Search Results
Astronomy
With a minor in astronomy, you can be part of a 50-plus-year history of exploring space at a college known for strong science programs with a liberal arts foundation, and a culture of support for research and adventure.
Research and adventure are at the heart of study in astronomy. At Augustana, students minoring in astronomy learn using resources that link our campus to the American west, and to the far reaches of space.
Latin American and Latinx Studies
The Latin American and Latinx studies minor allows students to expand their awareness and understanding of Latin America, the Caribbean and Latinx communities in the United States.
Geology
Augustana offers both a major in the environmental science of geology and a major in environmental studies, and many students choose to double major.
Music
Music students prepare for their careers through carefully planned coursework in a strong liberal arts curriculum, individual advising, career internships, public performances and other professional experience.
Multimedia Journalism and Mass Communication
Learn to tell stories that cut through the noise in the dynamic, fast-changing environment of 21st-century media. Encounter the fundamental roles and purposes of journalism in democratic society, and their place in the age of social media. Then get a job using what you know.
Paul R. Croll
Professor of Sociology
- Phone: 309-794-7649
- Email: PaulCroll@augustana.edu
- Office: Evald 109
Paul R. Croll is a Professor of Sociology at Augustana College. He joined the department in 2008.
In addition to his book, Race and Ethnicity: The Basics (with Peter Kivisto, 2011) his research has appeared in the journals Social Forces, Social Problems, Ethnic & Racial Studies, and The American Sociologist. He is also a contributing author to Teaching Race and Anti-Racism in Contemporary America: Adding Context to Colorblindness (2013).
His research and teaching interests include whiteness, white privilege, critical race theory, race and ethnic relations, social inequality, quantitative research methods, and statistics. His research examines attitudes and beliefs about race in America through the lenses of whiteness and white privilege. Dr. Croll is a Principal Investigator on the Boundaries in the American Mosaic Project funded by the National Science Foundation, studying the roles of race and religion in the contemporary United States.
Specializations: Race
Education
- B.A., Northwestern
- Ph.D., Minnesota
Margaret A. Morse
Professor of Art History, Department Chair
- Phone: 309-794-7234
- Email: MargaretMorse@augustana.edu
- Office: Bergendoff 11C
Education
- B.A., Temple
- Ph.D., Maryland
Daniel E. Lee
Professor of Religion, Co-Chair of Ethics, Director for the Center for Study of Ethics, Marian Taft Cannon Endowed Chair in the Humanities
- Phone: 309-794-7258
- Email: DanLee@augustana.edu
- Office: Old Main 8
A member of the Augustana faculty since 1974, Dan Lee is the Marian Taft Cannon Professor in the Humanities and director of the Augustana Center for the Study of Ethics.
His teaching responsibilities include courses in business ethics and medical ethics. On a two-year cycle, he teaches a course entitled “Faiths in Dialogue,” after which he and the students enrolled in the course spend 12 days in Rome visiting various sites of significance, attending an audience with the pope, and meeting with church officials and other individuals to talk about issues discussed in the course.
Video: Augie Minute with Dr. Dan Lee
Lee named first Cannon Professor
The family that cites together, writes together
Appointed chair of the religion department in 2008, he will continue serving in that capacity through the 2013-2014 academic year.
Born in the mountains of Montana as World War II was nearing its conclusion, he began his formal education in a two-room country school, where the teacher allowed students to run outside to look at airplanes when one flew over.
A summa cum laude graduate of Concordia College, Moorhead, Minn., he received the M.A., M.Phil. and Ph.D. degrees from Yale University, where they don’t run outside to look at airplanes.
He is a Navy veteran, having served as a commissioned officer assigned to naval intelligence. While in the Navy, he studied Russian, which proved useful to the Augustana Choir when it needed a translator to provide a literal translation of a Russian choral arrangement. He is no longer involved in espionage — in fact, he hasn’t been involved in that particular line of work for more than 40 years.
Dr. Lee is the author of numerous articles and books. Published by Cambridge University Press in 2010, Human Rights and the Ethics of Globalization, which he co-authored with his daughter, Elizabeth J. Lee, was a Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2011 winner.
Other books include Letters from a Sailor: America at War 1917-1918 (2011) Freedom vs. Intervention: Six Tough Cases (2005), Navigating Right and Wrong: Ethical Decision Making in a Pluralistic Age (2002), Generations and the Challenge of Justice (1996), Hope Is Where We Least Expect to Find It (1993), and Death and Dying: Ethical Choices in a Caring Community (1983).
A published poet and writer of fiction, his first work of fiction, entitled Of Clay Made, was released in 2007. He writes a weekly column that appears in the op-ed sections of The Rock Island Argus and The (Moline, Ill.) Dispatch, as well as occasional pieces for other papers. Op-ed pieces he has written have appeared in USA Today, the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, Journal of Commerce, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Peoria Journal-Star, and several other newspapers.
He is currently working on a book on individual rights and the common good. He is also writing a historical novel entitled When Jeannette Met Jeannette, though that manuscript is on the back burner while he is working on other projects.
In June 2007, he was a member of the People to People Ambassador Program Philosophy Delegation to China, which led to an invitation to be a guest professor in the College of Philosophy at Shanghai Normal University in 2010 and 2011. Also in 2007, he was invited to present a paper entitled “The Erosion of Ethical Standards in Government: Is What It Takes To Get Elected the Root of the Problem?” at a symposium at Oxford University in the United Kingdom, a paper that was subsequently published in Forum on Public Policy: A Journal of the Oxford Round Table. The previous year he presented a paper entitled “Ensuring Academic Freedom for Students in the Classroom” at a symposium at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom, a paper that was subsequently published in the International Journal of Humanities.
Dr. Lee was named Professor of the Month in February 2007 by the Augustana Chapter of Mortar Board and was selected in 2011 for a Harold T. and Violet M. Jaeke Award for Outstanding Service to the College.
He is a member of Omicron Delta Kappa (ODK), an honorary organization that recognizes outstanding students and faculty, and Order of Omega, an honorary organization that recognizes individuals who have contributed significantly to Greek life.
Dr. Lee serves as the faculty advisor for three groups on campus: Omicron Delta Kappa (ODK), the Augustana Veterans Support Group, and the Phi Rho sorority. Other activities include helping prepare Miss Iowa for the Miss America contest.
He is a member of the Handel Oratorio Society and has sung with Opera Quad Cities in Puccini’s La Bohème, Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutti,Bizet’s Carmen, and Verdi’s Rigoletto. In May 2013, he sang with Opera@Augustana in Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance, in which he played the role of a cowardly police officer.
Along with singing, his hobbies include photography, sailing, gourmet cooking, trap and skeet shooting, oil painting, playing guitar, and working on the log cabin he and his wife are building in mountains of Montana on part of the family farm that he inherited.
He is a member of Trinity Lutheran Church (ELCA), Moline, Ill. He and his wife, Ruth Jean (Danielson) Lee, have one daughter, Elizabeth J. Lee, born Feb. 23, 1982.
Specializations: Ethics, Religion
Education
- B.A., Concordia (Moorhead)
- M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale
Jason A. Mahn
Professor of Religion, Director of the Presidential Center for Faith and Learning, Conrad Bergendoff Professor in the Humanities
- Phone: 309-794-7324
- Email: JasonMahn@augustana.edu
- Office: Old Main 002
(Related link: Professor Jason Mahn and Augie students reflect on teaching and learning about Christianity among diverse students. Video by Augustana student Josie Ngo, Class of 2020.)
After completing his Ph.D. at Emory University (2004), Jason taught full time at Duke University (Durham, N.C.) for three years before coming to Augustana, where he teaches courses in theology and contemporary religious belief.
He is an associate professor of religion, and also directs Augustana’s new Presidential Center for Faith and Learning.
Jason has published a number of scholarly articles about contemporary Christian theology and religious belief, suffering, vocation, secularism, and temptation and sin. His first book, "Fortunate Fallibility: Kierkegaard and the Power of Sin" (Oxford University Press, 2011), put the theology of Søren Kierkegaard "in conversation" with an old and peculiar Christian tradition that thought of human sin as a good thing — in light of Christian redemption.
Jason’s second book is entitled, "Becoming a Christian in Christendom: Radical Discipleship and the Way of the Cross in America’s “Christian” Culture" (Fortress Press, 2016). It puts Lutheran critics of cultured Christianity (Bonhoeffer, Kierkegaard, Soelle) together with critics from the radical Reformation (Yoder, Hauerwas, the "new monasticism" communities) in order to consider what faithful Christian discipleship looks like in an American culture that privileges but also relativizes and privatizes the Christian tradition.
Jason also has co-authored and edited two additional volumes, "The Vocation of Lutheran Higher Education" (Lutheran University Press, 2016), and "Radical Lutherans/Lutheran Radicals" (Cascade, 2017). Both of these books are being read by faculty, staff, and administrators from various ELCA colleges and universities, especially during the 500-year anniversary of the Lutheran Reformation.
Jason helps support such faculty development by leading ALE (Augustana as Lutheran Education) at Augustana, as well as by editing the journal "Intersections: Faith, Learning, and Vocation of Lutheran Higher Education."These initiatives are part of the work of the Presidential Center for Faith and Learning, whose mission is to “lift up and live out Augustana’s five faith commitments.”
Courses taught by Professor Mahn:
RELG 155 Encountering Religion
RELG 209 Christian Theology
RELG 328 Theological Investigations
RELG 335 Luther: Life, Thought, and Legacy
RELG 383 Creator, Creation, and Calling (a Holden Village course)
RELG 391 Suffering, Death, and Endurance
Specializations: Christian theology, Kierkegaard, Luther, Contemporary debates about secularism and faith, Pacifism, Lutheran higher education, Protestant reformations
Education
- B.A., Gustavus Adolphus
- M.A., Luther Theological Seminary
- Ph.D., Emory University
