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Chemistry professor Springsteen receives Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award

|The Foundation is named for the Switzerland-born Dreyfus brothers.

Last updated August 15, 2018

By Tina Underwood

Furman Associate Professor of Chemistry Greg Springsteen has been granted a 2018 Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.

The awards program supports the research and teaching efforts of talented, early-career faculty in the chemical sciences at undergraduate institutions.

The Foundation is named for the Switzerland-born Dreyfus brothers.

Based on institutional nominations, the program provides discretionary funding to independent faculty members who have demonstrated leadership in original scholarly research of outstanding quality, substantially with undergraduates, as well as excellence and dedication in undergraduate education.

Awarded to only eight faculty members nationally, the honor carries an unrestricted research grant of $60,000.

Said Furman Interim Chair and Professor of Chemistry Paul Wagenknecht, “This is a well-deserved award for Greg, whose research program has flourished and who is an incredibly engaging teacher, having published papers with undergraduate coauthors in some of the most prestigious journals in the world. Furthermore, the award underscores the impactful work we do collectively as a department at Furman.”

This latest award from the Foundation marks Furman’s sixth, placing the university among the most decorated institutions receiving Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar awards.

A Furman faculty member since 2006, Springsteen earned a bachelor’s in biology from the University of Virginia, followed by a Ph.D. in synthetic organic chemistry from North Carolina State University. He finished his training at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) studying molecular evolution.

This year, he was recognized with an Excellence in Teaching Award from the South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities, Inc. (SCICU). In 2016, he was named a Henry Keith and Ellen Townes Professor, and in 2008, a South Carolina InnoVision Awardee in education technology.

Springsteen’s scholarship has focused on applying the principles of mechanistic organic chemistry toward understanding and teaching about life and its origins. In the classroom, Springsteen teaches at the interface of chemistry and biology in classes spanning general chemistry to advanced biochemistry.

Working with three to six undergraduate researchers each year, Springsteen’s lab collaborates with a National Science Foundation (NSF)/National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) research consortium called the Center for Chemical Evolution, which is comprised of about 15 research labs across the country with diverse abilities to jointly tackle questions related to the chemical origins of life. The Springsteen lab has recently published research articles in the highly esteemed journals Nature Communications and Angewandte Chemie.

Since 2007, Springsteen’s lab has been responsible for securing nearly $1 million in funding from the NSF, NASA and the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

For more information, contact Furman’s News and Media Relations office at 864-294-3107, or visit www.dreyfus.org.

About the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.
The purpose of the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc. is to advance the science of chemistry, chemical engineering and related sciences as a means of improving human relations and circumstances throughout the world. Established in 1946 by chemist, inventor and businessman Camille Dreyfus as a memorial to his brother Henry, the Foundation became a memorial to both men when Camille Dreyfus died in 1956. Throughout its history, the Foundation has sought to take the lead in identifying and addressing needs and opportunities in the chemical sciences.

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