MCLA Welcomes Three New Faculty Members

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass.—Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) announced that three new faculty members will be joining the Trailblazer community for the College's fall semester: Dr. Normadeane Armstrong, Dr. Mohsen Danesh, and Dr. Laura Hancock.
 
Read more about our new faculty members: 
 
Dr. Normadeane Armstrong joins MCLA's Nursing/Biology Department as a professor. She is a nurse practitioner specializing in global/public health and epidemiology, with more than 30 years of experience in academia and four decades in nursing. Her extensive career includes volunteering as a medical professional in clinics worldwide and presenting research at national and international conferences such as the International Council on Infectious Diseases and the Mayo Clinic. She has authored articles in respected journals, including The Lancet, The Journal of The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners, Nurse Educator, and the International Journal of Infectious Diseases. Dr. Armstrong earned her Ph.D. in international health from Touro University, holds an Adult Nurse Practitioner certification from SUNY Stony Brook, and is recognized as a Fulbright Specialist Roster Member. Outside of her professional pursuits, she enjoys fishing and hiking.
 
Dr. Mohsen Danesh joins MCLA's Business Department as an assistant professor. He obtained his Ph.D. in finance from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. He has a deep passion for education and helping students understand the intricacies of the field of finance. He takes a personal approach to teaching, catering and adapting his material to meet his students' needs. Dr. Danesh's goal is to help his students realize the utmost from their investment in higher education. In his free time, he enjoys cooking, exercise, and reading.
 
Dr. Laura Hancock joins MCLA's Biology Department as a visiting assistant professor. She is an ecological and wildlife researcher and holds a Ph.D. from the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass). Her research interests focus on the population ecology of wildlife, specifically, the drivers of population structuring, resource use, and distribution patterns seen across multiple spatial scales. Her work spans taxa, from invasive New England plants to threatened bats in the intermountain western U.S. In addition to research and implementing ecological conservation initiatives through work with regional nonprofits, Dr. Hancock is passionate about teaching, science policy, and science communication; she has designed and taught courses within the UMass College of Natural Sciences and has co-founded, led, and/or written award-winning pieces for science communication and science policy platforms and social media accounts. She holds an M.S. from UMass and a B.S. from Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia. She interned with the NASA DEVELOP program, served as a Biology Fellow with the National Park Service and as chief financial officer and executive leader for the UMass Amherst Graduate Student Senate, and was a 2023 National Academy of Sciences Science and Technology Policy Fellow.

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Markey Pledges Support for 'Converging' Projects in North Adams

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Jennifer Macksey and Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau explain the temporary fixes, below, to the flood chute along Building 6 at Mass MoCA. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — U.S. Sen. Edward Markey pledged his support as the city and its partners embark on an ambitious plan of refashioning the downtown, the Hoosic River, the bike path and the connections to the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.
 
"A vision without funding, that's an hallucination," said the state's junior senator as he got the rundown on the studies underway during a tour of Mass MoCA on Thursday. 
 
North Adams and MoCA received a $750,000 grant from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act's Reconnecting Communities Pilot Program for a study focused on the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge.
 
The Hoosic River Revival and the city are working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on a  $3 million, three-year engineering and feasibility study for the 70-year-old flood control system.
 
And the North Adams Adventure Trail is in the works to run a bike path from Williamstown through the downtown. 
 
"There's a really unique moment in all these projects converging in North Adams and on the Mass MoCA campus and to really think creatively about how to combine those things to create a force multiplier between those different projects  rather than piecemeal," said Andy Schlatter, director of facilities and campus planning, as he pointed out areas of interest on a model of the museum's campus.
 
Steve Jenks, vice chair of the Mass MoCA board, likened it to the Big Dig that transformed the center of Boston into in green space. 
 
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