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Meet the Instructors

Chris

 

Chris McKitterick is your University of Kansas Technical Communication Liaison and runs the KUTC program. He also teaches all of the technical-communication courses offered at KU each year. To contact him about taking a course, helping develop a course for your KU School or Department, discussing possible internships with your organization, or announcing jobs in the field, please send him an email.

Click here for more about McKitterick.

Sam with children - not hers!

 

Samantha Bell is originally from upstate New York, where she got her Master's degree in Creative Writing. She is now a PhD candidate at the University of Kansas, studying poetry and creative non-fiction. In addition, she has previously taught English classes ranging from Composition Studies to Business Writing to Creative Writing, and currently teaches at the University of Kansas. She is married and also has two cute cats.

SteveStephen Evans (Ph.D., Kansas) is a Full-Time Lecturer in the Department of English. His dissertation addressed aspects of Erasmian satire in the comedies of Ben Jonson. Though he remains interested in Renaissance literature, at present he is at work on an edition of Elizabethan minor epics. Dr. Evans also has published articles and reviews in the fields of American Indian and gay literatures. Twice winner of the department's award for Outstanding Instructor, since 1990 Dr. Evans has taught a wide variety of introductory and upper-division courses, including Foundations of Technical Writing and Advanced Composition, Shakespeare, American Indian literature, and virtually all of the Freshman-Sophomore English courses, including special topics and Honors courses. He also instructs English 362 for KU Continuing Education.

For more on Dr. Evans, go to his class website or send him an e-mail.

Nate
Nathaniel Williams
(B.A. [Communication] Truman State University; M.A. [English] Truman State University) is a Graduate Teaching Assistant, former musician, and Volunteer Coordinator for the Center for the Study of Science Fiction's AboutSF program. Areas of Interest: 19th Century American Literature, Modernism (Highbrow and Pulp), Magic Realism, Science Fiction, The Short Story, Technical Writing.

Send Nate an e-mail.

If you are currently a Technical Communication student, click here for class-related links.