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Get to know more about Antioch’s talented faculty in the B.A. in Liberal Studies program by exploring the links below. You’ll find biographies of faculty members that feature their backgrounds, interests and perspectives on teaching at Antioch.
To read about associate and adjunct faculty who teach in the B.A. in Liberal Studies program, click here. To check out other Antioch faculty, visit Our Faculty.
Marcia Tate Arunga, M.A. Pacific Oaks College. Arunga is an international/community activist and a cultural custodian. With her background in sociology and human development, she specializes in intercultural communication, social justice and global topics research.
Nada Elia, Ph.D., Purdue University. Elia is a scholar-activist whose interests include local and transnational grassroots activism, community organizing around alternatives to social services, and resistance to institutionalized systems of oppression.
Mary Lou Finley, Ph.D., University of Chicago. Finley's professional experience includes work with community organizing and social-service organizations, particularly organizations serving the needs of homeless women.
Candace M. Harris, M.A., Antioch University Seattle. Harris' current interests include the intersections of education and spirituality, whole-person learning, education as liberation and the theory and practice of feminist pedagogy.
Anne Nancy C. Harvey, M.S.W., University of Washington. Harvey is a therapist in private practice in Seattle with a background in nonprofit management and community organizing.
Randy Morris, Ph.D., Emory University. Morris did his doctoral studies in human development and phenomenological philosophy, and maintains a private practice as a Jungian-oriented counselor.
Ormond Smythe, Ed.D., Harvard University. Smythe's interests include experiential learning, ethics, philosophy of religion, philosophy of race and gender and interdisciplinary studies.
Susan Starbuck, Ph.D., University of Washington. Susan Starbuck is interested in contemporary fiction, intellectual and environmental history and the interface between oral and written stories.
Bryan Tomasovich, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Tomasovich's primary creative and critical expertise are modern and postmodern American literature, publishing and ecocriticism.
Sue Woehrlin, Ph.D., The Union Institute and University. Woehrlin is particularly passionate about narrating change — the intentional use of stories to effect participatory change.
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