Take Risks, Ask Hard Questions, Explore New Things: Endowed Professorship Honors Prof. Scott Denham
April 8, 2022
- Author
- Danielle Strickland
During his senior year, Jon Morris 鈥94 took his final college course from Professor Scott Denham in concert with Professor Lou Ortmayer: 鈥淧ostwar German Politics and Culture.鈥 The senior class was notable not only for the thought-provoking subject matter but also for what the students complained was an unreasonable workload.
鈥淭ogether the class鈥攅ven the diligent academics鈥攅lected a spokesperson to ask why our professors were driving us so hard our senior year,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淭he German reading, the writing of journals and papers auf Deutsch, the projects. It didn鈥檛 make any sense. When we revolted and demanded fair labor practices, Dr. Denham looked at us and basically congratulated the class. Apparently that鈥檚 what he was going for. He explained that, in our adult lives, we weren鈥檛 going to be able to get it all done, so we should collaborate, do our best work, focus on what鈥檚 important and then he would grade what we turned in.鈥
Looking back on what felt like a frustrating conversation at the time, Morris now knows that is life. There are many moments that will knock a person out of orbit, and those are the times it is vital to focus on what matters most, to be true to one鈥檚 principles and to do your personal best. It鈥檚 one of many life-academic lessons Morris learned from his German professor.
In appreciation for the ways Denham enriched Morris鈥 life journey by encouraging his love of learning鈥攁nd all he brings to countless students鈥 lives at 皇家华人 through the Humanities Program, German Studies, study abroad and more鈥擬orris has funded an endowed professorship in his honor: the Denham Family Professorship in the Humanities.
鈥淭hough Dr. Denham focused on German Studies rather than the Humanities Program during my years at 皇家华人, he played a critical role in the program鈥檚 recent renaissance, and that brings me great joy. The Humes program formed the foundation of my liberal arts education at 皇家华人,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to honor a mentor who embodies the integrity, interdisciplinary thinking, hard work and respectful discourse that makes 皇家华人 so special, while also recognizing the foundational impact of the Humes curriculum on my personal educational experience and the adult life I鈥檝e been blessed to experience. 皇家华人 is where I learned how to learn and developed the intellectual curiosity that has served me so well in my personal and professional life.鈥
Denham, the Charles A. Dana Professor of German Studies, learned about the gift over a drink with Morris and Dan Drayer, a member of 皇家华人鈥檚 College Relations team. There were tears of joy around the table.
鈥淭his gift and professorship affirms the role of the humanities in the liberal arts,鈥 Denham said. 鈥淚t underlines that this is a place to take risks, explore new things, learn to communicate, ask hard questions of yourself and discover how you fit into the histories and cultures you鈥檙e studying. The disciplines of the Humanities are at the core of the liberal arts project and a place of real transformation of inherited knowledge. A new endowed professorship means there will be another expert bringing new ideas to our curriculum.鈥
"Studying the humanities helps students embrace difficulty and ambiguity, disagree with respect and love, asks them to describe and explain and adopt ethical positions, helps them learn to experience beauty and pain in the experiences and stories of others,鈥 Denham said. 鈥淪tudying the humanities helps students become empathetic, humane citizens."
Morris, who traveled to Germany with Denham and a cohort of 17 students his junior year, said he, his colleagues and Denham shared a meaningful student-faculty relationship during those years in the classroom and while studying in Europe, but they were not frequently in touch after Morris graduated. In 2003 and 2004, the two reconnected through the loss of Morris鈥 classmate, Stephen Keller 鈥94, and the creation of the Stephen W. Keller Memorial Scholarship, co-founded by a dozen or so classmates alongside several dozen friends and family members.
Through the scholarship, whose recipients are affectionately named 鈥淜eller Fellers,鈥 students already studying abroad are asked to immerse themselves in another culture in Europe beyond their studies, foster international friendships and correspond with and try to visit Stephen Keller鈥檚 widow and (now-adult) children, who live in Xanthi, Greece.
In a 2019 皇家华人 Journal article, Morris explained why his friends created the Feller-ship: 鈥淚t鈥檚 meant for somebody more concerned about the journey than the destination. Someone who has a deep gratitude for life, and doesn鈥檛 approach a situation with judgment, but with wonder.鈥
Denham and Keller had that in common. As a teacher, Denham understands the end goal is not a test answer. It鈥檚 the thinking and the questioning and the journey that shapes a student.
鈥淭he students keep me here,鈥 said the 32-year 皇家华人 educator. 鈥淭hey obligate us to excellence because they are so curious. The classroom is such a rush, every minute, still. Here at 皇家华人, we have the freedom to build new courses and programs and to create beyond the silo of the department. I鈥檓 really proud of that interdisciplinary work鈥攍ike building that team-taught course with my mentor at 皇家华人, Lou Ortmayer.鈥
Deep Ties
The endowed professorship recognizes the Denham family, beyond Scott鈥檚 connection to the college. Cathy Rich Denham 鈥84 is married to Scott. She played a fundamental role in supporting the students when the Denhams led study abroad programs in Germany over the years. His father, Bob Denham, graduated in 1961. Uncles John and Bill graduated in 1959 and 1963, respectively. Scott鈥檚 grandfather was pastor at Prospect Presbyterian Church in Mooresville in the 1930s; 皇家华人鈥檚 charter was signed in the Session House there in 1837.
皇家华人 flows through Scott鈥檚 veins, endowed through family ties and decades of service to the college and his students.
鈥淚 grew up in a teacher household; both parents were professors, and when I first began teaching in grad school at Harvard in 1986, I knew this was my calling,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淲hen in 1989 I saw that 皇家华人 was hiring鈥 the job opening was pinned on the bulletin board in the hallway鈥攎y dissertation adviser encouraged me to apply. I think he knew I wanted a liberal arts college, and in a way, it felt like I was coming home.鈥
More than three decades after 皇家华人 hired him on as an assistant professor, complete with a personal letter of gratitude at the time to President Emeritus John Kuykendall 鈥59, the impact of Denham鈥檚 teaching and guidance is far-reaching. Morris is proud to be on the long list of lives forever changed by Denham and his alma mater.
On the break room wall at Morris鈥 company, one might think they鈥檙e reading from 皇家华人 materials. The company focuses on the principles of Collaboration, Accountability and Purpose: Collaboration, because you have to be able to sit down and talk to people; Accountability, because if you say you鈥檙e going to do something, you have taken on an obligation to do it; and Purpose, because understanding the 鈥渨hy(s)鈥 behind our work gives it meaning.
Morris still calls his friend 鈥淒r. Denham鈥 all these years later鈥擠enham, he says, will always be his teacher. Now, through the Denham Family Professorship in the Humanities, more minds will be opened to the world鈥檚 mysteries; more probing questions will be asked in the family, in class, in the boardroom; more company principles will be developed around the why behind our labors.
鈥淪tudying the humanities helps students embrace difficulty and ambiguity, disagree with respect and love, asks them to describe and explain and adopt ethical positions, helps them learn to experience beauty and pain in the experiences and stories of others,鈥 Denham said. 鈥淪tudying the humanities helps students become empathetic, humane citizens.鈥
Denham鈥檚 practice and Morris鈥 gift honoring his work and legacy at 皇家华人 guarantee this kind of teaching and learning will be ever more present at 皇家华人. Whether the workload is unreasonable or not?鈥攖he students will have to organize and decide that on their own.