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Sapling Learning

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Charles Scalet

Charles Scalet is Professor Emeritus and Emeritus Department Head of the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences at South Dakota State University, where he served as active department head from 1976 to 2007.  When he retired in 2007, Dr. Scalet became the longest serving faculty member in the department's history.

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Paul F. Schatz

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Stephen A. Schellenberg

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Paul R. Schimmel

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Neil E. Schore

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Fred Schwab

Frederick L.  Schwab is professor Emeritus in the Department of Geology at Washington and Lee University

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Matthew P. Scott

Matthew P. Scott is Professor of Developmental Biology, Genetics and Bioengineering at Stanford University School of Medicine and Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a past president of the Society for Developmental Biology. He is known for his work in developmental biology and genetics, particularly in areas of cell-cell signaling and homeobox genes and for discovering the roles of developmental regulators in cancer. Dr. Scott teaches cell and developmental biology to undergraduate students, development and disease mechanisms to medical students and developmental biology to graduate students at Stanford University

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Matthew P. Scott

Matthew P. Scott is Professor of Developmental Biology, Genetics and Bioengineering at Stanford University School of Medicine and Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a past president of the Society for Developmental Biology. He is known for his work in developmental biology and genetics, particularly in areas of cell-cell signaling and homeobox genes and for discovering the roles of developmental regulators in cancer. Dr. Scott teaches cell and developmental biology to undergraduate students, development and disease mechanisms to medical students and developmental biology to graduate students at Stanford University

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Harry W. Seeley

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Mats Selen

Professor Mats Selen received bachelor's degree in physics from the University of Guelph (1982), a M.Sc. in physics from Guelph (1983), and an M.A. in physics from Princeton University (1985). He received his Ph.D. in physics from Princeton (1989). He was a research associate at the Laboratory for Elementary Particle Physics (LEPP) at Cornell University from 1989-1993. He joined the Department of Physics at Illinois in 1993 as an assistant professor and, since 2001, has been a full professor. He was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2006 for his contributions to particle physics. Since arriving at Illinois, he has been a prime mover behind the massive curriculum revision of the calculus-based introductory physics courses (Physics 211-214), and he was the first lecturer in the new sequence. He created an undergraduate "discovery" course where freshmen create their own physics demonstrations, and developed the Physics Van Outreach program, in which physicists visit elementary schools to share enthusiasm for science). Professor Selen played a key role in the development of i>clicker™.

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Bradley A. Shellito

Bradley A. Shellito is a geographer whose work focuses on the application of geospatial technologies.  Dr. Shellito has been a professor at Youngstown State University (YSU) since 2004, and was previously a faculty member at Old Dominion University.  He teaches classes in GIS, Remote Sensing, GPS, and 3D Visualization and his research interests involve using these concepts with a variety of real-world issues.  He also serves as YSU’s PI in OhioView, a statewide geospatial consortium.  A native of the Youngstown area, Dr. Shellito received his bachelor’s degree from YSU, his Masters from the Ohio State University, and his doctorate from Michigan State University.

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Ted Shifrin

Theodore Shifrin is a Professor of Mathematics and the Associate Head of the Mathematics Department at the University of Georgia. There, he has won multiple awards for teaching, including the Lothar Tresp Outstandin g Honors Professor Award in 2002 and 2010, as well as the Honoratus Medal in 1992. Professor Shifrin was one of  five receipients of the University of Georgia's 1997 Josiah Meigs Award for Excellence in Teaching, and in 2000 he was given the Southeastern MAA Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics. In addition to Linear Algebra: A Geometric Approach, Professor Shifrin has published the textbooks Multivariable Mathematics: Linear Algebra, Multivariable Calculus, and Manifolds and Abstract Algebra: A Geometric Approach, and he has also authored the Differential Geometry: A First Course in Curves and Surfaces, a free, online text that is widely used all over the world. His research interests and publications have focused on integral geometry and complex algebraic geometry.

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Duward Shriver

Duward F. Shriver is the former Morrison Professor and Chairman of the Chemistry Department at Northwestern University, where he was also a member of the Materials Research Center and the Ipatieff Catalysis Center.  His most important work has been in organometallic chemistry.  His book, Manipulation of Air-Sensitive Materials, is the standard reference in the field.

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Michele Shuster

Michèle Shuster, Ph.D. is an assistant professor in the biology department at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, New Mexico. She focuses on the scholarship of teaching and learning, studying introductory biology, microbiology, and cancer biology classes at the undergraduate level, as well as working on several K-12 science education programs. Michèle is an active participant in programs that provide mentoring in scientific teaching to postdoctoral fellows, preparing the next generation of undergraduate educators. She is the recipient of numerous teaching awards, including a Donald C. Roush Excellence in Teaching Award at NMSU. Michèle received her Ph.D. from the Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences at Tufts University School of Medicine, where she studied meiotic chromosome segregation in yeast.

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