Curriculum Vitae

Notarization. I have read the following and certify that this curriculum vitae is a current and accurate statement of my professional record.

Signature______Date October 17, 2013

Please organize your CV in order of the following: primary headings in bold (e.g. 1. Personal Information), sub-headings in underline (e.g. 1.c. Educational Background), and numbered items within sub-headings (e.g. 2.a.ii Books Edited). In your CV, for uniformity, please use exactly the same headings / sub-headings / numbered items as below.

1. Personal Information

a.104423019, Neustadtl, Alan, Department of , University of Maryland, 301-405-6411 [email protected]

b. Current Academic Appointment Alan Neustadtl, Sociology, Associate Professor, year of University, 1993

c. Other Academic Appointments while at UMD

d. Educational Background Ph.D. Sociology Department, University of , Amherst, 1987. M.A. Sociology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, 1982. B.A. Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, 1979.

e. Employment Background Appointments prior to UMD

2. Research, Scholarly and Creative Activities For each of the categories listed below follow this guideline:  Published works should be listed first, in either chronological order or its inverse, followed (or preceded) by works not yet published but accepted for publicationError! Bookmark not defined..  The individual should distinguish between authored and edited works and between refereed and unrefereed outlets and should clarify the status of unpublished works (e.g. accepted, in press).  All authors should be listed in the order they appear on the publication.  In exceptional cases, e.g., when the work is a product of a large group (more than 10 authors), not all authors need be listed. As an example, he/she may list the first three, the last three, and the individual him/herself (including his/her place in the total author list). That is, if an individual named "Candidate" is the 97th author, the citation may be listed as: Smith, Jones, Curley...Candidate (97th)...Moe, Larry, Shemp (total of 189 authors).  Individuals should designate the identity of the author with intellectual leadership on jointly authored papers (if this designation can be appropriately ascertained) by using * or by placing that name in bold  Identify which co-authors they mentored as undergraduate and graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, faculty research assistants, and junior faculty.  When the research is published in a foreign language, the translation of the title should be included. a. Books (include full citation information) i. Books Authored Clawson, Dan, Alan Neustadtl, Mark Weller, 1998. Dollars and Votes: How Business Campaign Contributions Subvert Democracy. Temple University Press. Clawson, Dan, Alan Neustadtl, and Denise Scott. 1992. Money Talks: Corporate PACs and Political Influence. New York: Basic Books. This book was a finalist for the C.W. Mills Award. Specify original or revised edition. ii. Books Edited iii. Book Chapters (include page numbers) iv. Text Books v. Other

b. Articles in Refereed Journals Jeanine Warisse Turner , James D. Robinson, Yan Tian, Alan Neustadtl, Pam Angelus, Marie Russell, Seong K. Mun, and Betty Levine. 2013. “Can Messages Make a Difference? Association between Email Messages and Health Outcomes in Diabetes Patients”, Human Communication Research, Vol. 39, Issue 2, 252–268 Turner, Jeanine W., Ph.D., James D. Robinson, Ph.D., Yan Tian, Ph.D., Alan Neustadtl, Ph.D., Pam Angelus, Marie Russell, M.D., Seong K Mun, Ph.D., Betty Levine, M.S. 2010. “Can Messages Make a Difference? Association between Email Messages and Health Outcomes in Diabetes Patients.” J.W. Turner, J.D. Robinson, A. Alaoui, J. Winchester, A. Neustadtl, B. Levine, J. Collmann, S.K. Mun. Forthcoming. 2007. “Understanding the communicative context created through telemedicine interactions.” In A.. Schorr (Ed.) Health Communication (Gesundheitskommunikation), Verlag, Gottingen, Germany, Hogrefe & Huber Publishers. Turner, J.W., Robinson, J.D., Alaoui, A., Winchester, J., Neustadtl, A., Levine, B., Tohme, W., Collmann, J., & Mun, S.K. 2004. “Doctor and Patient Interactions During Telemedicine: Clashes of Perceptions and Reality. In Understanding Health Communication Technologies. Pamela Whitten and David Cook, editors. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Robinson, John P., Alan Neustadtl, and Meyer Kestnbaum. 2004. “The ‘Online Divide’: Attitudinal and Behavioral Differences among Internet Users and Non-Users.” In: Society Online: The Internet in Context, eds. Philip Howard and Steve Jones. New York: Sage. Neustadtl, Alan. 2003. “An Expanding Digital Divide? Panel Dynamics in the General Social Survey.” Internet & Society, Volume 1, Issue 4, Spring 2003, pp. 14-26 Ferrigno-Stack, Josephine, John P. Robinson, Meyer Kestnbaun, Alan Neustadtl, and Anthony Alvarez. 2003. “Internet and Society: A Summary of Research Reported at WebShop 2001.” Social Science Computer Review, Spring Vol. 21, Number 1, pp. 73-117. Robinson, John P., and Neustadtl, Alan. 2003. “Survey Research About the Internet.” In: Encyclopedia of Community. Eds Karen Christensen and David Levinson. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. J.W. Turner, J.D. Robinson, A. Alaoui, J. Winchester, A. Neustadtl, B. Levine, J. Collmann, S.K. Mun. (in press) “Understanding the communicative context created through telemedicine interactions.” In A.. Schorr (Ed.) Health Communication (Gesundheitskommunikation), Verlag, Gottingen, Germany, Hogrefe & Huber Publishers. Turner, J.W., Robinson, J.D., Alaoui, A., Winchester, J., Neustadtl, A., Levine, B., Collmann, J., & Mun, S.K. (in press) “Media attitudes vs. media use: Understanding the contribution of context to the communication environment of telemedicine interactions.” Health Care Management Review. Neustadtl, Alan and Meyer Kestnbaum. 2002. “The McDonaldization of the Internet.” Pp. 126-140 in McDonaldization: The Reader edited by George Ritzer. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge. Robinson, John P, Meyer Kestnbaum, Alan Neustadtl, and Anthony Alvarez. 2002. “The Internet and Other Uses of Time.” In The Internet in Everyday Life, eds. Barry Wellman and Caroline Haythornthwaite. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. Robinson, John P., Meyer Kestnbaum, Alan Neustadtl, and Anthony Alvarez. 2002. “Information Technology and Functional Time Displacement” Internet & Society, Issue 2, Vol. 1, Fall 2002, pp. 21-36. Neustadtl, Alan and John P. Robinson. 2002. “Media Use Differences Between Internet Users and Nonusers in the General Social Survey.” Internet & Society, Issue 2, Vol. 1, Fall 2002, pp. 100-120. Meyer Kestnbaum, John P. Robinson, Alan Neustadtl, Anthony Alvarez. 2002. “Information Technology and Social Time Displacement.” Internet & Society, Issue 1, Vol. 1, Summer 2002, pp. 21-37. Neustadtl, Alan and John P. Robinson. 2002. “Social Contact Differences among Internet Users and Nonusers in the General Social Survey.” Internet & Society, Issue 1, Vol. 1, Summer 2002, pp. 73- 102. Robinson, John P., Alan Neustadtl, and Meyer Kestnbaum. 2002. “The Online ‘Diversity Divide’: Public Opinion Differences Among Internet Users and Nonusers.” Internet & Society, Issue 1, Vol. 1, Summer 2002, pp. 284-302. Robinson, John P., Meyer Kestnbaum and Alan Neustadtl. “An Online Data Web Site for Internet Research.” American Behavioral Scientist, 45 (November 2001): 565-582. “Telemedicine and Hemodialysis: An Analysis of Clinical Outcomes.” With Betty A. Levine, James Grigsby, James Winchester, Seong K. Mun. Proceedings of Telemedicine and Telecommunications: Options for the New Century, sponsored by National Library of Medicine. “Understanding the Communicative Context Created through Telemedicine Interactions.” With Jeanine W. Turner, Adil Alaoui, James Winchester, Betty A. Levine, Jeff Collmann, and Seong K. Mun. Proceedings of Telemedicine and Telecommunications: Options for the New Century, sponsored by National Library of Medicine. Robinson, John, Meyer Kestnbaum, Alan Neustadtl, and Anthony Alvarez. “Mass Media Use and Social Life Among Internet Users.” Social Science Computer Review, Vol 18 No. 4, Winter 2000: 490-501. Money Changes Everything. Custom Annual Editions: Sociology, Guilford, CT, Dushkin/McGraw- Hill, 1997. Clawson, Dan and Alan Neustadtl. 1996. “Shift Happens: Corporations and the Struggle Over American Politics, 1976-1986.” Social Science Quarterly Vol. 77, No. 4, pp. 928-931. Su, Tie-ting, Alan Neustadtl, and Dan Clawson. 1995. “Business and the Conservative Shift: Corporate PAC Contributions 1976 and 1986.” Social Science Quarterly Vol. 76, No. 1, pp. 20-40. LeMoyne, Terri L., William W. Falk, and Alan Neustadtl. 1994. “Hyperrationality: Historical Antecedents and Contemporary Outcomes Within Japanese Manufacturing.” Sociological Spectrum, Vol. 14, No. 3, pp. 221-240. Su, Tie-ting, Dan Clawson, and Alan Neustadtl. 1993. “Corporate PACs and Conservative Realignment: Comparison of 1980 and 1984.” Social Science Research 22, pp. 33-71. Clawson, Dan and Alan Neustadtl. 1992. “Myopic Methods: Measures of Conservatism in Corporate PAC Analysis,” American Journal of Sociology. Vol. 97, No. 5 (March), pp. 1456-1461. Su, Tie-ting, Alan Neustadtl, and Dan Clawson. 1992. “The Coalescence of Corporate Conservatism from 1976 to 1980: The Roots of the Reagan Revolution.” Pp. 135-160 in Research in Politics and Society Annual: The Political Consequences of Social Networks, Gwen Moore and J. Allen Whitt, editors. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, Inc. Teachman, Jay and Alan Neustadtl. 1992. “Emerging Methods.” Chapter 27 in the Sourcebook on Family Theory and Methods: A Contextual Approach, edited by Pauline G. Boss, William J. Doherty, Ralph LaRossa, Walter R. Schumm, and Suzanne K. Steinmetz. New York, NY: Plenum Press. Neustadtl, Alan, Denise Scott, and Dan Clawson. 1991. “Class Struggle in Campaign Finance? PAC Contributions in the 1984 Elections,” Sociological Forum Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 219-237. Neustadtl, Alan. 1990. “Interest Group PACsmanship: An Analysis of Campaign Contributions, Issue Visibility, and Legislative Impact.” Social Forces, Volume 69, Number 2 (December). Clawson, Dan and Alan Neustadtl. 1989. “Interlocks, PACs, and Corporate Contributions.” American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 94, No. 4 (January): 749-73. Neustadtl, Alan and Dan Clawson. 1988. “Corporate Political Groupings: PAC Contributions to the 1980 Congressional Elections.” American Sociological Review, Volume 53, Number 2 (April): 172- 190. Clawson, Dan, Alan Neustadtl, and James Bearden. 1986. “The Logic of Business Unity: Corporate Contributions to the 1980 Elections,” American Sociological Review, Volume 51, Number 6, December, pp. 797-811. Clawson, Dan, Allen Kaufman, and Alan Neustadtl. 1985. “Corporate PACs for a New Pax Americana,” The Insurgent Sociologist, Volume XIII, Numbers 1-2, pp. 63-77 (Summer-Fall).

c. Professional / Extension Publications i. Monographs ii. Reports iii. Extension Publications iv. Other Professional Publications

d. Book Reviews, Notes, and Other Contributions i. Book Reviews Review of Buying for Armageddon: Business, Society, and Military Spending Since the Cuban Missile Crisis by John Boies for Contemporary Sociology. Review of Discrimination and Congressional Campaign Contributions by John Theilmann and Al Wilhite for The American Journal of Sociology. Review of The Transformation of Corporate Control by Neil Fligstein for Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. Review of Exact software. Teaching Sociology, Volume 18, Number 3 (July 1990). Review of Earl Babbie’s, The Practice of Social Research. Teaching Sociology, 1989, 17: 499-500. ii. Notes iii. Manuals iv. Other Contributions

e. Conferences and Workshops: Talks, Abstracts and Other Contributions i. Invited Talks (at Conferences) Human-Computer Interaction Lab Annual Symposium. Awalin Sopan, P.J. Rey, Jae-wook Ahn, Jeehye Kang, Catherine Plaisant, Alan Neustadtl, Art Hanson, Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamics of Web-Based Community Safety Groups: Lessons Learned from the Nation of Neighbors. May 22, 2012, College Park, MD. NSF sponsored Summer Social WebShop (organizer and presenter). August 21-24, 2012, College Park, MD PJ Rey, Alan Neustadtl, Nick Violi, Awalin Sopan, Ben Shneiderman, Catherine Plaisant, and Art Hanson."Nation of Neighbors: Understanding Users and their Motivations" 28th Annual Computer Human Interaction Symposium. University of Maryland. 26 May 2011. Nation of Neighbors: Design and Network Evolution for Internet Community Safety Systems. February 14, 2011, College Park, MD. George Washington University, University Seminar on Reflexive Systems Science 2.0: The Deep Science of Social Participation. October 19, 2010, Washington, DC Interdisciplinary Seminar on Technology-Mediated Social Participation. Social Networks and Long-term Health and Well-being, ISIS Center, Georgetown University Medical Center, 2009. The Relationship Between Social Network Analysis and Biomedical Networks. Presentation at the ISIS Center, Georgetown University, Spring 2007. Affiliation Networks of Terrorist Groups in 1997: Understanding the Duality of Co- Occurrence Data. START Center Meeting, September 2006. Co-Occurrence Data and Deterrence: Network Methodology and Analyzing Terrorist Networks with Public Data. 2006. Presentation made at the Homeland Security Institute, Arlington, VA. Didactic Seminar at the 2002 Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL. “Research on the Internet and Other Information Technology.” “Professional Workshop: The Internet, Information Technology, and Society.” (with Meyer Kestnbaum) American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Anaheim, CA, 2001. “The Social Impact of the Internet.” Paper presented at a special meeting on research about the Internet hosted by the Social Science Research Council, New York, New York, May 2001. “Understanding the Communicative Context Created through Telemedicine Interactions.” National Library of Medicine Symposium on Telemedicine, March 2001. Discussant, High-Technology section at the Annual Meetings of the International Management and Educational Conference, Leysin, Switzerland, 1985. ii. Presentations iii. Refereed Presentations IEEE Social Computing Conference. Motivation for Participation in Online Neighborhood Watch Communities: An Empirical Study Involving Invitation Letters. September 9-11, 2011, Cambridge, MA. Jeehye Kang, and Alan Neustadtl, “Social Life in an Online Neighborhood: Conversational Network Analysis of Nation of Neighbors,” The Eastern Sociological Society,” 2012 Annual Meeting. “Social Life in Online Neighborhood: Conversational Network Analysis in Nation of Neighbors”. Jeehye Kang and Alan Neustadtl. Eastern Sociological Society, 2011 Annual Meetings. Technology and Diabetes Management in a Veterans Administration Hospital. 2006. With Betty A. Levine, MS, Graham T. McMahon, MB, BCH, Helen E. Gomes, MS, APRN, Sara H. Hoehne, BA, Tang M.J. Hu1, Alan Neustadtl, Paul R. Conlin, MD. Poster session, American Diabetes Association meetings. “Information Technology, the Internet, and Time Displacement.” (with Anthony Alvarez, Meyer Kestnbaum, and John Robinson) American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Anaheim, CA, 2001. “Understanding the communication environment from both perspectives: Assessment of medium use by patients and healthcare practitioners.” With J. Turner, A. Alaoui, J. Winchester, B. Levine, J. Collmann, S. Mun, accepted for presentation to the International Communication Association meeting. Washington, DC, May 2001. “Home Peritoneal Dialysis via the Internet: Current and Future Technology.” With James Winchester , Betty Levine, Adil Alaoui, Jeff Collmann, MJ Tang Hu, Seon K. Mun , M. Aminrazavi, M. Hofilena, S. Borgiasz, J. Malik, Jeanine Turner, Jim Grigsby. Presented to the Association des Nephrologues du Quebec in Montreal Canada, PQ on March 30, 2000 “Telemedicine and Hemodialysis: An Analysis of Clinical Outcomes.” With Betty A. Levine, James Grigsby, James Winchester, Seong K. Mun. Presented to Telemedicine and Telecommunications: Options for the New Century, sponsored by National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland on March 13-14 2001. “Understanding the Communicative Context Created through Telemedicine Interactions.” With Jeanine W. Turner, Adil Alaoui, James Winchester, Betty A. Levine, Jeff Collmann, and Seong K. Mun. Presented to Telemedicine and Telecommunications: Options for the New Century, sponsored by National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland on March 13-14 2001. “Telemedicine and Hemodialysis: An Analysis of Clinical Outcomes.” Paper presented at a National Library of Medicine Symposium on Telemedicine, March 2001. “Income Determination in a Southern State.” Paper read at the American Sociological Association and Rural Sociology joint meeting, Toronto, Canada, August 1997 (with William Falk and Liana Sayer). “Onward Christian Soldiers: A Network Analysis of the Political Action of the Religious Right.” Paper presented at the Eastern Sociological Society annual meeting, Baltimore, MD April 1997 (with Jennifer Fortado) “Business and the 1994 Elections: PAC Contributions and the Republican Victory,” paper presented at the American Sociological Association annual meeting, New York, NY August 1996 (with Dan Clawson). “Does Place Matter?” Paper presented at the Southern Sociological Society annual meeting, Richmond, VA April 1996 (with W. Falk and K. Beckett). “A Feminist State Analysis of Child Care Provision and Female Labor Force Participation: The British and French Cases.” (with Joan Hermsen) American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Los Angeles, CA, 1994. “Reform and Reorganization: The State and Inequality in British Education in the Twentieth Century.” (with David Cotter) American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Los Angeles, CA, 1994. “Union Growth in Britain and France: 1871-1975.” (with Lovell Smith) The Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Baltimore, MD, 1994. “Corporate Hegemony, Soft Money, and Campaign Finance Reform.” American Political Science Association Annual Meetings, Washington, DC, 1993 (with Dan Clawson). “‘Soft Money’ in the 1992 Elections.” American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Miami, FL, 1993 (with Dan Clawson). “The Structure and Organization of Corporate PACs.” American Sociology Association Annual Meetings, Cincinnati, OH, 1991 (with Dan Clawson and Denise Scott). “The Relative Impact of Campaign Contributions on Roll Call Votes: A Comparison of Business and Labor.” The Eastern Sociological Society, Annual Meetings, Boston, MA, 1990. “What Corporate PAC Officials Say About Politics.” (with Dan Clawson and Denise Scott), American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, San Francisco, CA, 1989. “Network Methods and Elite Research: A Comparison of Factor Analysis and STRUCTURE.” Department of Sociology, University of Munich, Munich, Germany, March 1989. “A Dynamic Analysis of Corporate PAC Groupings, 1978-1986”, American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Atlanta, GA, 1988 (with Dan Clawson and Tie-ting Su). “Class Struggle in Campaign Finance? PAC Groupings in the 1984 Election”, American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Atlanta, GA, 1988 (with Dan Clawson and Denise Scott). “A Dynamic Analysis of Corporate Political Behavior: 1978-1984.” The Operations Research Society of America Annual Meetings, 1988, Washington, D.C. Organizer for the session titled “Elites and Masses,” The Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meetings, , PA, 1988. Discussant for the session titled “Cross-National Studies and Development,” The Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Philadelphia, PA, 1988. “The Networks of Corporate Political Action: Conservative Bonding in the 1980 Elections.” (with Dan Clawson) American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, Chicago, IL, 1987. “Corporate Political Groupings: Behavior Versus Self-Reported Communication” (with Dan Clawson). Conference on Corporate Interlocks. Nags Head, NC, 1987. “Interlocks and Corporate Campaign Contributions” (with Dan Clawson). Conference on Corporate Interlocks. Nags Head, NC, 1987. “Company versus Classwide Rationality in Corporate Political Action.” Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Boston, MA, 1987. “Corporate PACs and Conservative Cliques.” (with Dan Clawson) Sunbelt Social Network Conference, Clearwater, FL, 1987. “Vested Interests: An Assessment of Competing Corporate Political Action Strategies.” American Sociological Association Meetings, New York, NY, 1986. “The Impact of Magnetic Media in the Classroom.” Annual Meetings of the International Management and Education Conference, Leysin, Switzerland, 1985. “Which Class Fractions Fund the New Right?” (with Dan Clawson and Allen Kaufman) American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, , MI, 1983. “Foreign Capital and Debt: An Analysis of the Effects of Direct Foreign Investment on the External Public Debt of Underdeveloped Countries.” Society for the Study of Social Problems Annual Meetings, Detroit, MI, 1983. “The Dual Economy and Job Satisfaction: Differential Access to Work Satisfaction.” Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Philadelphia, PA, 1982. “The Dual Economy and Job Satisfaction: A Preliminary Analysis.” New York State Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Oswego, NY, 1982. “Maoist Economics and the New China.” Symposium on China, University of Maine at Orono, 1979.

iv. Refereed Conference Proceedings v. Non-Refereed Conference Proceedings vi. Abstracts vii. Refereed Abstracts viii. Posters ix. Refereed Posters x. Panels xi. Refereed Panels xii. Other f. Colloquia and Research Presentations g. Completed Creative Works i. CDs ii. Constructed Projects iii. Demonstrations iv. Exhibits and Installations v. Films. vi. Inventions vii.Original Plans and Designs viii. Patents ix.Performances x. Photographs xi. Software. xii. Webpages xiii. Other Completed Creative Works h. Sponsored Research

List source, title, amount awarded, time period and role (e.g., principal investigator) in reverse chronological order or its inverse. If there are co-investigators, please list these.

i. Grants CTE Learning Enhancement Mini-Grants, 2013. Budget: $17,160.91. The National Science Foundation supported Webshop 4.0: Technology-Mediated Social Participation under the Division of Information & Intelligent Systems (IIS, 2012). Budget: $100,000. (~$50,000 from business sources). The National Science Foundation supported Webshop 3.0: Technology-Mediated Social Participation under the Division of Information & Intelligent Systems (IIS, 2011). Budget: $100,000. The National Science Foundation supported Webshop 3.0: Technology-Mediated Social Participation under the Division of Information & Intelligent Systems (IIS, 2010). Budget: $50,000. Supporting a Nation of Neighbors with Community Analysis Visualization Environments (with Dr. Ben Schneiderman and Dr. Catherine Plaisant, 2010). Budget: $250,000, SoCS proposal IIS-0968521 . ITR: Theory Driven Technology Design of a Diabetes Management Community for Teens. (with Seong Ki Mun and Jennifer Preece). Submitted to the National Science Foundation, February 12th, 2003. Requested budget: $3,609,145. ITR:Documenting the Social Impacts of the Internet Online. (With Meyer Kestnbaum and John P. Robinson). Submitted to the National Science Foundation, February 13th, 2003. Budget: $3,976,938. The Social Impact of the Internet: A Multifaceted and Multidisciplinary Approach. (with John Robinson). Awarded $2.7 million by the National Science Foundation, 2000 (NSF Award #0086143). University of Maryland, General Research Board Semester Research Award, 2000. Total award of $9,000. University of Maryland, General Research Summer Award, 1991. Total Award of $5,450. University of Maryland, Summer Scholarship Incentive Award, 1991. Total Award of 1 month of salary. Business Elites and Political Realignment. (with Dan Clawson). Awarded $150,000 by the National Science Foundation, 1987 (SES-8721982). University of Maryland, General Research Summer Award, 1987. Total Award of $4,750. University of Maryland, General Research Support Award, 1987. Total Award of $1,000. University of Maryland, Summer Scholarship Incentive Award, 1987. Total Award of 1 month of salary. “The Networks of Corporate Political Action,” (with Dan Clawson). Awarded $65,000 by the National Science Foundation, 1985 (SES-8512021).

ii. Contracts

i. Work in Progress i. Grant Applications ii. Working Papers “Managing Chronic Disease: The role of Social Support Messages.” Alan Neustadtl, Danny Robinson, Jeanine Turner, & Betty Levine.

A Guide to Flipping Your Classroom and Assessing Outcomes.

iii. Manuscripts under Review “Online Health Monitoring of Diabetes: Social Support Messages and Patient Health Outcomes.” Alan Neustadtl, Danny Robinson, Jeanine Turner, & Betty Levine. Submitted to Health Communication.

j. Other Research (Specify type)

3. Teaching, Mentoring and Advising.

a. Courses Taught Include courses taught in the last five years. Indicate approximate enrollments and any unusual formats. SOCY201, Introductory Statistics for Sociology, 80 students. SOCY201BL, Introductory Statistics for Sociology, 40 students. This is a blended or hybrid version of SOCY201. SOCY401, Intermediate Statistics for Sociologists, 25 students. SOCY602, Statistics For Sociological Research II, 20 students. SOCY699C, Introduction to Computing for Sociologists, 20 students SOCY699I, Statistical Techniques, 15 students.

b. Course or Curriculum Development

SOCY201BL, Introductory Statistics for Sociology. I have developed this course as part of an experiment to compare the outcomes and pedagogical processes in a blended online course (flipped classroom) compared to a traditionally taught lecture/lab course. This involved rewriting lectures and class materials for video, shooting and editing the video, and organizing the course on Canvas and Coursera, two different content deliver and learning systems. I have also identified different video resources and have organized and merged three sources of videos: 1) Coursera lectures, 2) Youtube videos, and 3) video content I have created. This has been and continues to be a large undertaking, significantly more work than teaching a traditional course, at least initially. I have also had to learn two different information communication technologies to distribute the course content.

SOCY699C, Introduction to Computing for Sociologists. All of the material for this course have been revised to reflect the latest version of Stata, the statistical application that is the focus of the course. This was required when the College upgraded from version 12 to version 13. I have moved a significant portion of the course content to an online Stata usersite to facilitate teaching and am creating video content of all the course materials so this class can be taught as a blended or hybrid course on statistical programming and applications.

SOCY699I, Statistical Techniques. I am creating online video content that students can watch outside of class so we can expand the range and depth of topics taught in this required course for graduate students. c. Teaching Innovations Include Software, New Programs and Other Contributions to Teaching. i. Software, Web Pages, Online Education See section b. (Course or Curriculum Development) above

CTE Learning Enhancement Mini-Grants, 2013. My LEM research award is supporting redesigning a large existing traditional undergraduate statistics course, SOCY201, to deliver content online, blended with lab exercises organized around current sociological research and practice. Furthermore, I am conducting a quasi-experiment comparing blended to traditional sections of the introductory statistics class.

I am using video lectures and Web based technologies to 1) move lecture content out of the classroom, 2) move all course assessments online to provide timely and thorough evaluation of comprehension of the material, 3) support online discussion and office hours, and 4) use short message service text based micro-polls to guide course materials and discussion.

Additionally, I am using this opportunity to teach a traditional and blended version of the course in the same semester to quantitatively and qualitatively make direct comparisons of these two teaching methods. Quantitative comparisons of course assessments will instruct about the relative efficacy of these teaching methods and qualitative methods will allow for evaluation not tied to rigidly defined measures to understand the experiences of the students.

Finally, I hope this course development will be used to inform the Sociology and other faculty about new technologies and teaching methods to help them prepare similar blended courses.

ii. Major Programs Established iii. Study Abroad Established iv. Instructional Workshops and Seminars Established v. Professional Programs Established vi. Other Teaching Innovations d. Advising: Research Direction This refers to students whose projects the candidate has directed as chair or committee member (indicate role). The name of student and academic year(s) involved should be indicated, as well as placement of the student(s), if the project is completed. List completed work first. i. Undergraduate ii. Master’s Kang, Jeehye Johnson, Denae iii. Doctoral Spring 2012 (proposal defense)/Spring 2013 (Thursday, April 11, 2013), Dobin Yim, Online Networks and Prosocial Behaviors: Empirical Studies of Charitable Donations and Environmental Sustainability

Spring 2013 (final defense Tuesday, April 9, 2013), Jeffrey A. Taylor's Dissertation Examining Committee, Electoral Systems and Representation: the Effects of District Magnitude

Spring 2013 (final defense Friday, April 5, 2013), Cody Dunne, Measuring and Improving the Readability of Network Visualizations, CMNS-Institute for Advanced Computer Studies

Spring 2013 (final defense Tuesday, April 16, 2013), Summer 2012 (proposal defense), Brad N Greenwood, Pokes, Prods, and Pushes: Iformation Availability and Decision Making in Ambiguous Environments, BMGT-Decision, Operations & Information Technologies

Summer 2012, Jes Koepfler, Proposal defense, iSchool, INFO-College of Information Studies

Spring 2012 (final defense), EunRyung Chong, The Emotion Social Media Bring to News: Empathy and Compassion for Elements of News Messages in the Context of New Media Platforms, Journalism

Spring 2012, Feb. 2013 (final defense), Abrar Al-Hassan, Information Transparency and User Behavior in Emerging Online Marketplaces: Empirical Studies of Social Media and Open Innovation Markets

Spring 2011, Byungchae Jinm, PhD, Intuitional Logics, Collective Actions and Development of New Technologies, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, Management and Organization Dept

Lei Zhang, PhD Candidate in Business and Management

Spring 2011, Jonathan Horowitz, MA, Investigating the Global Effects of Highly Skilled Labor Migration: How Immigrant Athletes Impact Olympic Medal Counts

Fall 2010, Leah Carpenter, MS, Utilizing Social Networks Analysis in the Characterization of African Ungulate Social Structure

Summer 2010, Sri Kudaravalli e. Advising (Other than Research Direction) Indicate approximate numbers of students per year. i. Undergraduate 2 ii. Graduate 3 iii. Other advising and mentoring activities Include advising student groups, special assignments, recruiting, faculty mentorship, etc.

4. Service and Outreach

a. Editorships, Editorial Boards and Reviewing Activities

Include participation for Journals and Other Learned publications. i. Editorships ii. Editorial Boards iii. Reviewing Activities for Journals and Books Reviewer, American Journal of Sociology Reviewer, American Sociological Review Reviewer, Social Forces Reviewer, Social Science Research Reviewer, Teaching Sociology

iv. Reviewing Activities for Agencies

Reviewer, National Science Foundation v. Other

b. Professional Service i. Offices and committee memberships held in professional organizations (include dates). ii. Other non-University committees, commissions, panels, etc.

c.. Campus Service i. Departmental IRB Liason, Statistics Committee ii. College CPAC Committee iii. University iv. Special AdministrativeError! Bookmark not defined. Assignments v. Other

d. Consulting and External Engagements i. Paid Consultancies (optional) ii. Other Unpaid Services (to local, state and federal agencies) iii. Community Engagements, Local, State, National. iv. International Activities (not listed above) v. Corporate and Other Board Memberships vi. Entrepreneurial Activities vii. Other

e. Presentations and Media Activities i. Presentations (Non-Research) ii. Media Activities iii. Other

5. Awards and Honors

a. Research Fellowships, Prizes and Awards

b. Teaching Awards

c. Service Awards and Honors

d. Other Special Recognition