Stan Charnofsky"My early life was as an athlete, a baseball player at USC, then professionally in the New York Yankees organization. After a few years as a player, I became a manager, won a championship in Edmonton, Canada, then became the coach at Valley State, now CSUN. I coached at CSUN for five years and won one championship way back in 1965. I have been inducted into the CSUN Athletic Hall of Fame. I moved into the Educational Psychology and Counseling Department in 1970, after finishing my doctorate at USC in Counseling Psychology. Recently I was awarded the USC Spirit of Troy award as a high achieving athlete at USC. I also received the honor of being inducted into the Jewish Athletic Hall of Fame of Southern California. At CSUN, I received the Distinguished Teaching Award. I was the founding director of the CSUN Educational Opportunities Program (EOP). For five years I was campus President of the national honor society Phi Kappa Phi. I have been Chair of the EPC Department, once for 4 years, once for 5 years. For the past twenty years I have been writing every day, have published two textbooks and two books for the trade, one called The Deceived Society and one When Women Leave Men: How Men Feel, How Men Heal. I have also published seven novels, my last one called Charlotte, about a seventy-year-old living in a retirement village who solves a murder mystery. The same publisher, Devils Party Press in Delaware, will publish my second Charlotte novel Accident, the end of this year. I still live in Northridge with my son Jordan who has a doctorate in music from USC. Thank goodness for him as he orders in all our food." |
Lynn GordonLynn Melby Gordon grew up in Southern California and attended public schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District. She earned her B.A. and M.A. from Occidental College, and her administrative credential and Ph.D. in Education (with a specialization in Learning and Instruction) from UCLA. In her early career, Lynn taught elementary school for fourteen years, frequently serving as both a mentor teacher and supervising teacher for CSUN and UCLA student teachers. She reports that her favorite grades to teach were kindergarten and first grade. She eventually became an instructor with UCLA’s Teacher Education Laboratory (now Center X) for five years. Lynn earned her Ph.D. in Education from UCLA and started out teaching at CSUN 24 years ago, in 1996, as a part-time instructor for both the Department of Educational Psychology and the Department of Elementary Education. She was a full-time professor with the CSUN Department of Elementary Education since 2002. At CSUN, Dr. Gordon specialized in teaching reading, literacy, educational psychology, and ELD methods classes for students in the multiple-subject teaching credential program. She was known for her enthusiastic teaching style, vivid instructional materials, and practical demonstration lessons. She also taught popular RICA test preparation workshops for elementary and special education credential students. In 2011, the chair of the Department of Elementary Education nominated Dr. Gordon for CSUN’s Distinguished Teaching Award. She was the recipient of a variety of other awards, grants, and honors including a UCLA alumni award for excellence in scholarship and contribution to the field of education, an Occidental College ALOED (Alumni of Occidental in Education) certificate for outstanding service and leadership in the field of education, and an LAUSD Teamwork Award for dedication to student achievement through volunteerism. Dr. Gordon, a phonics expert and dynamic speaker, was the founder of the International Literacy Association’s Phonics Special Interest Group and was well known for promoting methods for engaging and multisensory phonics instruction. Dr. Gordon was frequently invited to speak and give demonstrations at schools as well as at local and international reading conferences. For many years, Lynn Gordon was also a volunteer trainer for KOREH LA, the Jewish Federation’s non-profit community organization that trains literacy volunteers to work with struggling readers in LAUSD public schools. In 2009, Scholastic published her teacher resource book, The Big Collection of Phonics Flipbooks, a collection of reproducible hands-on phonics flipbook patterns, dictation sheets, and 21 phonics assessments for beginning and struggling readers. She was also the author of many scholarly articles on the topics of teacher efficacy, attribution theory, classroom management, teacher education, and dyslexia, as well as a second book, How to Write a Lesson Plan. Lynn Gordon’s 2015 research report on twins and school separation was widely publicized, translated into Spanish, and prompts ongoing queries and requests from parents and researchers around the world. Lynn Gordon and her husband David live in Woodland Hills, within walking distance of the CHIME Charter school where their twins, Hunter and Tyler, now aged 21, were lucky enough to once attend. The Gordons have many fond memories of CHIME and their relationships with CHIME founding family members, professors, administrators, teachers, and friends. Undoubtedly, the CHIME Institute’s nationally renowned model of inclusive education is a shining example of CSUN’s best outreach work. (Tyler and Hunter recently graduated UCLA and UC Berkeley respectively, Lynn proudly reports.) Lynn and her family are grateful for those wonderful years at CHIME. Lynn retired from CSUN in August 2020. The university awarded her the honor of Professor Emeritus status for distinguished service and contribution to the profession of education, the state of California, and the University. Lynn says, "It has been a special privilege to serve on the faculty for over 24 years. I am truly grateful to CSUN for giving me a rewarding teaching career in higher education and so many warm memories working with our bright, determined, and optimistic elementary teaching credential students. It has meant a great deal to me, over the years, to have a meaningful and gratifying position that allowed me to support teacher education and build children’s literacy and educational access in Los Angeles and across the state. I know that everyone in CSUN’s College of Education will carry on beautifully in The Important Work—in the rich array of everyone’s various noble efforts, across the six departments, to make a difference and make the world a little better, one kid and one person at a time. Thank you for the honor of being part of the team." |