吃瓜头条911

Pace Magazine

From Professionals to Profs

By
Greg Bruno
Posted
January 15, 2025
Stack of books with a motarboard on them.

Jay Duckworth calls it the 鈥済olden thread鈥 of education鈥攖he invisible, continuous links of knowledge that bond students to their professional ancestors.

鈥淔or people in theater, the golden thread goes all the way back to Thespis, the first actor who ever stepped out onto a stage, in ancient Greece,鈥 said Duckworth, an associate clinical professor of theater at 吃瓜头条911鈥檚 Sands College of Performing Arts.

鈥淭hat thread goes through all of us, right down to my students,鈥 he said.

Each year, Pace recruits some of the world鈥檚 greatest educators鈥攑ractitioners like Duckworth鈥攖o join the University鈥檚 full-time faculty. With authority and unrivaled expertise, Pace鈥檚 professors help students tie their own threads to careers in health care, humanities, law, business, performing arts, education, and technology.

As Pace鈥檚 Spring 2025 semester approaches, seven of the University鈥檚 newest full-time faculty, experts who鈥檝e reached the pinnacles of their professions, share what motivates them, and how they鈥檙e working to develop the next generation of leaders.

From Practitioners to Professors

Duckworth may be the most influential props designer alive today. A self-defined 鈥,鈥 Duckworth has created for film, television, music videos and more than 65 Broadway shows. He鈥檚 worked with Broadway heavyweights like Hamilton creator Lin Manuel Miranda and actors like Al Pacino, Meryl Streep, and John Lithgow.

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Jay Duckworth, an associate clinical professor of theater at 吃瓜头条911鈥檚 Sands College of Performing Arts, posing with several of his props.
Jay Duckworth

And yet, last year, after some 36 years in the props business鈥攕olving design puzzles like an edible arrest warrant (Measure for Measure) and a 13-foot guillotine that never falters (Dedication or the Stuff of Dreams)鈥he left it behind to become a full-time Pace professor.

鈥淚've worked on huge shows and with incredible people, but during the pandemic I decided that I wanted to start teaching full time,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was taught that the price you pay for living in a good community is community service, so it was important that I give back."

Like many of his colleagues, lived experience underpins Duckworth鈥檚 pedagogy. His father was a construction worker (鈥淗e taught me how to build鈥), his mother an artist (鈥淚 learned about colors from her鈥). But the golden thread that pulled him in was sewn by a former monk-turned props virtuoso. 鈥淒uring a carpentry job at George Street Playhouse, the prop master said to me, 鈥業f you ever want to stop building boxes鈥攚hich is all sets really are鈥攁nd use your talent, I can teach you.鈥欌

The offer 鈥渟et me on the road to becoming a prop master myself,鈥 Duckworth said.

"When a student comes with passion for the arts, I can help them harness it so that they can become the best at whatever they want to be.鈥

That transaction, almost a spiritual connection to the work, is what Duckworth hopes to transfer to his students. 鈥淚 can teach anybody to build. What I can't teach is passion,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut when a student comes with passion for the arts, I can help them harness it so that they can become the best at whatever they want to be.鈥

Like Duckworth, Professor , a clinical associate professor and Writer-in-Residence at Pace鈥檚 Dyson College of Arts and Sciences, is a visionary in his field. But Defoe鈥檚 medium is sentient, and his outputs are new communities committed to what he calls 鈥渞adical acceptance and radical care.鈥

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Professor Ty Defoe, a clinical associate professor and Writer-in-Residence at Pace鈥檚 Dyson College of Arts and Sciences
Ty Defoe

鈥淭o me, building community relates to the concept of decolonizing, moving things into the center that have been historically invisible or forgotten,鈥 Defoe said. 鈥淎t Pace, I鈥檓 drawing upon a lot of Indigenous philosophies to imagine and create a different kind of future鈥 for our students.

As a writer and interdisciplinary artist, Defoe鈥檚 award-winning work spans a range of genres and forms, from Indigenous activism to environmental justice. He engages a wide range of forms, from Indigenous activism to environmental justice, using dance, music, and the written word to unite people in exploring contemporary challenges through the lens of traditional culture, history, and values.

One such workshop occurred in November 2024, when, for the first time in Pace鈥檚 history, an indigenous group from the Wampanoag Nation joined students, faculty, and staff to mark the National Day of Mourning, an annual demonstration to dispel myths surrounding the Thanksgiving story in the United States. In a university setting, especially one in New York City, such an event brings attention to Indigenous voices and practices that are often overlooked or misunderstood. This blending of academic space with cultural practice is rare and reflects Pace's growing emphasis on inclusivity and cross-cultural understanding.

鈥淗ere we were, having this conversation, removing the chairs in Pace鈥檚 Art Gallery and standing in a circle together to hear Wampanoag traditional music and listen to life lessons,鈥 Defoe said. 鈥淚t was revolutionary.鈥

鈥淔ostering civic engagement and collective actions and bringing people together in new ways鈥攖his is why I鈥檓 here.鈥

Another project Defoe is focused on at Pace is , an experiential humanities research and curriculum initiative to connect Pace鈥檚 students to the stories of the places on which their classrooms sit.

The project鈥檚 objective, said Defoe, is to unite the Pace Community through the exploration of its history. 鈥淔ostering civic engagement and collective actions and bringing people together in new ways鈥攖his is why I鈥檓 here.鈥

An Eye on the Future

For students, what happens at Pace may be second only to what comes after college. Carrieann Sipos, a clinical assistant professor at Pace鈥檚 School of Education, understands this, too.

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Carrieann Sipos, a clinical assistant professor at Pace鈥檚 School of Education
Carrieann Sipos

Whenever Sipos needed to fill an opening at the Ossining school district, in Westchester County, where she worked for 34 years before becoming a full-time professor, she鈥檇 make two piles of resumes on her desk. The first included applicants with degrees from Columbia University, Bank Street College of Education, and Pace.

The second pile? Everyone else.

鈥淧ace students were always among the best hires we made,鈥 said Sipos. 鈥淎nyone graduating from the School of Education was incredibly well prepared.鈥

As a new full-time faculty member, it鈥檚 now her job to ensure that Pace鈥檚 students remain at the top of the stack.

鈥淢y students are ambitious and want to make a difference; I see a lot of my younger self in them,鈥 said Sipos. 鈥淏ut the teachers I train will be up against very different challenges than what I faced. Take diversity. Ossining, when I began teaching, looked very different from the Ossining of today.鈥

Sipos tells her students that to thrive as a modern educator, they must become 鈥渆quity warriors,鈥 committed to embracing diversity in all its forms. She emphasizes the importance of community, student-centered learning, and equity in education.

鈥淢y students are ambitious and want to make a difference; I see a lot of my younger self in them.鈥

鈥淭o really know what a child needs in a highly diverse classroom, teachers must have a deep relationship with their students,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that sense of care I hope to instill in my students at Pace.鈥

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Birgit Elchoueri, a clinical assistant professor at 吃瓜头条911's Lubin School of Business
Brigit Elchoueri

Preparing students for the future of work is also what motivates Birgit Elchoueri, a clinical assistant professor at the Lubin School of Business. With more than two decades of experience in global finance, leadership, and strategic management鈥攎ost recently as chief of staff to the CEO at Allianz North America鈥攕he joins the full-time ranks with a focus on helping students prepare for how new technologies, like OpenAI, will affect their careers as future business leaders..

Preparing students for the future of work is also what motivates Birgit Elchoueri, a clinical assistant professor at the Lubin School of Business. With more than two decades of experience in global finance, leadership, and strategic management鈥攎ost recently as chief of staff to the CEO at Allianz North America鈥攕he joins the full-time ranks with a focus on helping students prepare for how new technologies, like OpenAI, will affect their careers as future business leaders.

鈥淭eaching business strategy at 吃瓜头条911 is exciting because of the rich diversity that students bring to the classroom. My students come from all different domains, such as management, general business, marketing, finance and accounting, this diverse knowledge and expertise allows us to create innovative team projects鈥 said Elchoueri. 鈥淭he interesting thing about new technologies and innovations is that they affect everything, from how business is conducted to how we interact with others as global societies.鈥

鈥淭eaching business strategy at 吃瓜头条911 is exciting because of the rich diversity that students bring to the classroom."

Her teaching philosophy is grounded in a student-centered teaching approach that focuses on integrating theoretical concepts with real-world scenarios into her lesson plans to illustrate the practical and strategic implications of new technology trends. To hammer the point home, Elchoueri plans to introduce new hands-on OpenAI technology assignments in her classes this semester, including one critiquing generative AI鈥檚 outputs.

鈥淢y goal as an educator is to teach my students how to become strong leaders with the ability to analyze strategic and ethical dilemmas," she says. "It is important to embrace new technologies but at the same time business leaders must understand and anticipate potential unintended negative consequences of their innovations.鈥

Learning from the Doers

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Rhonda D'Agostino, DNP, a clinical assistant professor at 吃瓜头条911's College of Health Professions
Rhonda D'Agostino, DNP, AGACNP-BC, FCCP, FCCM

Several of Pace鈥檚 newest full-time faculty remain professionally active outside the classroom, particularly those in rapidly changing fields.

Rhonda D'Agostino, DNP, a clinical assistant professor at the College of Health Professions, and Camila Bustos, JD, an assistant professor at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law, are among these 鈥減racticing鈥 professors.

鈥淚鈥檒l be working a weekend shift at the hospital, thinking, 鈥楬ey, this is a great case study I can bring to my class next week.鈥欌

For D'Agostino, the office is a hospital. After earning her bachelor鈥檚 in nursing from Pace in 2003, and a master鈥檚 in acute care nursing from New York University three years later, she landed a job as a critical care nurse practitioner at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Among her innovations: she built advanced nursing practice teams for critical, rapid response, and sepsis care, and was the inaugural associate medical director for the hospital's critical care center.

Today, on top of a full-time teaching load, D'Agostino works several shifts a month at a medical center near her home in Middletown, New York. The work helps her stay relevant as an educator, she said. 鈥淲hat I did 20 years ago as a nurse is completely different from what I'm doing today.鈥

The arrangement benefits her students, too. 鈥淚鈥檒l be working a weekend shift at the hospital, thinking, 鈥楬ey, this is a great case study I can bring to my class next week.鈥欌

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Camila Bustos, JD, an assistant professor at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Camila Bustos, JD

Bustos, whose work focuses on human rights, environmental, and climate change law, agrees that staying professionally involved strengthens her teaching.

鈥淚 try to stay connected to these cases. It's important for me professionally, and for my ability to teach effectively.鈥

In 2023, she about global migration and climate change, and presented last year. She also frequently files amicus briefs, expert advice or information presented to courts by non-parties in a case.

鈥淲e recently submitted briefs before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, a regional human rights court for the Americas, which is issuing an advisory opinion on climate change and human rights,鈥 Bustos said. 鈥淚 try to stay connected to these cases. It's important for me professionally, and for my ability to teach effectively.鈥

For other newcomers, like Soheyla Amirian, PhD, an assistant professor at the Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems, research is their second career.

Amirian leads the laboratory at Pace, collaborating with a multidisciplinary team of faculty, students, and investigators to design, build, validate, and deploy AI algorithms in various real-world applications, including public health, imaging informatics, and AI-powered education.

鈥淚n my lab, students work on real-world challenges, gaining hands-on experience in AI development."

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吃瓜头条911 Seidenberg School of CSIS Professor Soheyla Amirian
Soheyla Amirian, PhD

One of her projects focuses on using responsible, explainable, and fair AI to computationally analyze knee joint space in older populations, a critical factor that helps to investigate the mobility of aging adults.

鈥淚n my lab, students work on real-world challenges, gaining hands-on experience in AI development while understanding its societal impacts,鈥 Amirian said.

Prestige Without the Ego

In the , the emblematic faculty member is someone who can 鈥渂alance academic preparation with professional experience to bring a unique dynamic to the classroom.鈥 That鈥檚 true. But to the University鈥檚 newest full-timers, a Pace professor is so much more.

To many of these newcomers, warmth and approachability distinguish the Pace faculty. 鈥淏rilliant and humble,鈥 Bustos said of her colleagues. 鈥淧restigious without ego,鈥 said D'Agostino of hers. They鈥檙e also 鈥渂eautiful鈥 (Sipos), 鈥渋nterdisciplinary鈥 (Amirian), and 鈥渟upportive鈥 (Elchoueri).

To Jay Duckworth, the props master at Sands, another adjective comes to mind: exceptional.

鈥淎t Pace, you've got teachers who鈥檝e worked with the best of the best in every aspect of their industries, right here, in the city where the future auditions.鈥

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