Alumni
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us your success stories.
Department of Anthropology alumni testimonials
See what some of our alumni have to say about our program
and the success they found with their anthropology degrees.
Emily Altimare (2007)
MA Applied Socio-Cultural Anthropology
The anthropology program thoroughly prepared me for my
current PhD program and I am very thankful for the combination of rigor and
practicality that characterize the department. Attending NAU for my master’s
degree in anthropology was one of the wisest choices that I have made in my
academic career to date.
Stephen R. Anderson (2007)
MA Applied Archaeology
I can say without a doubt that my experiences at NAU
prepared me for my current job as an archaeology project manager in the CRM
field. I felt that they really wanted each of us to succeed and they were
always there to lend assistance in any way necessary. In my opinion, it was a
tough graduate school, but I wouldn’t change a thing about it. I could not
have picked a better program.
Andy Bessler (1999)
MA Applied Socio-cultural Anthropology
I graduated in 1999 and completed the applied cultural
internship track focusing on how activism on tribal lands is impacted by
cultural, social, and political boundaries. During my internship, I helped
Navajo community members set up a non-profit corporation that worked on land
restoration and traditional farming. My work at NAU prepared me to look at
problems holistically and not through just one lens.
Lee Rains Clauss (2001)
MA Applied Archaeology
The Applied Archaeology Graduate Program at NAU prepared me
for the real work of community-based archaeology and indigenous cultural
resource management. Due to my education and experiences at NAU, I
discovered a way to conduct an especially elusive, but extremely rewarding,
form of archaeology: one that is both scientifically rigorous and
culturally-appropriate, and thus, ultimately,
mutually beneficial.
Anna Corwin (2007)
MA Thesis Linguistic Anthropology
“Beyond He and She: The Linguistic Construction of Gender Among Genderqueer Individuals” is finishing her PhD in linguistic anthropology at UCLA.
I am currently pursuing a PhD in linguistic anthropology at
UCLA. The fact that I am pursing a PhD in this subject is a testament of
the encouragement, enthusiasm, and preparation provided to me by the anthropology
department and my NAU adviser, Jim Wilce. The theoretical, methodological, and
analytical background in linguistic anthropology that I received at NAU has
well prepared me to pursue a PhD in this field.
Mercedes C. Douglass (2012)
“Participatory Governance in a Mainlander Community in Roatán, Honduras: Structuring Partnership Discourse Through Performance”) has recently begun her PhD studies in linguistic anthropology at UCLA.
Christopher Engleke (2005)
“Talking Togetherness : The Discursive Construction of Sociocentricity in and Around the Pilgrimage to Manakaamanaa, Nepal”) is finishing his PhD in linguistic anthropology at UCLA.
Kaylene Holvenstot ( 2005)
“Nez Perce Language Revitalization” worked for several years with the Serrano Language Revitalization Project and recently began her PhD in linguistic anthropology at UCLA.
Duane C. Hubbard (2000)
MA Archaeology Thesis Track
NAU gave me the academic foundation necessary to work in the
National Park Service as a park archaeologist and resource manager. The NAU
anthropology department has a long history of properly preparing students for
careers through formal internship programs. The amount of former graduates in
federal service is a testimony in itself to the success of the anthropology program.
Nathanael Krancus (2009)
“Criticisms, Agency, and Subjectivity Among Bolivian Pentecostals” is currently research coordinator, data manager, and analyst at the Social Development Research Group (SDRG) at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Ora V. Marek-Martinez ( 2003)
MA Applied Archaeology Track
It wasn’t until I was enrolled at another university that I
realized the education and training I received at NAU’s Department of
Anthropology was unique. The practical training I received, for example, how
to create a successful resume and CV, how to effectively address and present my
research to audiences, and how to secure funding for my research, has proven to
be invaluable.
Eleanor McLellan-Lemal (1994)
MA Applied Socio-cultural Anthropology
While I worked on my degree, I had the opportunity to begin
applying many of the qualitative, quantitative, and project management research
skills acquired in my anthropology course work to my role as an ethnographer
with the Flagstaff Multicultural AIDS Prevent Project.
I continue to be involved in HIV/AIDS prevention research
and currently work for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) in Atlanta, GA as a Behavioral Scientist in the Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention. The theoretical, methodological, and analytical foundation I
received in the applied anthropology at NAU continues to influence how and why
I conduct research.
Fredy R. Rodriguez (2007)
MA Applied Socio-cultural Anthropology
Never before at a department in an American institution did
I feel such as sense of community among professors and students and such sense
of support and guidance. I arrived at the anthropology department at NAU with a
vague set of ideas about my future in anthropology and left with an immense set
of tools which have extensively prepared me for my experience as a PhD student
at Michigan State University.
As a graduate of the MA program I have notably
improved in areas such as conference attendance, public presentations, writing
style, and research—all attributes which I gained from the professional and
academic guidance I obtained from different professors at NAU’s anthropology
department.
Muhammad Nabil Zuberi (2012)
“Legitimating the
‘Battle’:
‘Illegality,’ Authenticity, and Language Ideologies in the Arizona Immigration Debate” has recently started
his PhD in
anthropology at
the Graduate Center, City University of New York.