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Sylvia E. Bowman Award, Robert V. Robinson


Photo by: Paul Martens

Robert V. Robinson
Class of 1964 Chancellor's Professor of Sociology; Chairperson, Department of Sociology, College of Arts and Sciences, University Graduate School, IU Bloomington


"My goal in working with students is to empower them to realize their own potential and strengths and help them to develop these to the fullest."
— Robert V. Robinson

When a faculty member becomes chair of a department, he or she might be expected to relinquish what are sometimes considered "undesirable" teaching obligations—namely, large, introductory lecture classes of several hundred undergraduate students. Rather than relinquish, however, Robert Robinson relishes the experience of teaching "S100: Introduction to Sociology," a class that regularly packs hundreds of students into some of IU Bloomington's largest lecture halls. He even counts the course as his favorite.

This is no surprise to the many colleagues and students who wrote letters recommending Robinson for a distinguished teaching award.

His amicable spirit comes in handy considering Robinson has taught more students (approximately 4,000) in the past decade than any other professor in the IU Bloomington Department of Sociology. Whether leading a large course of several hundred undergraduate students or spurring discussion among fewer than a dozen students in a graduate seminar, Robinson is admired for his infectious enthusiasm for sociological study, his unabashed love of teaching and his consistent "cheerleading" of students.

"I know of very few IU departments where professors and students have spent an afternoon together throwing Frisbees and playing football, but thanks to Professor Robinson's efforts, we have achieved an excellent level of student-professor camaraderie," writes doctoral candidate Jocelyn Viterna. It's not all fun and games with Robinson, however. "In his graduate ‘Social Organization' class, we first began to think of ourselves as competent academics with something to contribute to the field," continues Viterna. "He had such confidence in us and respect for our intelligence that he demanded we interact with him as equals, not as mere sponges sucking up the knowledge of our professors."

Indeed, Robinson aims to bring out students' abilities, talents and qualities that they may not know they have. "Michelangelo said of his sculpting that he wasn't chipping away stone to create the figure but he was ‘releasing' what was already inside the stone," Robinson writes. "My goal in working with students is to empower them to realize their own potential and strengths and help them to develop these to the fullest."

This empowerment includes preparing graduate students for the teaching component of their academic lives. The department's Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) program owes much of its success to Robinson's participation and advocacy, said fellow professor Brian Powell. "As a result of Robinson's efforts, our graduate students now have opportunities to ‘shadow' professors at several liberal arts colleges, a traditional black institution and regional campuses of Indiana University," he writes. "In a period when the academic community is criticized, perhaps rightly so, for not paying enough attention to teaching, Rob has demonstrated that commitment to teaching need not be at the expense of research excellence." After a review of the documentation and nominating letter submitted by Robinson, the department received the prestigious 2001 American Sociological Association Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award—an honor normally reserved for individuals.

 
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Publication date: March 1, 2002
Comments: homepgs@indiana.edu
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