David Blix is always animated, but he seemed especially so in his
religion course studying the religions of Islam and Asia.
Students in Professor David Blix's class take notes trying to keep up
with their professor.
Chemistry Professor gets up close and personal with his students in the
lab. Wabash gets high marks for student-faculty engagement, and this is
exactly why.
Standing at the end of a long table in the chemistry lab provides the
photographer a glimpse at how hard the students work at Wabash.
This is from the exact same location as the previous photograph, but
shows a different level of concentration and focus.
Religion Professor Bob Royalty told me that he thought this image made
him look stern — I found him to be anything but stern in his class
studying religion in America. The professor was supportive and invited
discussion from almost every student in the class.
Professor Royalty asked his students for a "close" reading of the text
they were studying.
When I made the schedule and confirmed it with Education Professor
Deborah Butler, she said the class I intended to shoot had only two
students. Great, I thought. When I got to Forest Hall — Wabash's first
classroom — I found two professors and two students. Talk about a
terrific student-faculty ratio!
The only students in Deborah Butler's teacher education class — a very
intimate teaching and learning experience.
Theater Professor Michael Abbott clearly loves this class — his Freshman
Tutorial on the narrative of video games.
The freshman students in Professor Abbott's Tutorial were engaged, open,
and honest — a terrific classrom dynamic.
Chemistry Professor gets up close and personal with his students in the
lab. Wabash gets high marks for student-faculty engagement, and this is
exactly why.
Religion Professor Bob Royalty told me that he thought this image made
him look stern — I found him to be anything but stern in his class
studying religion in America. The professor was supportive and invited
discussion from almost every student in the class.
When I made the schedule and confirmed it with Education Professor
Deborah Butler, she said the class I intended to shoot had only two
students. Great, I thought. When I got to Forest Hall — Wabash's first
classroom — I found two professors and two students. Talk about a
terrific student-faculty ratio!