As a freelance marketing consultant, Stephanie currently helps businesses develop and execute marketing strategy. As an adjunct professor of marketing she has taught Marketing, Retail Marketing Management, E-Commerce and Internet Marketing, Global Environment of Business and International Marketing at Western, Central, and Southern Connecticut State Universities and Quinnipiac University. She also teaches Strategic Marketing Management in the graduate program at American International College.
Dr. Jessica Loppnow is an assistant professor in the department of natural sciences. She obtained her PhD from UW-MIlwaukee in the field of Immunology. Her research focuses on anti-cancer properties of natural compounds and how this affects proliferation and death of human cancer cells. Dr. Loppnow also works extensively with undergraduate students to engage them in experimental design and research techniques in her lab. She also teaches full-time face-to-face courses on the Mequon campus, and also teaching online nursing courses.
Nathan Alexander, PhD, is an assistant professor of data science and education. He holds a joint appointment in the Howard University School of Education and the Center for Applied Data Science and Analytics (CADSA), and he is the assistant director of the MS Program in Data Science. Dr. Alexander teaches courses in computational methods, curriculum & instruction, and applied statistics. His research explores the history and development of critical and justice-oriented practices in quantitative literacy development, especially in Black educational contexts. This work sits at the intersection of the humanities, social sciences, mathematics, and the computational sciences, with a particular focus on Black history and futurity in national and global contexts. He is also the founding director of the Quantitative Histories Workshop, a community-centered teaching and learning lab for students, faculty, youth, and community partners.
Mikhail Lyubansky, Ph.D., is a teaching associate professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches Psychology of Race and Ethnicity and courses on restorative justice. His research and writing interests include restorative justice and racial/ethnic group relations. He is a regular contributor to anthologies on popular culture and is a co-editor of a recently-released volume titled Toward a Socially-Responsible Psychology For a Global Era. In addition to his academic writing, Mikhail writes a blog about justice for Psychology Today called Between the Lines.
Anne Geraghty-Rathert is a professor in the Department of Law, Crime and Social Justice at Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri. She teaches many courses in the Legal Studies program including Introduction to Law, Criminal Litigation, Evidence, Women and Law, Wrongful Convictions, among others. Anne also teaches in the Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies program and serves on its executive committee. Her research interests include legal issues surrounding domestic violence, as well as issues related to criminal justice reform.