Distinguished Achievement Award Winners

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211-240 of 1074
A. Benton Cocanougher

A. Benton Cocanougher
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Year Awarded: 2001

College: Business

Award Level: Administration

Barbara Jean Coe

Barbara Jean Coe
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Year Awarded: 1971

College: Business

Award Level: Teaching

Noah Cohen

Noah Cohen
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Year Awarded: 2013

Noah Cohen has been a member of the faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences since 1989. He earned his A.B. and V.M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and his M.P.H. and Ph.D. from John Hopkins University. Among his most prestigious awards are the World Equine Veterinary Association/Schering-Plough Applied Equine Research Award and Honorary Diplomate status in the American Veterinary Epidemiologic Society.



Though Dr. Cohen directs the Equine Infectious Disease Laboratory, studying cellular mechanisms of immunity to infectious disease in horses, his greatest contributions have come from patient-based studies of important health problems involving animals with spontaneous disease. He pioneered farm-based and private practice-based epidemiologic studies in horses, which led to faster and more effective solutions, and reduced the need to use healthy horses in research. Two key studies of this type uncovered risk factors that make racehorses more prone to injuries and feeding practices that caused equine colic, a major killer of horses. His theories on Rhodococcus equi pneumonia of foals have led to practices that save hundreds of equine lives annually.



Dr. Cohen’s two most exciting current collaborative projects involve using electron-beam technology to produce vaccines for important diseases of horses and using next-generation sequencing and genome-wide approaches to studying infectious disease of horses. His greatest contributions have been his theories and his thinking, which have revolutionized the way infectious diseases are approached in veterinary medicine. His nominator concludes that Dr. Cohen has improved the welfare and well-being of animals both here and abroad, touching the lives of so many people and animals by answering important research questions and delivering useful solutions that make a difference immediately.

College: Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences

Award Level: Research

Noah D. Cohen

Noah D. Cohen
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Year Awarded: 2018

Noah Cohen earned his bachelor’s degree and his doctorate in veterinary medicine from the University of Pennsylvania, and a master’s of public health and doctorate in epidemiology from Johns Hopkins University. He completed a residency in large animal internal medicine at Texas A&M University. He joined the faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in 1991 and has been employed by Texas A&M University for 29 years. He is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine – Large Animal and of the American Veterinary Epidemiology Society. Dr. Cohen is known as a leading expert in the epidemiology of equine infectious disease, in particular the intracellular pathogen Rhodococcus equi. He has made significant contributions to strategies for prevention and management of Rhodococcus equi and has co-developed a vaccine that has been effective in initial challenge studies. He has published over 200 peer-reviewed articles and was among the first to influence our knowledge of the epidemiology of many equine diseases. Dr. Cohen has been the principal investigator or significant co-investigator for nearly $2.5 million of funding from extramural granting agencies for research to impact animal disease. This is unprecedented given that these agencies have far fewer dollars available than their counterparts working to solve problems in human diseases.

College: Department of Large Animal Clinical Services

Award Level: Graduate Mentoring

Bryan Cole ’75

Bryan Cole ’75
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Year Awarded: 1979

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Teaching

Bryan Cole ’75

Bryan Cole ’75
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Year Awarded: 1994

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Teaching

Patricia D. Collins

Patricia D. Collins
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Year Awarded: 2008

Patti Collins is a shining star in the Texas A&M University community and specifically the Texas A&M University at Qatar community. She holds degrees from Western Kentucky University and the University of Cincinnati. Patti is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Supervisor in the state of Texas and a nationally certified counselor. Patti started her career as a school psychologist and then began serving college students in university counseling centers in 1994. She has held counseling center positions at Western Kentucky University and Texas A&M University and most recently has served as the Coordinator of Counseling and Wellness at Texas A&M University at Qatar for the past three years.



Over the past eight years, Patti has been helping Aggies to grow and develop and has helped many to reach their potential through their connection and interactions with Patti through the services she provides. She also has developed an area of expertise in biofeedback training to better serve the students in Qatar. One colleague wrote, “She has incredible empathy with students; she can so easily imagine what it is like for the student, and communicate that understanding.” Patti’s dedication and determination to always do what is best for the students shows in her every day interactions with students from various cultures. One student wrote, “she made me realize how important I am to myself and others, in short she enhances one’s self-esteem.”



Patti lives and works in Doha, Qatar with her husband Michael and ten year old daughter, Madeline. Patti enjoys running in her free time and most recently ran her fifth marathon in Venice, Italy. When not serving students, Patti is spending time with her family and four pets who were adopted in Qatar. She has been on the forefront of developing Aggies in Qatar and strives to connect them to the university while at the same time providing the gift of herself to TAMUQ Aggies, creating the space for safe, holistic self exploration and growth.

College: Texas A&M University at Qatar

Award Level: Student Relations

Jeffrey Conant

Jeffrey Conant
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Year Awarded: 1993

College: Business

Award Level: Teaching

Don T. Conlee ’94

Don T. Conlee ’94
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Year Awarded: 2018

Don Conlee earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Louisiana, Monroe, a master’s degree from the Naval Postgraduate School, and a doctorate from Texas A&M University. He joined the faculty of the College of Geosciences in 2009. Dr. Conlee has more than 30 years’ experience in operational meteorology and instrumentation. Before coming to Texas A&M, he served as a department head at the Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center in Monterey, California, and as a Strike Warfare Office for the U.S. Navy Enterprise Battle Group Staff. He teaches courses in weather forecasting, weather analysis, instrumentation, and severe weather. Students say these courses are rigorous, practical, and inspiring. A former student commented “his courses prepared us for the real-world applications in ways I continue to use in my career. They were challenging courses that encouraged us to think in new ways and make new connections.” His teaching extends far beyond the traditional classroom and continues long after regular business hours. He has developed several high-impact learning experiences, including a study-abroad program that focuses on meteorological phenomenon found in other parts of the world. He built a Weather Center that displays current charts and forecasts so that students could have a room of their own to study and discuss current weather situations. He actively involves freshman and sophomore students in research projects and activities, including launching weather balloons to collect data for the National Weather Service. A former student said “one of the defining characteristics is the teaching he enables beyond the classroom. He always encourages his students to get involved and shares a contagious desire to become a life-long learner.”



College: Department of Atmospheric Sciences

Award Level: Teaching

Charles Conrad

Charles Conrad
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Year Awarded: 1997

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

Dwight C. Conway

Dwight C. Conway
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Year Awarded: 2003

College: Science

Award Level: Teaching

Audrey K. Cook

Audrey K. Cook
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Year Awarded: 2017

Audrey Cook, associate professor in the Department of Veterinary Small Animal Clinical Sciences, joined the faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in 2007. She graduated from the Royal School of Veterinary Studies at Edinburgh University and earned a Post Graduate Certificate in Veterinary Education from the Royal Veterinary College, London. Dr. Cook is nationally recognized in the field of veterinary internal medicine with a focus on endocrinology and gastroenterology. Further, her colleagues and students recognize her as an outstanding teacher and mentor who excels in the classroom, enthusiastically teaching in all four years of the professional DVM program and mentoring post-DVM interns and residents. She also works directly with fourth-year veterinary students during their small animal internal medicine clinical rotations. Her dean wrote, “Through her clinical rotations, Dr. Cook provides hands-on, high-impact, experiential learning opportunities for our students and resident trainees.” Her teaching program “blends a clinical service with practical, real world concepts, creating unique educational prospects for our DVM students…and provides them with cutting edge opportunities that foster a deeper learning and understanding of course materials not available to all veterinary schools.” In addition, her students consistently give her stellar reviews. One former student wrote, “Dr. Cook's rounds are absolutely WONDERFUL and I learned so much ? she is truly a wealth of knowledge. I probably learned more from our 10-15 hours-worth of rounds than I did in most of our third year medicine courses.” A colleague concludes “Her passion and genuine belief in the power of quality education is what truly drives her to be a spectacular educator. She is a visionary and the CVM is incredibly fortunate to have her as part of our educational programs.

College: Department of Veterinary Small Animal Clinical Sciences

Award Level: Teaching

John T. Cooper Jr. '92

John T. Cooper Jr. '92
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Year Awarded: 2017

John Cooper, associate professor of practice and planner-in-residence, also serves as director of the Texas Target Communities Program (TTCP), interim director of the Center for Housing & Urban Development, associate director of outreach for the Hazard Reduction & Recovery Center, and director of engagement for the Institute for the Environment. He holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Texas A&M University and earned his Ph.D. in city and regional planning from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hell. Soon thereafter, he launched his community development career at MDC, a nationally respected community development nonprofit, where he helped lead a four-year project developing solutions to help 22 communities across the Carolinas increase local employment, income and wealth, and build the leadership assets and structures necessary for long-term economic renewal. He also managed a project focused on increasing disaster awareness and preparedness in disadvantaged rural communities and another aimed at teaching policy framing and advocacy skills to non-profits working to build public support for policies that benefit rural children and families. With these experiences, Dr. Cooper returned to Texas A&M in 2012 to lead the TTCP, a high-impact service learning and community outreach program within the College of Architecture and supported in part by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service. The goal of the TTCP is to provide tailored support, grounded in local context and informed by interdisciplinary teams skilled at solving complex problems. Under Dr. Cooper’s leadership, TTCP has assisted more than 20 underserved communities across Texas, invested up to 12,000 hours of student and faculty expertise for each community, and connected communities to resources across the Texas A&M System for assessing and leveraging community assets.

College: Department of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning

Award Level: Extension, Outreach, Continuing Education and PD

Michael O. Cornelius

Michael O. Cornelius
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Year Awarded: 2003

College: Food Services

Award Level: Staff

Dean Corrigan

Dean Corrigan
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Year Awarded: 1989

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Staff

Richard Costa

Richard Costa
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Year Awarded: 1976

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

Richard Costa

Richard Costa
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Year Awarded: 1984

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

Gerard Cote

Gerard Cote
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Year Awarded: 2011

Dr. Gerard L. Coté has been with the university for 20 years. He is recognized as a world-wide expert in optical sensing for diagnostic and biomedical sensing applications. His most notable research accomplishment is in the area of optical glucose monitoring for determining blood sugar levels in diabetes. He has been asked to give several technical talks within the US and abroad, has consulted with companies providing his expertise in this technology area, and received attention from the popular press including segments on Fox News and in Readers Digest. More specifically, beyond his publication record in these areas, he is the co-inventor, with four patents issued and one pending, of two potentially revolutionizing glucose sensing methods. In addition to glucose sensing, he has developed optical technology for the diagnostics area. Specifically, he has co-authored several research papers in top journals describing his collaborative innovative approaches toward optically monitoring perfusion and oxygenation for tissue liver transplant patients and for the development of point-of-care nanosystems based on surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy for detection of blood biomarkers. He has a patent pending on the point-of-care technology that has been licensed by a small medical device company that he co-founded, MedAutomate Diagnostics, Inc. He has also spun off two other companies (BioTex, Inc. and Visualase, Inc.) that develop optical medical technologies. The bulk of the research that Dr. Coté has performed is described in over 240 publications; including refereed journal papers, proceedings, presentations, patents, and book chapters. To perform this work, he has received funding from NIH, NSF, DOE, NASA, private foundations and industry. He currently has over $6M in NIH research funding. He has also established collaborations world-wide including faculty from Strathclyde University in Scotland, the University of Pittsburgh, University of Maryland and Oak Ridge National Lab.

College: College of Engineering

Award Level: Research

Samuel Cotner ’64

Samuel Cotner ’64
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Year Awarded: 1981

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Extension/ Continuing Education

F. Albert Cotton

F. Albert Cotton
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Year Awarded: 1977

College: Science

Award Level: Research

F. Albert Cotton

F. Albert Cotton
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Year Awarded: 2006

College: Science

Award Level: Graduate Mentoring

James Russell Couch ’31

James Russell Couch ’31
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Year Awarded: 1974

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Research

Robert Coulson

Robert Coulson
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Year Awarded: 1986

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Research

Slyvia Cover

Slyvia Cover
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Year Awarded: 1962

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Research

Elenor Cox

Elenor Cox
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Year Awarded: 1993

College: Science

Award Level: Teaching

Sidney Cox

Sidney Cox
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Year Awarded: 1967

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

Roger Crockett

Roger Crockett
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Year Awarded: 1988

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

John L. Crompton '77

John L. Crompton '77
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Year Awarded: 2016

John Crompton, University Distinguished Professor in the Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences, earned his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. He joined the faculty of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences in 1974. He has also served on the faculty of the Department of Marketing and as a consultant. His numerous awards include the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Agriculture Sciences National Excellence in Teaching Award, a Minnie Stevens Piper Professor award for excellence in teaching at Texas universities, a Texas A&M University Presidential Professor of Teaching Excellence award, and The Association of Former Students University-Level Award for Teaching. Over his career, he has chaired more than 30 Ph.D. and 50 M.S. committees. Each of these students has been taught to conceptualize abstract concepts and to empirically examine phenomena. In addition, through his mentorship, these students have learned to distribute the results of their research through high-quality writing and presentations. A colleague and former graduate student wrote, “John Crompton’s interest in his graduate students can be described as nurturing, parental, empowering, critical, intense, intrusive and invasive. We wouldn’t have it any other way!” His nominator commented that it is obvious that Dr. Crompton “enjoys helping young researchers and professionals achieve their potential,” and noted that he has the “uncommon ability to help people of all skill levels realize their potential.” A supporter added, “He always knew how to create a person-specific academic environment in which there is room for individual creativity and professional growth, bringing out the best in his students.” His supporters consistently praise his ability to instill confidence by encouraging students to raise their aspirations and demonstrating to them that they can accomplish much more than they think they can.

College: College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Graduate Mentoring

John L. Crompton ’77

John L. Crompton ’77
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Year Awarded: 2002

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Research

John L. Crompton ’77

John L. Crompton ’77
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Year Awarded: 2006

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Teaching

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211-240 of 1074