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Bassam Shakhashiri

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Name
  
Bassam Shakhashiri

Role
  
Professor

Education
  
Boston University


Bassam Shakhashiri UWMadison University Communications News Photos

Books
  
CHEMICAL DEMONSTRATIONS.

A quick message from prof bassam shakhashiri


Bassam Z. Shakhashiri (born 1939, Lebanon) is a professor of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he is the holder of the William T. Evjue Distinguished Chair. An active advocate for science education, he is the author of multiple books of chemical demonstrations. He was the 2012 president of the American Chemical Society and has received numerous awards and honors.

Contents

Bassam Shakhashiri 18 February 2013 The WellTempered Ear

Madison youth choir and prof bassam shakhashiri


Education

Bassam Shakhashiri newsuncaedusitesdefaultfilesShakhashiriBass

Shakhashiri was born in 1939 in Lebanon to Dr. Zekin A. Shakhashiri of the American University of Beirut and Adma N. Shakhashiri. The family moved to the United States in 1957. Shakhashiri attended Boston University, receiving his A.B. degree in 1960, and then earned an M.Sc. (1964) and Ph.D. (1968) in chemistry at the University of Maryland. He accepted a postdoctoral position under Dr. Russell S. Drago at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, and taught there for two years as a junior faculty member.

Science education

Bassam Shakhashiri UWMadison University Communications News Photos

In 1970 Professor Shakhashiri joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he now holds the William T. Evjue Distinguished Chair.

Dr. Shakhashiri has given more than 1400 invited lectures and presentations around the world. Shakhashiri is a strong advocate for public education and programs that inform the public about scientific research, creating an "educated citizenry". He helped to found the Wisconsin Initiative for Science Literacy.

“Science literacy enlightens and enables people to make informed choices, to be skeptical and to reject shams, quackery, unproven conjecture and to avoid being bamboozled into making foolish decisions where matters of science and technology are concerned. Science literacy is for everyone – chemists, artists, humanists, all professionals, the general public, youth and adults alike.”

He has spent much of his career celebrating the fun of science by giving public demonstrations at schools, fairs and on television. His SCIENCE IS FUN! presentations at shopping malls, schools, and colleges have reached tens of thousands of students, their teachers, and parents throughout Wisconsin. His Christmas science show, inspired by lectures of 19th century scientist Michael Faraday, has been performed for more than 40 years, and have been viewed by as many as 1,000 people in one year.

Dr. Shakhashiri has published several books of chemistry demonstrations, including Manual for Laboratory Investigations in General Chemistry ; Workbook for General Chemistry; and Chemical Demonstrations: A Handbook for Teachers of Chemistry, Volumes 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. His books, television broadcasts, and website have provided the source material for presentations given by hundreds of teachers during National Chemistry Week, as well as regular demonstrations by many teachers throughout the year. Chemical Demonstrations has been applauded as "a series without peer", for its "wealth of detail", "copiously illustrated, meticulously documented, and well-planned."

In 1996-97 Dr. Shakhashiri chaired two working groups which reviewed the Wisconsin Science and Math Standards.

National Science Foundation

Shakhashiri served as Assistant Director of the National Science Foundation for Science and Engineering Education from 1984 to 1990. In that position he obtained a four-fold budget increase for science education over a five-year period, and was credited widely with revitalizing science education programs at NSF. However, he was also anonymously criticized for having a "confrontational" style, overly personalizing policy campaigns, and introducing a political element into the grant award process. In 1990 NSF Director Erich Bloch removed Shakhashiri from his post, replacing him with Luther Williams, a move that was both applauded and protested.

American Chemical Society President

He was elected President-Elect of the American Chemical Society in 2011 and became President in January 2012. One of his initiatives while president was to create a year-long Commission on Graduate Education in the Chemical Sciences, whose report, Advancing Graduate Education in the Chemical Sciences, recommended better preparation of Ph.D. candidates for employment, teaching communication skills for engagement in a global workplace, and inclusion of women and students from underrepresented populations.

Shakhashiri has also spoken about changes in scientific practice, in particular the ways in which boundaries between chemistry and biology are blurring as scientists learn more in those fields. More recently, he has called for active scientific discourse on climate change and other significant societal issues.

Awards and honors

He has received a large number of awards and honors, including the following:

  • 1962, member of the American Chemical Society
  • 1969, 1970, Outstanding Lecturer of the Year in General Chemistry, University of Illinois
  • 1977, Kiekhofer Distinguished Teaching Award, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • 1979, Manufacturing Chemists Association Catalyst Award
  • 1982, Ron Gibbs Award, Wisconsin Society of Science Teachers for "outstanding contributions to science education at the local, regional, national, and international levels."
  • 1983, James Flack Norris Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Teaching of Chemistry, Northeastern Section, American Chemical Society
  • 1986, George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education, American Chemical Society
  • 2002, Award for Public Understanding of Science and Technology, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) "for his tireless efforts to communicate science to the general public, and especially children."
  • 2005, Chemical Pioneer Award, American Institute of Chemists
  • 2005, Helen M. Free Award for Public Outreach, American Chemical Society, for "lifelong accomplishments and for explaining and demonstrating science with charisma and passion"
  • 2007, National Science Board Public Service Award, for "extraordinary contributions to promote science literacy and cultivate the intellectual and emotional links between science and the arts for the public"
  • 2008, inaugural David Emerson Science Advocacy Medal, University of Nevada-Las Vegas, for "distinguished, sustained, and lasting contributions in the development of the sciences."
  • 2013, Carl Sagan Award for Public Understanding of Science, Council of Scientific Society Presidents
  • References

    Bassam Shakhashiri Wikipedia