Coordinator:
Dr. Minaz Fazal
    -Iona College
Coordinator of the Latin Distance Learning Program, Dr. Fazal is the Educational Technology Specialist  and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at Iona College. She heads the Faculty Technology Resource Center where she works with faculty members on how they can incorporate technology in teaching. She teaches various courses in research methods, and the use of technology in teaching. Currently, she is working on methods of assessing student learning when technology is used in teaching. You can e-mail her at mfazal@iona.edu.
Content Providers:
Dr. Stephen Beall
    -Marquette University
Stephen Beall is Asst. Prof. of Classics at Marquette University in Milwaukee, WI, where he has taught Latin, Greek, and Classical Civilization since 1993. He received his PhD in Classics from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1988. He has published articles on Latin and Greek prose style and translation theory. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the Americal Philological Assoc., and the Classical Association of the Middle West and South. 

Dr. David George
    -St. Anselm College
David George is a Professor of Classics at Saint Anselm College. He has published on Greek, Latin, and Hebrew philology in The American Journal of Philology, Classical Antiquity, Zeitschrift fr die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft as well as other journals. He is also a past president of the Classical Association of New England. You can check out more about him here

Content Coordinator:
Dr. Ann Raia
    -College of New Rochelle

Ann Raia is Associate Professor of Classics at the College of New Rochelle, where she has taught Latin, Greek, classics in translation, and Humanities courses since 1964 and is the Director Emerita of the Honors Program. She graduated magna cum laude from Queens College in 1961 as a classics major and received her PhD from Fordham University in 1964. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and many professional associations for classics and honors education. She received grants for the American School of Classical Studies in Athens' summer archaeological institute and participated in an NEH-funded seminar at the American Academy in Rome. Since 1998 she has been a member of the core faculty of the VRoma Project, an NEH-funded Teaching with Technology project. In 1999 she was elected President of the New York Classical Club. She can be reached at araia@cnr.edu
 

Special Thanks:
This program has benefited from consultations on content and technical issues with Barbara McManus, Professor Emerita of Classics, The College of New Rochelle.
Web Site Designers:
William Etundi - Iona College
Eddie Garcia - Iona College
Assessors:
Susan Bonvallet
    -The Wellington School
Susan Bonvallet has taught all levels of Latin (I- V plus AP) at the Wellington School in Columbus, Ohio, for 13 years, is a core member of the VRoma Project, has been a table leader or reader of the AP Latin exam for 7 years, and is currently a member of the AP Test Development Committee. With Judith de Luce (Miami University) she piloted a computer-assisted collaborative Plautus course between high school and university students. 

Dr. Judith P. Hallett
    -U Maryland College Park
Judith P. Hallett is Professor and Chair of Classics at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her areas of expertise include Latin pedagogy as well as Latin grammar, style, and prose/verse composition and transformation. Her efforts to work closely with students making the transition from basic grammatical study to reading and interpreting actual Latin literary texts--which culminated in the presentation and publication of several undergraduate collaborative research papers--were recognized in 1992, when she was named a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher at her university. 

Dr. Maria Pantelia
   -University of California, Irvine
Maria Pantelia is an Associate Professor of Classics and Director of the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of "Electronic Resources for Classicists: The Second Generation," a WWW meta-list for Classics resources and the recipient of the APA Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Classics. She has served as chair of the APA Board for Non-Print Publications and editor for Classical Computing of the New England Classical Journal. 

Dr. Thomas Sienkewicz
    -Monmouth College
Thomas J. Sienkewicz is Minnie Billings Capron Professor of Classics at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois. He is the author of World Mythology (1996) and Theories of Myth (1997) published by Salem Press. He has served as president of the Illinois Classical Conference and is currently chair of the Committee for the Promotion of Latin (CPL) sponsored by the Classical Association of the Middle West and South (CAMWS). You can visit his website or e-mail him at: toms@monm.edu