"SHSI Certificate of Recognition"
"Best on the Web"


Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
Marshall Cohen—researcher and producer, CNN

Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




BAUERLY, Donna: Difference between revisions

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:donnaBRGB.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Donna Bauerly]]BAUERLY, Donna. (Dubuque, IA- ).Professor. On August I5, 1983, Bauerly became the first woman to attain full professorship at [[LORAS COLLEGE]]. She taught on the campus when Loras began accepting women as students in 1971. Later Bauerly worked as a supervisor of student teachers.  She held Masters and Doctoral degrees from Marquette University. In 2001 she received he fourth John Cardinal O’Connor Chair for Catholic Thought.  
[[Image:donnaBRGB.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Donna Bauerly]]BAUERLY, Donna. (Dubuque, IA- ).Professor. On August I5, 1983, Bauerly became the first woman to attain full professorship at [[LORAS COLLEGE]]. She taught on the campus when Loras began accepting women as students in 1971. Later Bauerly worked as a supervisor of student teachers.  She held Masters and Doctoral degrees from Marquette University. In 2001 she received he fourth John Cardinal O’Connor Chair for Catholic Thought.  


Retiring after a 52-year teaching career, Bauerly focused on writing the biography of the poet Rev. Raymond Roseliep, a former professor at Loras and an accomplished haikuist.  She also served as President of the Carnegie-Stout Library Foundation Board and Chair of the Foundation Subcommittee for the Carnegie-Stout Library Renovation Campaign.  She began serving on the Dubuque Community School District Board of Education in 1997. In September 2008 she announced that she would not campaign for re-election.
Bauerly retired after a 52-year teaching career including 36 years at Loras and 16 years as a teacher in elementary, middle and high schools across the country. She focused her attention on writing the biography of the poet Rev. Raymond Roseliep, a former professor at Loras and an accomplished haikuist.  She also served as President of the Carnegie-Stout Library Foundation Board and Chair of the Foundation Subcommittee for the Carnegie-Stout Library Renovation Campaign.   
 
Bauerly began serving on the Dubuque Community School District Board of Education in 1997. In September 2008 she announced that she would not campaign for re-election. In her thirteen years on the board, Bauerly chaired the committee that oversaw the construction of [[PRESCOTT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL]]. She was a center of every discussion including the debates over the use of drug dogs in the schools.

Revision as of 03:01, 6 September 2008

Donna Bauerly

BAUERLY, Donna. (Dubuque, IA- ).Professor. On August I5, 1983, Bauerly became the first woman to attain full professorship at LORAS COLLEGE. She taught on the campus when Loras began accepting women as students in 1971. Later Bauerly worked as a supervisor of student teachers. She held Masters and Doctoral degrees from Marquette University. In 2001 she received he fourth John Cardinal O’Connor Chair for Catholic Thought.

Bauerly retired after a 52-year teaching career including 36 years at Loras and 16 years as a teacher in elementary, middle and high schools across the country. She focused her attention on writing the biography of the poet Rev. Raymond Roseliep, a former professor at Loras and an accomplished haikuist. She also served as President of the Carnegie-Stout Library Foundation Board and Chair of the Foundation Subcommittee for the Carnegie-Stout Library Renovation Campaign.

Bauerly began serving on the Dubuque Community School District Board of Education in 1997. In September 2008 she announced that she would not campaign for re-election. In her thirteen years on the board, Bauerly chaired the committee that oversaw the construction of PRESCOTT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. She was a center of every discussion including the debates over the use of drug dogs in the schools.