Skip to main content

About Trent W. Maurer

I teach two primary populations of students, majors/minors and those taking a course because “it sounded interesting.” These groups come in to the course with completely different expectations, yet for both my goal is the same: empowerment.  I want to empower them to learn about learning, not just which study tips work for them and which don’t, but more fundamentally that learning is a lifelong process that grows, that evolves, that requires constant struggle, constant change, that never ends.  I want to empower them to lead healthier, happier, more examined lives.  I want to empower them in the most important way possible:  to empower them to empower others and continue the cycle of paying it forward.  For our majors and minors, most of them will go on to careers where they will work with populations that are vulnerable, exploited, and disempowered.  It will be their job to protect and empower these people.  Conversely, the other population of students will likely never take another course in my discipline, nor ever work in a professional setting in my field, yet they too will be positioned to empower others:  classmates, parents, siblings, spouses, children, and many others.

I begin in all my courses at the most fundamental level:  learning how to learn, based on best practices from the scholarly literature and my own research.  In addition to providing resources on learning and study strategies, all of my courses contain multiple opportunities for students to receive formative feedback about their learning gains and the effectiveness of their study strategies throughout the course, typically through the form of low-stakes or no-stakes quizzes (often online).  It is not uncommon to have 40-60 such assessments in my large-enrollment courses.  These frequent, small assessments drive home to students the importance of regular time and effort dedicated to the learning process and reduce mass practice or “cramming” for exams.  Here, they are learning not only the material, but how to be successful in college courses, a skill that will pay dividends for years to come.  As they progress through the course, they are able to improve their study skills because of the formative feedback they are receiving and in the process they become aware that learning strategies must constantly evolve to keep up with new information and new abilities.  My own empirical evaluations of these methods, which I have shared at conferences, workshops, and in publications, have confirmed the effectiveness of these techniques in improving student learning.

Additionally, in all of my courses I also teach students how to take the type of application-based exams that are common in my discipline.  I scaffold them through the process, showing them how to pick out the relevant information in the question, match it to the relevant information in the answers, and deduce the best answer.  This technique has improved my students’ exam averages by nearly a letter grade, a pattern that continues through their upper division classes with other instructors.  This knowledge not only empowers them to better learn and demonstrate their knowledge of the material, but also puts them in a position of expertise, empowering them to help classmates in other classes learn these techniques.

This theme of empowerment continues in the content material I teach, which relates directly to students’ own lives.  I teach students strategies for reducing conflict in their relationships, methods for promoting children’s development, even how to budget and buy a car.  I teach students these things to empower them—and those they will teach—to lead happier, healthier, more fulfilling lives.  I empirically evaluate the effectiveness of every teaching method and activity that I use and joyfully share what works—and what doesn’t—with anyone who will listen at conferences, seminars, even in the hallway. To me, sharing these things with other teachers so that they and their students might benefit from them is the greatest obligation, joy, and privilege of being a teacher.

Positions

Present Faculty Member, Georgia Southern University School of Human Ecology
to

Curriculum Vitae




Grants

2020 - 2023 NSF International Research Experiences for Students [IRES] Grant
National Science Foundation - FAIN-1952402
Role: Project Evaluator
Colleague(s): Rafael Quirino (PI)
$279,827
2018 - 2021 NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates [REU] Grant
National Science Foundation - CHE-1757016
Role: Project Evaluator
Colleague(s): Karelle Aiken (PI)
$280,056
2019 GSU Faculty Service Grant
Georgia Southern University
$787.60
2014 - 2017 NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates [REU] Grant
National Science Foundation - CHE-1359229
Role: Project Evaluator
Colleague(s): Karelle Aiken (PI)
$270,000
2016 GSU Faculty Travel Grant
Georgia Southern University
$2,071
2014 CUR Conference Travel Grant
Council on Undergraduate Research
$400
2014 GSU Faculty Travel Grant
Georgia Southern University
$1,700
2013 GSU Faculty Travel Grant
Georgia Southern University
$183
2012 GSU Office of Student Leadership and Civic Engagement, Service-Learning Mini-Grant
Georgia Southern University
$1,000
2012 GSU Student Government Association Student Organization Grant
Georgia Southern University
$600
2010 GSU Student Government Association Student Organization Grant
Georgia Southern University
$600
2009 GSU Faculty Travel Grant
Georgia Southern University
$367
2008 GSU Student Government Association Student Organization Grant
Georgia Southern University
$600
2005 GSU Faculty Research Grant
Georgia Southern University
$5,111
2005 GSU Student Faculty Collaborative Research Grant
Georgia Southern University
$2,796
2004 GSU Faculty Development Grant, Summer Award
Georgia Southern University
$3,000
2003 GSU Faculty Development Grant, Development of Instruction Award
Georgia Southern University
$580
2002 Departmental Graduate Travel Grant for Continuing Education
Auburn University Workshop on Mentoring and Promoting Diversity
2002 Graduate Travel Grant for Continuing Education
Auburn University
2001 UIUC Graduate College On-Campus Dissertation Research Grant
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
$
to
Enter a valid date range.

Professional Service and Affiliations

2019 - Present Member, ISSOTL Fellows Adjudicator, GSU
2015 - Present Member, Family Science SoTL Committee, Family Science Association
2015 - Present Member, Honors Selection Committee, GSU
2013 - Present Chair, Advancing Undergraduate Research Special Interest Group, ISSOTL
2013 - Present Member, Advocacy Committee, ISSOTL
2013 - Present Chair, School of Human Ecology Scholarship Committee, GSU
2013 - Present Member, Undergraduate Research Council, GSU
2015 - 2020 Member, Students and SoTL Committee, ISSOTL
2014 - 2020 Executive Board Member, American Association of University Professors
2018 Co-Chair, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences Policy Working Group, GSU
2018 Member, NCFR Advancing Family Science Section SoTL Award Committee
2018 Member, NCFR Advancing Family Science Section SoTL Award Development Committee
2018 Chair, School of Human Ecology Promotion & Tenure Committee, GSU
2018 Mentor, SoTL Faculty Fellows Program, GSU
2017 Member, School of Human Ecology Promotion & Tenure Committee, GSU
2016 - 2017 Member, CUR pre-ISSOTL Workshop Planning Committee, CUR/ISSOTL
2015 - 2017 Chair, Senate Ad Hoc Student Ratings of Instruction Revision Committee, GSU
2016 Member, College of Health and Human Sciences Promotion & Tenure Committee, GSU
2013 - 2014 Member, Senate Ad Hoc Student Ratings of Instruction Committee, GSU
2013 Member, Senate Ad Hoc Compensation Committee, GSU
to
Enter a valid date range.

Honors and Awards

  • Most Awarded Professors in Georgia, OnlineColleges.com (2015)
  • School of Human Ecology Award for Scholarship, GSU (2014)
  • CHHS Award for Teaching, GSU (2013)
  • School of Human Ecology Award for Teaching, GSU (2013)
  • Carnegie/CASE U.S. Professor of the Year, Nominee (2012)
  • Governor’s Teaching Fellow, University of Georgia, (2011-2012)
  • University Award for Excellence in Contributions to Instruction, GSU, (2011)
  • University Award for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning, GSU, (2011)
  • University System of Georgia FY 2011 Regents’ Scholarship of Teaching & Learning Award, (2010)
  • CHHS Award for Scholarship, GSU, (2008)
  • Who’s Who in America, (2007)
  • Michael E. Axelrod Power of Prevention Volunteer of the Year, Prevent Child Abuse Georgia—Region II, (2006)
  • Michael E. Axelrod Power of Prevention Volunteer of the Year, Prevent Child Abuse Bulloch County, (2006)
  • Phi Upsilon Omicron, Honorary Member, (2004)
  • UIUC Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, (2003)
  • Phi Kappa Phi, UIUC, (2001)
  • Gamma Sigma Delta, UIUC, (1999)
  • Summa Cum Laude, University of Notre Dame, (1998)
  • Phi Beta Kappa, University of Notre Dame, (1998)
  • Phi Alpha Theta, University of Notre Dame, (1997)
  • Outstanding Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) Paper Award, NCFR Advancing Family Science Section, (2019)
  • College of Behavioral and Social Sciences Career Award, (2019)

Courses

  • Introduction to Family Science
  • Child Development
  • Honors Research: Human Ecology

Education

to
October 2003 Ph.D. Human Development & Family Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
to
August 1999 M.S. Human Development & Family Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
to
May 1998 B.A. Psychology & History, University of Notre Dame
to


Contact Information

P.O. Box 8034
Statesboro, GA 30460
Phone: (912) 478-1522
Fax: (912) 478-0276

Email:



Peer-Reviewed Publications (57)