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Longtime Professor Dorothy Dodge dies Dorothy Dodge, a pioneering professor of political science who taught at Macalester from 1955 to 1996, died June 20 at Abbott Northwestern Hospital after a short illness. She was 76. Dorothy Rae Dodge was born March 17, 1927, in Mason City, Iowa. She earned her B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota. She came to Macalester after serving as executive director of the American Association for the United Nations. She became chair of the Political Science Department in 1968 and was named James Wallace Professor of Political Science in 1973. Her teaching interests included comparative political
systems, particularly in Africa and Asia; international theory and international
law; cross-national urban problems; women in politics; and developing
and applying simulation models in which students took roles in functioning
models of real life social science problems. In many ways she was a pioneering academic in political science, said Professor Chuck Green, a longtime colleague in Macalester’s Political Science Department. She was among a small group of women who received their Ph.Ds in the 1950s and entered a predominantly male discipline. Green said Dodge’s teaching featured some of the earliest incorporation of instructional games and simulations of decision-making and conflict resolution; the regular use of guests to connect her students with issues through personal contact with policymakers and advocates; and she actively encouraged and supported student internships with international organizations and agencies. When Macalester had a January term, she led several courses based in New York at the United Nations. She was also a frequent speaker on current affairs at community organizations throughout the Twin Cities. Even after retirement she consulted with a number of organizations, especially those dealing with international politics and human rights, Green said. Patricia Kane, a retired English professor at Macalester,
recalled that Dodge was the first woman elected as presiding officer of
the faculty when that custom was established in the 1970s. During the
same decade, Dodge, Kane and French Professor Virginia Schubert received
a regional grant from HEW designed to raise the career aspirations of
women. The grant paid for seminars which brought to campus career women
from the Twin Cities who talked about their careers and what paths they
followed to reach them. These seminars were very successful, offering
role models and contacts for Macalester women students, Schubert said. Delta Chi Chatter Newsletter These newsletters are in Adobe Acrobat format. You will need to down load the reader application. |
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