Leading the Aerodynamics and Turbulence
Laboratory at UH, Hussain was one of the first to recognize that
the organized motion underlying the seemingly random motion of turbulence
is the key to understanding and controlling it for technological
benefits.
A colleague from another university wrote in a letter of support
that Hussain is “one of the top five experimental turbulence
researchers in the world. He serves as a benchmark against which
people should measure themselves in our profession.”
Hussain has published more than 250 scientific papers and received
more than $10 million in competitive research funding from federal
and state organizations. In addition to his impact on research and
scholarship, Hussain’s dedication to teaching and commitment
to service also are important elements that earned him the Farfel
honor. The very tenets of the Farfel award, Hussain said, are what
he believes is most gratifying about teaching – “the
transmission of knowledge, the creation of new knowledge, and professional,
community and academic service both inside and outside a university.”
He enjoys motivating students to think outside the box, provoking
them to think in fresh ways about turbulence.
“The satisfaction is in the quality of the results and publications
students achieve,” Hussain said. “I’m thrilled
if they get a good job, learn to give good talks and get significant
awards. Inspiring them as future faculty also is rewarding. If they,
in turn, go on to teach and motivate other students, I feel I also
am teaching their students, indirectly.”
In a letter of support, one of his former students wrote Hussain
“truly believes that teaching is not so much a matter of passing
knowledge through narration or demonstration as it is of training
the student on how to learn by rigorous thinking and critical analysis.”
In fact, Hussain asserts that he finds it “most gratifying
when a student has come to a level that he or she can challenge
my ideas, as it’s the intellectual battle with students that
produces new ideas. I’m happy when I learn from students.”
Perhaps one of his former students best sums up Hussain’s
Farfel qualities by outlining his multifaceted approach to his job
as a faculty member.
“A professor must not only teach, but also learn and create
new knowledge; support, grow and guide the educational and scientific
institutions of which he is a part; be a public resource in the
service of the broader society; and must pursue excellence to the
utmost of his abilities.”
Lisa Merkl View
full list of 2007 award recipients Past
award recipients
Staff Writer
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