Southern Spotlight

e-news for April 19, 2006

Medical school professor wins teaching honor

A family practice faculty member at the School of Medicine has received a new teaching honor. The winner of the Excellence through Commitment Outstanding Teaching Award is Dr. James M. Daniels II, professor of family and community medicine, based at SIU's Family Medicine Center in Quincy. He also is director of SIU's primary care sports medicine fellowship.

According to Dr. Debra Klamen, the School of Medicine's associate dean for education and curriculum, Daniels was the unanimous choice for the award.

"The selection committee, steering committee members of the School's Academy for Scholarship in Education was impressed by Dr. Daniels' stellar teaching evaluations, both their scope and their quality, and by his innovations in medical education," she said.

Daniels has produced educational materials that have been adopted by other family medicine programs nationwide. He also has received grant support for designing new and innovative curricula and has published several articles in the area of medical education.

Medical school faculty members nominated for the award were judged on a variety of things including their philosophy of teaching, an overview of their teaching assignments for the last three years, other teaching-related activities such as advising and mentoring, and evaluations of their teaching including those from students and faculty colleagues.

The new award recognizes faculty who demonstrate exceptional skill in and commitment to teaching and educational scholarship. It was stimulated by SIUC’s long-range plan, Southern at 150: Building Excellence Through Commitment, the blueprint for the development of the University by the time it celebrates its 150th anniversary in 2019. An important goal of the plan is to recognize and reward teaching excellence.

Daniels joined the faculty in 1995 and is board certified in family medicine, preventive medicine and primary care sports medicine. He completed a family practice residency at SIU's Quincy program in 1986 and a fellowship in occupational medicine at University of California in San Francisco in 1992. He also earned a master's of public health at the Medical College of Wisconsin in 1992. He earned his medical degree at SIU in 1983, and two bachelor's degrees at Quincy College in Illinois in 1980.
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