...

Arch 639: 20 -Century Theory and Practice

by user

on
Category: Documents
15

views

Report

Comments

Transcript

Arch 639: 20 -Century Theory and Practice
Appendix 2 – Format for Faculty Resumes for APRs
Name: Sarah Deyong
Courses Taught (Two academic years prior to current visit):
Arch 639: 20th-Century Theory and Practice
Arch 350: History and Theory of Modern and Contemporary Architecture
Arch 305: Arch Design III (Communications Credit)
Arch 685: Directed Studies
Arch 693: Professional Study
Educational Credentials:
Ph.D., Princeton University, School of Architecture, Doctoral Program in History and Theory
M.A., University of Toronto, Department of Art History
B. Arch., University of Toronto, School of Architecture, NAAB Accredited
Teaching Experience:
2007-present: Assistant Professor, Department of Architecture, Texas A&M University
2006-2007: Visiting Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, Pratt Institute
2001-2002: Lecturer, Undergraduate Writing Program, Princeton University
Professional Experience:
1992-1994: Partner in Babe Deyong Design
1989-1992: Intern Architect, Boigon and Armstrong Architects, Toronto
Selected Publications and Recent Research:
 “Sigfried Giedion, Team X Idea, and the Evolution of a Relational Idea.” Accepted for
publication in The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, ed. Swati Chattopadhyay
(expected to appear in September 2014).
 “Rethinking Designs of the 1960s: Pliny Fisk’s Political Ecology.” Submitted to the Journal of
Architectural Education (Taylor & Francis).
 “Urban Acupuncture and the Paradoxical Logic of Systems,” Praxis: Eco-logics, n.13 (April
2012), eds. Amanda Reeser Lawrence and Ashley Schafer.
 “High Tech: Modernism Redux,” A Critical History of Contemporary Architecture [1960-2010],
edited by Elie Haddad and David Rifkind (Hampshire, UK: Ashgate). Pending
 “The Rise and Fall of the Megastructure: Memories of the Urban Future,” The Changing of the
Avant-Garde: Visionary Architectural Drawings from the Howard Gilman Collection, ed.
Terence Riley (New York: MoMA, 2002).
 “Planetary Habitat: The Origins of a Phantom Movement,” The Journal of Architecture, guest
eds. David Cunnigham, Jon Goodbun and Karin Jaschke, volume 6, n. 2 (July 2001), pp. 113128.
Professional Memberships:
Association of the Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA)
Society of Architectural Historians (SAH)
Fly UP