Graduate Students on the Job Market
Christine A. Bevc
Christine Bevc is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology and a graduate research assistant with the Natural Hazards Center. Her research areas and interests include environmental sociology, sociology of disasters, organizational behavior, human spatial behavior, and research methods, including social network analysis and geographic information science. Her dissertation is entitled "Working on the Edge: A Study of Multiorganizational Networks in the Spatiotemporal Context of the World Trade Center Attacks on September 11, 2001." For a copy of her curriculum vitae, including publications, grants, and research projects, [click here]. To contact, she may be reached via email at: christine.bevc@colorado.edu
Justin T. Denney
Justin Denney is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology and a graduate research assistant in the Population Program within the Institute of Behavioral Science at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Broadly, Justin's research and teaching interests are in the areas of Social Epidemiology, Demography, Health Disparities, Mortality, Sociology of the Family, Health Lifestyles, Community and Neighborhood Effects, and Quantitative Methods.
For more about Justin and his research click here to visit his website.
Contact: Justin.Denney@Colorado.edu
Angel Hoekstra
Angel Hoekstra is a doctoral candidate ("ABD") in the Department of
Sociology at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Angel's dissertation, "A
Socio-Cultural Analysis of the Use of Clickers in Higher Education,"
explores the effects of Student Response Systems for student experience,
behavior, and peer interaction across four disciplines. Following her
emphasis in social psychology, Angel's thesis explores the social,
educational, and emotional effects of clicker use for learning in higher
education. After graduation (in May 2010), Angel hopes to find a teaching
position where she can continue to use the skills she has developed in the
Department of Sociology at CU, which recently awarded her the annual
Graduate Instructor of the Year award. Broadly, Angel's interests include
Sociological Social Psychology, the Sociology of Teaching and Learning,
Sociological Theory, and Qualitative Methods, with an emphasis in
Ethnographic Epistemology.
For a Curriculum Vitae containing the courses Angel has taught, please see
the following link: Curriculum Vitae

