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Emeritus Professor Rodney Boyer
Reappointed to Professional Committe
Posted March 24, 2003
HOLLAND -- Rodney Boyer, the Drs. Edward and
Elizabeth Hofma Professor Emeritus of Chemistry at Hope
College, has been reappointed to a three-year term on the
Education and Professional Development Committee of The
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
(ASBMB).
Boyer, who has been on the committee since 1985,
is one of 15 members who represent private undergraduate
colleges, graduate programs, medical schools, and the
pharmaceutical industry.
The ASBMB is the largest organization of molecular
life scientists in the United States and is affiliated with
the International Union for Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology (IUBMB). The mission of the committee is to promote
the molecular life sciences through educational and
informational activities for the society's members, the
scientific community, and the general public.
Some of the committee's activities include
promoting effective teaching practices at all levels,
including K-12, undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral;
disseminating information on educational and professional
development via the society's Web site; and monitoring
trends in the education and career paths of biochemistry and
molecular biology graduates. The committee is responsible
for setting national standards in teaching and publishes the
"Recommended Curriculum for Undergraduate Programs in
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology."
Boyer was on the chemistry faculty at Hope College
from 1974 to 2000. During his time at Hope, he directed the
research of 75 undergraduates and published their research
results in numerous papers in peer-reviewed journals. His
research in iron metabolism was supported by grants from the
National Institutes of Health, the National Science
Foundation, and the Dreyfus Foundation. He spent a
sabbatical year as an American Cancer Society Scholar in the
lab of Nobel Laureate Tom Cech at the University of
Colorado, Boulder.
Boyer, who currently resides in Bozeman, Mont., is
the author of two widely-used textbooks, "Modern
Experimental Biochemistry" (third edition, published by
Benjamin/Cummings in 2000) and "Concepts in Biochemistry"
(second edition, published by John Wiley & Sons in 2002).
The latter text is currently being translated into Spanish,
Korean and Orthodox Chinese.
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