

Ryan Goodwin

Liz Gordian Olmo

Walter Gordon

Rhonda Granger Gomez

Josh Haupt

George Hayner Jr.

Rita Higgins

Katherine Hoefer

Elizabeth Hughes

Erica Hutton

Renee Johnston

Nathanael Jones

Megan Kellogg

Brian Kelly

Mike Kilbride

Maureen Landgraf

Daniel Lee

Missy Lesnewski

Ian Levy

Sarojben Limbachia

George Lopez

Ricardo Lopez

Juan Lugo

Karemah Manselle

Kristy McAllister

Justin McGill

Pamela McGlinchey

Oliver McSurley

Rebecca Meadows

Nelson Mendez

Pamela Mills

Mike Minutelli

Eli Mizell

Angela Moreira

Rebecca Mowrer

Lauren Murray-Lemon

David Neese

Lucas Noboa

Loida Olivas

Jeffrey Panter

Steven Pardo

Juana Pasco

Laura Patterson

Deborah Pease

Miguel Pellot

Ryan Pendry

Karen Peterson

Wanda Pruett-Butler

Abner Ramos Pi帽ero

Erica Recktenwald

Samantha Redlund

Elizabeth Richner

Carlos Rivera

Victor Rivera

Lisa Roberts

Jacob Scholtz

Skender Shehu

Mari Sievinen

Kiela Sims

Aaron Smart

Liza Smith

Casey Smith

Esperanza Soto

Calvin Soto

Tenley Sterkel

Timothy Sullivan

Jackson Thevenin

Danielle Traylor

Wanda Tummons

Anna Velocci

Brian Villar

Stephen Villiotis

Paul Werden

Jonathan White

Barbara Wilson

Dylan Yonts

5 Years of Service

Lidya Abdelmalak

Elna Andreeva

Dana Archer

Linnette Aviles

Jessica Banos

Arismir Barreiras Peralta

Kristy Beitler

Summer Bernini

Abby Bertrand

Mayra Bonilla Torres

Melissa Braillard

Drew Bryant

Barbara Busch

Jess Camacho

Alexander N. Cartwright

Maria Ceku

Gianna Cifredo

Wilfredo Cornelio

Mario De Vera

Franco Del Pino

Mark Durbin

David Edgar

Lori Fiandra

Steven Fournier

Amoy Fraser

Raquela Garcia-Valenzuela

Melissa Gilliland

Luis Gonzalez

Marisela Guillen

Kathleen Hawkins

Robert Herr

Donna Jackson

Chase Jicha

Justin Kardach

Jamie Kaynan

Scott Langdon

Sarah Lardizabal

Kristeena LaRoue

Angela Lehman

Lucy Leon

Lawrence Lipe

Alex Lucchi

Marc Maheu

Alli Maiorano

Martha Martin

Reyner Martinez

Kate Mascheri

Angelica Mateo

Stephanie Mederos

Christopher Miller

Sarah Moore

Mindy Mozena

Lisa Myles

Iris Neil

Veronica Pak

Evgenia Pamer

Neelam Patel

Tran Pham

Cat Puckett

Monica Quimbayo

Michael Rivera

Marvecia Robinson

Leslie Rogers

Mary Rush

Luis Sanchez Artavia

Kyle Sindelar

Monica Smith

Yulisney Sotolongo

Garrett Spurlin

Jennifer Stalzer

Kimberly Stangle

Kenneth Steele

Lorenzo Stefko

Shari-Ann Stewart

Jane Stump

Elizabeth Tammaro

Jason Taningco

Raquel Toro-Espinal

Pia Valenciano

Thaina Velez

Danta White

Roksana Zak

Recognition of Retirees

Rafael Abreu

Yousef Ayoub

Pam Barkman

Suzette Batka

Emily Bennett

Richard Berwanger

Jeanne Blank

Patrick Blount

Parri Bolinger

Marcus Bowan

Deborah Bradford

Roanne Brice

Gary Burkhart

Rose Carpenter

Rick Catasus

Edgar Chavez

Willis Chico

Eunice Choi

Diane Claudio

Theresa Collins

Debra Copertino

Laura Crouch

Carol Davella

Karen Dlhosh

Debbie Doyle

Carol Ann Dykes Logue

Larry Eflin

Joseph Finnigan

Perry Fraser

Catherine Gholson

Amy Giroux

Robert Goater

Mariela Gonzalez

Tracy Griffith

Mark Gumble

Tania Gutierrez-Catasus

Martha Hamann

MJ Herbert Fuerst

Bethsy Hernandez

Ana Hernandez

Cherie Herrin

Michael Herring

Cathy Hill

Jane Ingalls

Wayne Jackson

Larry Jaffe

Daniel Kidder

Lee Kirkpatrick

Phyllis Kornegay

Melinda Kramer

Donna Leavitt

Ruben Lopez

Dennis Maddox

Kelli Marini

Janice Matley

Marcia Maukonen

Oscar Mauricio

James 鈥淛im鈥 McCully

Carrie McDowell

Linda Milner

Bruce Mink

Michele Monteith

Abderrahim Mouhassin

Christine Mouton

Jesus Munoz

Chuck Nicholas

Stephen OConnell

Leonardo Pascua

Esther Pennepacker

Rosario Pizarro

Brenda Posey

Michele Pozdoll

Odus Radford

Frances Ragsdale

Cindy Rahrle

Robert Reed

Wayne Regilio

Stella Restrepo

Kayonne Riley

Iris Rios

Charles Roberts

Norma Robles

Aimara Rodriguez

James Roop

Rosalba Ruiz

Eileen Ryan

Judith Samuels

Nicolas Santos

James Schaus

Jeanette Schreiber

Susan Schroen

Alison Schultz

Elena Sequera

Kelly Shilton

Michael Shumack

Shela Siegrist

Liza Smith

Karen Smith

Kathleen Snoeblen

Terry Stein

Peter Stephens

Patty Stroupe

Timothy Sullivan

Randolph Sulter

Jeffrey Ulmer

Lisa Vaughn

Luis Velozo

Rebecca Vilsack

Vicki Vitale

Deborah Walker

Kerry Welch

Maria Jocelyn Wick

Scott Wiles

Elena Wilson

Robert Wong

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麻豆原创 Celebrates Order of Pegasus, Student Awardees During Founders Day 2026 /news/founders-day-2026-student-awardees/ Tue, 31 Mar 2026 16:45:01 +0000 /news/?p=151945 The Order of Pegasus inducts its 25th class of exemplary Knights among more than 50 students who will be recognized at the annual celebration.

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麻豆原创 will honor 56 exceptional students at Founders鈥 Day on Wednesday for excellence in scholarship, leadership and service across various disciplines.

Our students are groundbreaking national and global scholarship winners, researchers, athletes, teaching assistants, residence assistants and leaders in campus organizations, including Student Government, LEAD Scholars and the President鈥檚 Leadership Council. The honorees include transfer students, those from first-generation and international backgrounds and members of the Burnett Honors College.

Aside from focusing on academics and campus causes, many of the student honorees volunteered at hospitals, schools, parks, food banks, shelters, clinics, youth clubs and with many community service organizations 鈥 at times as organizers and coordinators for support drives and campaigns.

鈥淲hen you look at this group, you see trajectory.鈥 鈥 John Buckwalter, 麻豆原创’s provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs

鈥淭he students we recognize at our Founders鈥 Day Student Honors Celebration are extraordinary not just for what they鈥檝e achieved, but for how they鈥檝e shaped their time at 麻豆原创. They鈥檝e pursued opportunities, challenged themselves and lifted others along the way,鈥 says John Buckwalter, 麻豆原创’s provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs. 鈥淲hen you look at this group, you see trajectory 鈥 students whose experiences here are opening doors in meaningful ways and changing the direction of their futures, the trajectories of their families and the communities they inhabit.鈥

Student award categories highlight new inductees of the Order of Pegasus, 麻豆原创鈥檚 highest student honor; graduate awards for outstanding master鈥檚 thesis and outstanding dissertation; undergraduate awards for honors thesis; and individual college awardees as chosen by the respective college deans. All honorees earned financial awards.

This year鈥檚 37 inductees into the Order of Pegasus mark the 25th anniversary class of top-achieving Knights. The average GPA of the 2026 class is 3.912.

The campus community is invited to attend the Student Honors Celebration on Wednesday from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the Student Union鈥檚 Pegasus Ballroom. A brief reception will follow.

Here are the students to be recognized.

Order of Pegasus Inductees

  • Fatima Alziyad, College of Health Professions and Sciences and Burnett Honors College
  • Andy Ayup, College of Sciences
  • Megan Bailey, College of Engineering and Computer Science and Burnett Honors College
  • Stacie Becker 鈥23, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Akash Hari Bharath 鈥25MS, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Swati Bhargava 鈥25MS, College of Optics and Photonics
  • Sanjana Bhatt, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Griffon Binkowski 鈥24, College of Sciences and Burnett Honors College
  • Ossyris Bury, College of Engineering and Computer Science and Burnett Honors College
  • Nico Chen, College of Arts and Humanities and Burnett Honors College
  • Kyle Coutray, College of Medicine, College of Engineering and Computer Science and Burnett Honors College
  • Allyson Crighton, College of Nursing and Burnett Honors College
  • Nyauni Crowelle-Feggins, College of Health Professions and Sciences and Burnett Honors College
  • Cameron Cummins, College of Arts and Humanities and Burnett Honors College
  • Andrew 鈥淒rew鈥 Hansen 鈥25, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Andrea Hernandez Gomez, College of Sciences
  • Lindsey Hildebrand, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Ariana Johnson, College of Medicine
  • Sanjan Kumar 鈥23, College of Medicine
  • Kworweinski Lafontant, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Meera Lakshmanan, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Abrianna Lalle, College of Nursing
  • Ilana Logvinov, College of Nursing
  • Hannah Lovejoy, College of Business
  • Taiel Lucile, College of Health Professions and Sciences and Burnett Honors College
  • Robin Marquez, College of Sciences
  • Shanel Moya Aguero, College of Community Innovation and Education and Burnett Honors College
  • Gabrielle 鈥淕abby鈥 Murison, College of Sciences
  • Varun Nannuri, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Natalie Otero, College of Business and Burnett Honors College
  • Om Pathak, College of Medicine, College of Arts and Humanities and Burnett Honors College
  • Pritha Sarkar 鈥24, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Jacob Vierling, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Janapriya Vijayakumar, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Ornella Vintimilla, College of Medicine and Burnett Honors College
  • Om Vishanagra, College of Medicine, College of Engineering and Computer Science and Burnett Honors College

Undergraduate Student Awards

College Founders鈥 Award

  • Liam Pivnichny, Burnett Honors College
  • Antonella Bisbal Hernandez, College of Arts and Humanities
  • Jordan Nell, College of Business
  • Jude Hagan, College of Community Innovation and Education
  • Ossyris Bury, College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Timothy Horanic, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Sun Latt, College of Medicine
  • Abrianna Lalle, College of Nursing
  • Jacob Silver, College of Optics and Photonics
  • Emily Willis, College of Sciences
  • Fabian Rodriguez Gomez, Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Outstanding Honors Undergraduate Thesis

  • Edwin Garcia 鈥25, College of Arts and Humanities, Outstanding Honors Thesis in Arts, Humanities and Creative Inquiry
  • Eric Haseman 鈥25, College of Sciences, Outstanding Honors Undergraduate Thesis in Social Sciences
  • Shreya Pawar 鈥25, College of Engineering and Computer Science, Outstanding Honors Undergraduate Thesis in Natural Sciences
  • Andrea Molero Perez 鈥25, College of Medicine, Outstanding Honors Undergraduate Thesis in Health Sciences
  • Nicholas Rose 鈥25, College of Engineering and Computer Science, Outstanding Honors Thesis in Engineering and Technology

Graduate Student Awards

Outstanding Dissertation

  • Jessica Moon 鈥25PhD, College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • Michael Pierro 鈥20 鈥23MS 鈥25PhD, College of Engineering and Computer Science
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9 麻豆原创 Experts Inducted to National Academies of Practice /news/9-ucf-experts-inducted-to-national-academies-of-practice/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 19:32:32 +0000 /news/?p=151950 Faculty members from 麻豆原创鈥檚 Colleges of Health Professions and Sciences and Nursing are now recognized as distinguished fellows, honored for their dedication to interprofessional research and practice.

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Nine experts from two colleges within 麻豆原创鈥檚 Academic Health Sciences Center were elected into the Class of 2026 Distinguished Fellows of the National Academies of Practice.

The prestigious recognition is awarded to scholars who have made outstanding contributions to advance practice, education, research and policy in a healthcare profession and who have demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to interprofessional practice.

麻豆原创鈥檚 inductees and their respective academies are: Mindi Anderson (Nursing), Morris Beato (Physical Therapy), Susan Dyess (Nursing), David Eddins (Audiology), Julie Feuerstein (Speech-Language Pathology), Kristine Gauthier (Nursing), Valerie Martinez (Nursing), Jacqueline Towson (Speech-Language Pathology), and Asli Yalim (Social Work).

The awardees were inducted during the National Academies of Practice Annual Meeting in Indianapolis on March 14.

College of Nursing Fellows

Six faculty members from College of Nursing pose in v formation in lobby of building
(From left to right): College of Nursing’s inductees Susan Dyess, Frances Armstrong, Jonathan Decker, Valerie Martinez, Mindi Anderson, and Kristine Gauthier. (Photo by Melanie Cede帽o-Lopez)

Mindi Anderson

Mindi Anderson, interim associate dean of academic affairs and professor at the College of Nursing, is one of the world鈥檚 leading experts in healthcare simulation. Her research, which has established best practices in healthcare simulation education, includes developing and evaluating simulation experiences to prepare healthcare students for clinical practice. She is also part of an interdisciplinary team at 麻豆原创 whose research has contributed to multiple patents to advance simulation and training.

Susan Dyess

With over 30 years of academic, clinical, and administrative experience, Professor Susan Dyess is a nationally recognized leader in interprofessional education, curricular design and holistic nursing. An expert in aging, vulnerable populations and quality, safety and patient outcomes, she has played a pivotal role in advancing interprofessional learning through institutional councils, statewide initiatives and community-based partnerships. Previously, she held senior academic leadership positions that strengthened cross-disciplinary education and fostered student success through innovative models.

Kristine Gauthier

Kristine Gauthier, assistant dean for clinical affairs in the College of Nursing, is a board-certified pediatric nurse practitioner who collaborates on interdisciplinary teams to improve health outcomes for underserved pediatric populations. Her collaboration extends into academic settings with curriculum development and research to address childhood health and wellness. In addition to her 麻豆原创 appointment, Gauthier leads a national center on child health and safety where she collaborates to develop resources, metrics, policies and research.

Valerie Martinez

As a certified pediatric nurse practitioner, Valerie Martinez collaborates across disciplines as a researcher and educator to improve health outcomes for children and families. In her role as director of the advanced practice in 麻豆原创鈥檚 doctor of nursing practice program, Martinez has designed courses and simulations to prepare future nurse practitioners to collaborate effectively across health professions. Her research seeks to generate evidence to improve care across healthcare professions.

two women and two men wearing professional attire pose in front of back drop
(From left to right): Asli Yalim, Julie Feuerstein, Morris 鈥淩ick鈥 Beato and David Eddins (not pictured Jacqueline Towson).

College of Health Professions and Sciences Fellows

Morris 鈥淩ick鈥 Beato

Morris 鈥淩ick鈥 Beato, a clinical associate professor in the , has extensive experience in multidisciplinary clinical settings, including the 麻豆原创 Huntington鈥檚 Clinic. He educates physical therapy students in IPE competencies and has received multiple national and state awards for teaching and professional service. His scholarly contributions include multiple collaborations in neurology and geriatrics. He is the director of the 麻豆原创 and Orlando Health Neurologic Physical Therapy Residency Program.

David Eddins

Professor David Eddins is a nationally recognized certified clinical audiologist in the . Eddins is the founding director of the Communication Technologies Research Center at 麻豆原创, an interdisciplinary center that focuses on hearing technologies, simulation, auditory neuroscience, voice and aerodigestive systems, and simulation and virtualization. His contributions to the interprofessional community include extensive research, mentoring and editorial service focused on improving diagnostics and treatment in hearing, speech and voice.

Julie Feuerstein

Assistant Professor Julie Feuerstein is a speech-language pathologist, educator and clinical researcher who leads interdisciplinary initiatives uniting professionals in speech-language pathology, physical therapy and assistive technology. Her research and service in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders are centered around improving systems of care for young children with complex communication needs. Feuerstein鈥檚 expertise spans early intervention, augmentative and alternative communication, and implementation science.

Jacqueline Towson

Jacqueline Towson is a speech-language pathologist and associate professor in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders committed to improve outcomes for young children with disabilities and their families. Towson has published and presented extensively on her research focusing on dialogic reading, early language and literacy and training. She has led multiple large-scale interdisciplinary projects, designed to deliver statewide training to ensure the use of evidence-based practices in serving children with high-intensity needs.

Asli Yalim

Associate Professor Asli Yalim has served as the School of Social Work鈥檚 Interprofessional Education Research Liaison since 2024. She develops and leads IPE activities that integrate wellness content into her coursework, creating experimental learning opportunities that foster collaboration across different professions. Yalim has collaborated on several funded projects, including an interprofessional, evidence-based virtual program to prevent burnout, suicide and mental health conditions among healthcare workers.

Additionally, six 麻豆原创 faculty members from the Colleges of Health Professions and Sciences and Nursing were elected as new professional members. Membership is extended to individuals who have demonstrated excellence in their profession and dedication to interprofessional healthcare.

麻豆原创鈥檚 new professional members and their respective academies are: Frances Armstrong (Nursing), Jonathan Decker (Nursing), William Hanney (Physical Therapy), Ilana Logvinov (Nursing), Ayse Malatyali (Nursing), and Shari Norte (Athletic Training).

麻豆原创鈥檚 new distinguished fellows join 17 previously inducted faculty, 11 from the College of Health Professions and Sciences and six

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NAP26Inductees_College of Nursing College of Nursing's inductees ucf-Asli, Feuerstein, Beato and Eddins (From left to right): Asli, Feuerstein, Beato and Eddins
Meet 麻豆原创’s 2026 Pegasus Professors /news/meet-ucfs-2026-pegasus-professors/ Fri, 27 Mar 2026 17:07:01 +0000 /news/?p=151768 These four researchers are driven to think big and work with purpose as they address some of society鈥檚 biggest problems.

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麻豆原创鈥檚 faculty are renowned thinkers, doers and creators delivering high-quality education and leading-industry research with purpose. They are the campus culture-setters 鈥 inspiring ingenuity while upholding our mission to change lives and livelihoods.

The most exceptional among them are recognized annually with the distinction of the university鈥檚 highest honor, the Pegasus Professor award. This year, Hassan Foroosh (College of Computer Science and Engineering); Carmen Giurgescu (College of Nursing); Annette Khaled (College of Medicine); and Matthew Marino (College of Community Innovation and Education) become the newest inductees of this esteemed group.

Their work and research have been motivated by a pursuit to positively impact society 鈥 redefining our capabilities with artificial intelligence (AI) systems; improving pre-term birth outcomes for mothers and their babies; curing cancer; and enhancing quality of life for people with disabilities.

Each will be recognized during Founders鈥 Day, which is April 1 this year and receive $5,000.

Meet the 麻豆原创 Pegasus Professors for 2026:

Man in black business suit poses with arms crossed in blue-lit room with Dell server pillars behind him
Hassan Foroosh (Photo by Antoine Hart)

Hassan Foroosh

CAE-Link Professor of computer science
Director of the Computational Imaging Laboratory

One day your research will solve:

My聽goal has always been not to solve one specific聽problem but聽build聽a machine that is聽the聽problem solver.聽I work with explainable AI and efficient or high-performance AI. My goal is to build general-purpose machines, whether in robotics or autonomous driving or data analytics, etc. I have always thought that there is a way to find a general solution to almost any problem. We just then have to specialize the machines and models to solve specific problems.

What motivates you to pursue this line of research?

I was fascinated by sci-fi movies as a kid. Not many people know this, but I鈥檓 a Trekkie. What always fascinated me were the technologies in that world 鈥 tele-transportation, warp speed, and others. I had not even seen a computer as a kid. Because back then, computers fit in rooms five times the size of my office. I was always interested in electronics and building things. In 1992, I moved back to France to do my Ph.D. and my advisor pushed me in the direction of AI and it鈥檚 been that ever since.

What makes 麻豆原创 the right place to do what you do?

When I first came to 麻豆原创 24 years ago, I saw opportunity for growth, and I saw all the industries around here. I saw Kennedy Space Center next door. I like to build partnerships. I like to see my research used in practice. 麻豆原创 has given me the ability to do that throughout my career.

What has been your favorite moment as a professor?

There are many I can think of. But, once I was vacationing with my family in North Carolina about 10 years ago or so. We were in a mall, and this young man ran toward me. I said, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 going on?鈥 He shook my hand and said, 鈥淒r. Foroosh! I wanted to thank you. You affected my life.鈥 Back then I was teaching classes of 200 students every semester, so it wasn鈥檛 easy to build relationships with every student or remember everyone鈥檚 name. It felt humbling to know that he felt that way and that I impacted his life like that. It was a very good moment.

Woman with curly-shoulder length hair in black professional suit stands with arms crossed at the waste in front of hanging mosaic art in windowed atrium
Carmen Giurgescu (Photo by Antoine Hart)

Carmen Giurgescu

Chatlos Foundation Endowed Chair in Nursing聽Associate聽Dean of聽Research聽
Professor of nursing聽

One day your research will:
Reduce the rate of pre-term births. For the past 20 years, my research has been examining how social determinants of health influence maternal health and birth outcomes, including preterm birth. Pre-term infants, born at less than 37-weeks gestation, are more likely to have developmental delays, hearing problems and blindness than infants born at term. Their mothers are more likely to have stress, depression, and anxiety. I am focused on improving the health of mothers and their babies.

What motivates you to take this on?
I鈥檝e always been passionate about obstetrics, even since childhood. One of my aunts was pregnant with my cousin when I was a young child, and she was a physician, so she felt comfortable telling me about fetal development. I came to the United States in 1990, and I started working in a mother-baby unit. I had the opportunity to talk with mothers and provide care for their babies. And that put me on the trajectory and my passion for pregnancy and birth outcomes.

In what ways do your students inspire you?
They聽come聽up聽with聽new, innovative ideas that I never thought of.聽It鈥檚聽not a matter of聽just them聽learning from me, but聽me聽also聽learning from them. When I see their passion for what they are doing and when I see them being successful, it drives me to be more innovative, to keep pursuing opportunities, and be more resilient.

What contributions聽at 麻豆原创 are you most proud of?
I came here in fall of 2019, and back then the College of Nursing had $1.7 million in research funding. In the 2024-25 academic year, we had $3.8 million.聽That鈥檚聽a 124% increase in funding in five years. I am聽really proud聽of聽the聽commitment of our faculty聽and聽the interprofessional collaboration聽that聽has聽increased聽research and聽advanced聽scholarship聽in our college.

Brunette woman with glasses wearing white lab coat stands next to white concrete pillar outside
Annette Khaled (Photo by Antoine Hart)

Annette Khaled

Professor of Medicine Cancer Division Head
Assistant Dean for Faculty Affairs聽

One day your research will solve:
Cancer. Today, even if you聽treat聽it, the patient聽isn鈥檛聽sure if it will come back. Cancer diagnosis is聽almost like聽a lifetime death threat. I want to get to a place where, much like when we have a cold and take an antibiotic, I want people to be able to say, 鈥淚 have cancer, take my medicine,聽I鈥檓聽done.聽It鈥檚聽not going to come back.聽It鈥檚聽not going to kill me.鈥

What motivates you to take this on?
I grew up in California, and my grandparents visited us when I was a teenager. I remember my grandfather asked, 鈥淲hat do you want to do?鈥 And I told him, 鈥淚 want to cure cancer.鈥 I think for some reason my whole life聽I鈥檝e聽been aware of this deadly disease. I want to help people. I want to make a difference.

What聽are you most proud of聽during your tenure at 麻豆原创?
I think the resiliency. We are a young college and have struggled with the ups and downs that the world throws at you. Sometimes you won鈥檛 have funding, sometimes you will have tons of funding. Sometimes things go your way with your studies, but this might be after 20 years of doing experiments that 诲颈诲苍鈥檛听work.聽So聽I think what聽I鈥檓聽most proud of is that I聽haven鈥檛聽given up,聽and I still see that聽there鈥檚聽an optimistic future.

奥丑补迟鈥檚听苍别虫迟?
Cancer is a聽really difficult聽disease because everybody鈥檚 cancer is different.聽But personalized drug therapies 鈥 although good in theory 鈥 is聽very hard聽to implement because you would have to have 100聽different聽drugs for each person.聽That鈥檚聽how complicated it is. Our research and method take聽a different聽track.

We鈥檝e聽found that all cancer cells share something in common, a protein-folding complex. With this insight we developed a drug that聽we鈥檙e聽partnering with the Orlando VA聽Healthcare System, thanks to the generous support of Orlando Sports Foundation and聽Alan Gooch聽鈥84聽鈥89MA,聽聽to test with patient聽specimens. We have a lot more to聽do聽鈥 this is very preliminary. But I am so pleased with the data. I want to eventually get this into clinical trials and get this into the hands of people.

Bald man in business suit and yellow tie stands with right hand in pocket in front of glass and steel building
Matthew Marino (Photo by Antoine Hart)

Matthew Marino

Professor of聽Exceptional聽Student聽Education
Director of the Toni Jennings Exceptional Education Institute聽(TJEEI)

One day your research will:
Empower independence for people living with disabilities. People with disabilities struggle to find and maintain employment. A recent study by the U.S. Department of Labor noted a workforce participation rate of just 42% for people with disabilities, compared to 78% for those without. This lack of employment leads to downstream effects such as the inability to live independently. Our dynamic team is utilizing an interdisciplinary approach to leverage emerging technologies in a way that enhances the lives of people with disabilities across our community.

What motivates you to take this problem on?
When I was in college, I suffered a severe spinal cord injury while playing rugby. I had no idea what a disability was prior to that event, but when you are confined to a聽wheelchair,聽you quickly learn how challenging life can be. It took me years of rehabilitation to recover from the injury. I have been working to improve the lives of people with disabilities who are less fortunate than me ever since.聽My goal is to help them find聽the tools聽to open the doors of employment.

What makes 麻豆原创 the right place to do what you do?
The work we do at TJEEI is based on interdisciplinary partnerships and efficient, effective teamwork.聽I have traveled to universities throughout the country and have not found an institution where there is more ambition to change the world for the better, technology resources to make the change,聽and collaborative vigor to make it happen than there is at 麻豆原创. We are truly blessed to work in this environment.

奥丑补迟鈥檚听苍别虫迟?
When we published聽our聽first article on聽 no one was talking about the impact it would have on education. AI has tremendous potential for people with disabilities, which is something we are actively exploring at the National Center on Innovation, Design, and Digital Learning, where I am a co-principle investigator. I鈥檓 not sure where it will take us, but I am extremely optimistic that it can enhance the lives of people with disabilities while improving employment and independent living outcomes.

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ucf-Hassan-Foroosh-Pegasus-Professor Hassan Foroosh (Photo by Antoine Hart) 麻豆原创-Carmen-Giurgescu-Pegasus-Professor Carmen Giurgescu (Photo by Antoine Hart) ucf-Annette-Khaled-Pegasus-Professor Annette Khaled (Photo by Antoine Hart) ucf-matthew-marino-Pegasus-Professor Matthew Marino (Photo by Antoine Hart)