
Majors
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Dr. Anne Laura Bizub
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Dr Bizub earned the Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology in 1998 from
Duquesne University and is a licensed psychologist in the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. “Dr. B” is
also a certified school counselor in Pennsylvania, having earned
her certificate in school counseling, K-12, at Chatham College. In
addition, she has taught college courses since 1992 and has served
as a researcher and a program director.
“Dr. B” joined the EC faculty in 2006
and teaches Abnormal Psychology, Introduction to Counseling,
Introduction to Clinical Psychology, and (in Term III) All
Creatures Great and Small: An Exploration of Human and Animal
Relationships. She has published on animal behavior and
on the benefits of therapeutic horseback riding for individuals
with severe and persistent mental illness.
Dr. Bizub has been a jewelry maker and metalsmith for 26 years
and looks forward to teaching metalsmithing at EC as well when the
opportunity presents itself. Art, music, travel, and
nature give her inspiration and joy.

Dr. Martha Easton
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Tel: (607) 735-1956
Email: measton@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 212
Dr. Easton's Personal Website
Email: measton@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 212
Dr. Easton's Personal Website
Dr. Easton came to Elmira College after having taught at
Carleton in Minnesota. She earned her BA from
Swarthmore and the Ph.D. from the University of
Minnesota. She teaches both Sociology and
Women’s Studies, and has created three Term III travel
courses. Her European Union class spends three weeks
traveling to major European cities where students meet European
citizens engaged in the work (and protest) of European
identity-building. She and Dr. Rosati teach a class
that travels to India, where students examine gender and
globalization issues. Drs. Easton and Rosati have also
created a class that travels to South Africa to study the social
construction of race.
Co-Advisor for the Social Science honor society, and the
Women’s Studies honor society, Dr. Easton’s
research interests are in national identity in Europe and in the
social construction of gender and race. She has studied
in Norway, where she spent several years doing fieldwork on the
creation of Norwegian identity in the face of the European
Union.
Dr. Kunihiko Imai
Associate Professor of Political Science
Associate Professor of Political Science
Dr. Imai earned the Ph.D. from Binghamton University. Since
coming to Elmira College in 1997, he has developed such courses as
International Conflict and Cooperation, Research Methods in
Political Science, and Culture and People of Japan, a Term III
travel course helping students gain first-hand knowledge of Japan
and its people through language lessons, university lectures,
visits to cultural sites in Japan, and living with host families in
Tokyo. Dr. Imai helps the College recruit students from
Japan and maintain relationships with Japanese colleges,
universities, and educational agencies.
Building upon his own experience in Russia, Poland, and Japan, Dr. Imai is well-versed in many areas of international relations, comparative politics, international law, U.S. foreign policy, international relations theory, international political economy, and research methods and statistics. His articles have appeared in scholarly books, as well as professional journals such as Comparative Strategy: An International Journal, The International Journal on World Peace, International Interactions, and The Journal of Politics, among others.
Building upon his own experience in Russia, Poland, and Japan, Dr. Imai is well-versed in many areas of international relations, comparative politics, international law, U.S. foreign policy, international relations theory, international political economy, and research methods and statistics. His articles have appeared in scholarly books, as well as professional journals such as Comparative Strategy: An International Journal, The International Journal on World Peace, International Interactions, and The Journal of Politics, among others.
Dr. Myra Glenn
Professor of American History
Professor of American History
Dr. Glenn earned the B.A. from Canisius College and the M.A. and
Ph.D. from the State University of New York at Buffalo. She has
also studied at Gujarat University in Ahmedabad, India.
Her major research interests are in nineteenth-century American
intellectual and cultural history; she has published two books:
Campaigns Against Corporal Punishment: Prisoners, Sailors, Women,
and Children in Antebellum America (1984) and Thomas K. Beecher:
Minister to a Changing America (1996), as well as numerous articles
in scholarly journals, including American Quarterly, Journal of the
Early Republic, and Nineteenth Century American
History. Her next book is tentatively titled Jack Tar's
Story: The Lives and Autobiographies of Antebellum American
Sailors. A two-time recipient of the Fulbright Lecture
Award, Dr. Glenn has taught in Spain, Argentina, and Brazil.
At Elmira College, she regularly teaches both halves of the
United States history survey and women's history. She
also teaches a wide range of upper-level seminars in American
history as well as Freshman Core.

Dr. Carol Lenhart
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice
Tel: (607) 735-1909
Email: clenhart@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 234
Dr. Lenhart's Personal Website
Email: clenhart@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 234
Dr. Lenhart's Personal Website
Dr. Lenhart graduated Summa Cum Laude from the State University
of New York at Brockport, and earned the M.A. and the Ph.D. in
Criminology at the University of Delaware. She is a
member of the Golden Key National Honor Society, Alpha Kappa Delta
International Sociology Honor Society, Alpha Phi Sigma National
Criminal Justice Honor Society, Alpha Chi Honor Society, and a
number of professional organizations.
She has been teaching Criminal Justice at Elmira College since
2005. Areas of interest include inmate litigation,
prison litigation reform effort, policing, profiling, history of
corrections, youth violence, at-risk youth and local
history. Dr. Lenhart regularly teaches such courses as
Criminology, Senior Seminar, Penology, Police Administration,
Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile Justice, and has recently begun
teaching the Term III course Women and Quilting in American
Society. She serves as advisor to the Elmira College Chapter of
Alpha Phi Sigma.

Dr. Benjamin Lovett
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Dr. Lovett joined the faculty in 2007. He earned his Ph.D. in School Psychology from Syracuse University, and his research focus is psychological testing. He has expertise in the diagnosis of learning and attention disorders, as well as the use of testing accommodations for students with these disorders. He consults widely on issues of how to best assess students with disabilities.
Dr. Lovett’s research has been published in a variety of professional journals, including School Psychology Review, the Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, and the Journal of Learning Disabilities. He has also presented with students at state and national research conferences. His courses at Elmira College include Psychological Testing, the Psychology of Learning, and Child Psychopathology.

Dr. Diane Maluso
Associate Professor of Psychology
Associate Professor of Psychology
Dr. Maluso earned the Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island
in 1992. A social psychologist, she teaches courses in
the areas of experimental, social and personality psychology,
statistics, the psychology of women, and interpersonal
discrimination. She is an active member of the
Women’s Studies program and regularly teaches Women
& Society and Feminist Theories.
Her research interests include interpersonal discrimination, the
social learning of gender, and online behavior. Her dissertation
was an assessment of the efficacies of various interventions
designed to lessen racist discrimination among college
students. She has served as a board member of the
Association for Women in Psychology, has been a recipient of the
Josef Stein Award, and has been voted “Teacher of the
Year” by Elmira College students. Professor
Maluso, an avid outdoorswoman, enjoys camping, fly fishing, and
canoeing.

Dr. Charles Mitchell
Associate Professor of American Studies
Associate Professor of American Studies
Tel: (607) 735-1937
Email: cmitchell@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 204
Dr. Mitchell's Personal Website
Email: cmitchell@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 204
Dr. Mitchell's Personal Website
Having earned the Ph.D. in American History-American Studies
from the Claremont Graduate University, Dr. Mitchell has been
teaching at Elmira College since 1993. His courses in
American Studies include Perspectives on the American Dream and
Individualism and Community in American Life; he also teaches
courses in the Women’s Studies program and a Term III
travel course to the canyon country of the
Southwest.
His primary research interests are in Environmental History with
a focus on representations of nature and the landscape in
literature and art. This allows him to blend work and
play while exploring America’s national parks and
wilderness areas. He has published a book on the legacy
of Ralph Waldo Emerson (Individualism and Its Discontents) and
essays and book chapters on such topics as teaching about the
desert, gender and landscape, and the perils of landscape
photography.

Dr. Robin O'Brian
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Sociology
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Sociology
A native of California, Dr. O’Brian earned the Ph.D.
in anthropology from UCLA, having earned the B.A. in anthropology
from UCLA and the M.A. from California State
University. Dr. O’Brian has conducted
research in Chiapas, Mexico, on Maya women’s household
and economic work. She is particularly interested in
why women retain traditional dress and under what conditions such
dress changes. In 2006, Dr. O’Brian was one
of twenty-four faculty selected nationally to participate in
“Maya Worlds,” a traveling institute about
ancient and contemporary Maya society. Dr.
O’Brian has published papers on women’s
work, including “Rosa: Weaving Women into
Life” and “Who Weaves and Why? Weaving,
Loom Complexity and Trade”. Dr.
O’Brian joined the EC faculty in 2000.
She teaches numerous anthropology courses including Peoples of
Latin America and Anthropology of Gender, and also participates in
both the Freshman Studies and the Women’s Studies
programs. She is the faculty sponsor of Lambda Alpha,
the anthropology honor society, and Culture Club, the campus
anthropology club.

Dr. Mark Pitner
Assistant Professor of Asian History
Assistant Professor of Asian History
Having earned his Ph.D. from the University of Washington, Dr.
Pitner has taught at the University of Tennessee, the University of
Washington, and Cornish College of the Arts before coming to Elmira
College. He has also spent numerous years working with the East
Asian art collection at the Seattle Asian Art Museum as a Blakemore
Curatorial Fellow (2004-2008), where he continues to act as a
consultant. Dr. Pitner has lived in China, Taiwan, and Japan, most
recently as a Fulbright Fellow in Taiwan (2008-2009), experiences
which enrich his courses and will form the core of a series of term
III travel courses to Asia.
Dr. Pitner has written on developments in Ruism (Confucianism), the history of natural science in China, and is currently working on a number of projects that explore the role of place in the intellectual history of China. His courses cover a range of regions, time periods, and topics in Asian Studies from broad surveys in Asian History to specialized courses in Japanese and Chinese history and literature.
Dr. Pitner has written on developments in Ruism (Confucianism), the history of natural science in China, and is currently working on a number of projects that explore the role of place in the intellectual history of China. His courses cover a range of regions, time periods, and topics in Asian Studies from broad surveys in Asian History to specialized courses in Japanese and Chinese history and literature.

Dr. William Pruitt
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice
Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice
I was born in Nashville, Tennessee (and still have much family in the area), but I grew up mainly in Connecticut where my family moved when I was 6. I attended the University of Hartford graduating summa cum laude with a Bachelor's degree in Criminal Justice. After working for a year at a small law firm in their real estate and estate planning area, I attended law school at Syracuse University graduating cum laude in 2006. After passing the bar exam in New York state, I worked for the judicial branch in Connecticut for several months. I then moved to Boston to attend Northeastern University where I obtained my Ph.D. in Criminology and Justice Policy in 2011.
I joined the faculty at Elmira College in 2012. I teach courses from Introduction to Criminal Justice to Due Process and beyond.
I joined the faculty at Elmira College in 2012. I teach courses from Introduction to Criminal Justice to Due Process and beyond.
Dr. Robert Shephard
Professor of History
Professor of History
Tel: (607) 735-1939
Email: Rshephard@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 204
Dr. Shephard's Personal Website
Email: Rshephard@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 204
Dr. Shephard's Personal Website
Dr. Shephard has been teaching European History at Elmira
College since 1987, including courses on the Holocaust and on
British, Russian, and women’s history, and seminars on
Renaissance Italy, Tudor England, the French Revolution, and
European Totalitarianism.
His research interests focus on early modern British political
culture, and he has published articles in the Journal of Modern
History, the Sixteenth Century Journal, the Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography, and Sex and Sexuality in the Pre-Modern
West. Dr. Shephard has been a Regional
Visiting Fellow at Cornell University and is currently the vice
president of the International Sidney Society. He
received the Gerald R. Rubio Award in 2005 for his article
“The Political Commonplace Books of Sir Robert
Sidney.”
Dr. Shephard is also the faculty advisor to the campus chapter
of Amnesty International. He earned the Ph.D. from
Claremont Graduate School after completing the undergraduate degree
at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington.

Dr. Christopher Terry
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Dr. Terry earned the Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from
Syracuse University in 2009. He teaches courses in experimental and
quantitative research methods, cognitive processes, and adult
development and aging. He also enjoys teaching introductory
psychology and offering courses on special topics related to
attention, memory, and cognitive aging.
His research interests focus on multitasking and divided
attention, with a special interest in task switching and the way
individuals develop strategies for managing competing tasks over
time. Dr. Terry’s other research interests include the
perception of health information and its impact on health-related
behaviors, such as alcohol and tobacco use.
As a recent graduate from Syracuse University, Dr. Terry
completed an appointment as a University Teaching Fellow and was a
recipient of the Certificate in University Teaching. In his spare
time, he enjoys hiking, camping, running, and skiing.

Dr. Jim Twombly
Associate Professor of Political Science
Associate Professor of Political Science
Tel: (607) 735-1702
Email: jtwombly@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 206
Dr. Twombly's Personal Website
Email: jtwombly@elmira.edu
Office: McGraw Hall 206
Dr. Twombly's Personal Website
Dr. Twombly earned degrees from Slippery Rock University and the State University of New York at Stony Brook. His Ph.D. included specialties in American Politics and Public Policy.
Dr. Twombly’s courses include Congress, The Presidency, Political Parties, State and Local Government, Public Policy, and others. His research interests include: behavior of government officials, policy implementation, the presidency, political parties, and political volunteers. He has co-authored articles appearing in the American Political Science Review, American Politics Research, Politics and Policy, and Policy Studies Journal, and a book chapter in Presidential Leadership and Civil Rights Policy. He is also the author of the recently published text on the American Presidency: The Progression of the American Presidency: Individuals, Empire, and Change (from Palgrave Macmillan). Dr. Twombly plans to start on a second book on unicameral state legislatures this summer.
Dr. Twombly’s courses include Congress, The Presidency, Political Parties, State and Local Government, Public Policy, and others. His research interests include: behavior of government officials, policy implementation, the presidency, political parties, and political volunteers. He has co-authored articles appearing in the American Political Science Review, American Politics Research, Politics and Policy, and Policy Studies Journal, and a book chapter in Presidential Leadership and Civil Rights Policy. He is also the author of the recently published text on the American Presidency: The Progression of the American Presidency: Individuals, Empire, and Change (from Palgrave Macmillan). Dr. Twombly plans to start on a second book on unicameral state legislatures this summer.
Dr. Twombly has run for public office and held a variety of political party offices. He is the author of The Progression of the American Presidency: Individuals, Empire, and Change. Dr. Twombly is a member of the American Political Science Association and currently serves as the American Politics Section Chair for the New York State Political Science Association, he has consulted with party organizations, written official speeches, designed campaign literature, and developed strategies for political campaigns. He currently serves as Political Analyst for WENY-TV and has appeared on many of their news programs, including being on location for their coverage of the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver. He has recently been interviewed by CNNRadio.com on unicameral state legislatures and The New York Times on aspects of New York State election law. Dr. Twombly has made numerous appearances before local groups including the Chemung Valley Historical Society, the Rotary Club, and the League of Women Voters.
Dr. Twombly is an avid reader (particularly of science fiction) and a fan of the New York Mets. He also serves as the faculty adviser to the EC College Democrats and the male a Capella group - A1 and the Sauce.





Print This Page
Email This Page

