Honors Faculty Fellows
Roles and Responsibilities of Honors College Faculty Fellows
(A) Honors Faculty Fellows will meet the following expectations:
- Serve as mentors to senior Honors Scholars in preparation for their Senior Thesis;
- Assist with career counseling/mentoring for Honors College Scholars in their departments or related departments;
- Promote the Honors College before potential students, potential benefactors, and other publics;
- Assists the Honors College with writing grant proposals.
(B) Benefits to fellows for their contributions to students and the Honors College include:
- The opportunity to help some of the most intellectually gifted students on campus to graduate and become leaders locally, nationally, and globally;
- Assistance from Honors College scholars in their research, creative, professional and service projects;
Current Honors Faculty Fellows
Dr. Tanya Allen is Assistant Professor of Music Education at Texas Southern University. Prior to joining the faculty in the fall of 2016, she observed and evaluated alternative certification teachers and provided music instruction to public school students. She completed her Master’s and Doctorate degree in Music Education at Florida State University and her undergraduate degree and teacher certification at the University of New Orleans.
While her primary responsibilities at TSU include music education courses and observing preservice music teachers, she also enjoys instructing non-music majors and cultivating relationships with public school educators. Besides effectively utilizing technology in all aspects of education, her interests include open educational resources and practices in higher education and effective teacher training. She is an active member of several organizations including the Association for Technology in Music Instruction and the Association of Teacher Educators.
Dr. Willie Capers II, is the Interim Assistant Dean of Student Services and Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice at Texas Southern University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences where he is responsible for simulation labs and experiential education faculty development and affiliate relations for clinical laboratory science, environmental health, health administration, health information management, pharmacy, and respiratory therapy programs.
Prior to academia, he held leadership, management, and clinical positions in large community hospitals and academic medical centers. He is a founding PGY1 Residency Program Director and has taught pharmacy residents and students for over 10 years. He earned his MBA from Arkansas State University and PharmD from Texas Southern University. He completed his PGY1 and PGY2 in Health-System Pharmacy Administration residencies at Aurora Health Care in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Dr. Erica Cassimere is an Assistant Professor of Biology in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology. A native of Baltimore, Maryland, Dr. Cassimere earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Biology with honors from the University of Maryland-Eastern Shore (Princess Anne, MD). She later received a Ph.D. in Medicinal Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology from Purdue University (West Lafayette, IN), where her research in cancer cell biology was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Ruth L. Kirschstein Pre-Doctoral Fellowship. She continued extensive postdoctoral training in breast cancer research at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UT Health), where her work was supported by the Susan G. Komen foundation. Her research focused on the role of tumor suppressors on cancer inhibition in response to DNA damaging agents. Since 2013, Dr. Cassimere has been teaching general biology and cell biology courses at Texas Southern University. She also serves as an academic advisor and coordinates the introductory biology labs. Her current research interests focus on investigating the molecular mechanisms of cell cycle regulatory proteins that regulate various activities in breast cancer.
Dr. Cavil is a prominent voice on the business and leadership of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and a specialist on the HBCU Sports Culture paradigm. He is the author of Early Athletic Experiences at HBCUs: The Creation of Conferences. From an Africana-centered framework of HBCU athletics, he teaches about consumer behavior in HBCU athletics, strategic management, vision and leadership in HBCU athletic programs, and the contextualization of critical race theory in the Sporting HBCU Diaspora. He has published research articles such as The State of Intercollegiate Athletics at Historically Black Colleges/Universities (HBCUs): Past, Present, & Persistence, completed commission studies such as, HBCU (A Minimum of Nine, A Maximum of 12) Football Reclassification & New HBCU FBS Conference Formation Study, presentations such as, Athletic Director’s Leadership Perception of Variable Determining the Effectiveness of Administering HBCU Athletic Programs, and a book chapter titled: The Case for Tennessee State as an expansion member of the SWAC: Economic Impact. Dr. Cavil has written articles for College Sporting News (CSN) and I-AA.org magazines. Recently, Cavil was also one of the four authors among Billy Hawkins, Joseph Cooper, and Akilah Carter-Francique which edited the textbook The Athletic Experience at Historically Black Colleges and Universities – Past, Present, and Persistence. He currently produces Dr. Cavil’s HBCU Sports Top 10 Mid-Major and Major Polls as well as the Dr. Cavil’s ‘Inside the HBCU Sports Lab” radio show. He is a HBCU sport business analyst on several radio programs across the country with the HBCU Sports Report.
Dr. Mayur S. Desai is the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Research/MIS and Professor of Management Information Systems at the Jesse H. Jones School of Business at Texas Southern University. He has 15+ years of industry and 20+ years of academic experience. While at Indiana University Kokomo for nine years he received excellence in teaching awards, established an e-business lab, served as a webmaster for the school of business, was involved in promoting the MBA program, wrote research grants, and developed database applications for the city of Kokomo. His research involves outsourcing strategies, information technology ethics, end-user development, curriculum, assessment, student enrollment development, e-commerce, and systems security. Dr. Desai, an award-winning researcher, has published several refereed articles and presented papers at professional conferences. Dr. Desai holds a Ph.D. in Business Computers Information Systems from the University of North Texas, an MBA from Hardin-Simmons University, an MS in Electrical Engineering from Texas A & M University–Kingsville, and a BE in electrical engineering from the University of Bombay.
Dr. Roger Hart is the Director of the China Center and an Associate Professor in the Department of History and Geography at Texas Southern University. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of History, University of California-LA, his M.S. from Stanford University in Mathematics, and a B.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Mathematics. Dr. Hart spent a total of six years teaching, studying, and researching in China. He has received numerous fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Dr. Hart’s previous appointments include Seoul National University, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Chicago, the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), Stanford University, the University of California at Berkeley, and Harvard University. Dr. Hart is also the author of “The Chinese Roots of Linear Algebra” (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010) and “Imagined Civilizations: China, the West, and Their First Encounter” (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013).
Dr. Mario Hollomon received his Bachelor of Science degree in Biology from Prairie View A&M University. He obtained his Ph.D. from Texas Southern University. After obtaining his Ph.D., Dr. Hollomon served as a postdoctoral fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in the departments of immunology and pediatrics. Dr. Hollomon joined the department of biology as a tenure-track Assistant Professor in 2014. Dr. Hollomon is currently an Associate Professor in the department of biology. Dr. Hollomon’s research focuses on the role of autophagy on cancer cell tolerance to anticancer treatment. Dr. Hollomon’s research also focuses on the non-apoptotic functions of FADD in osteosarcoma. Dr. Hollomon is currently expanding his research interest to the field of redox transcription factors and their role in cancer cell development and tolerance to anticancer treatment. Dr. Hollomon is currently collaborating with researchers here at Texas Southern University and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Dr. Iris M. Lancaster earned her Ph.D. from Texas A&M-Commerce in 2009. Her dissertation analyzes the cultural metaphor in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. Since receiving her PhD, she has written: “Nanny, Signifying Empowerment: The Evolution of the Dispirited Black Woman in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God” published in Cultural Intertexts - Academic Journal of Literary Studies; Queen Sugar: A Book Review published in the CLA Journal; and “The Rose that Grew from a Legacy of Hope: A Study of Tupac Shakur’s Poetry” published in THE GRIOT: The Journal of African American Studies.
Currently, Dr. Lancaster is writing a chapter on the writings of Tupac Shakur for Reading Between the Lines: A Genealogy of Racial Discourse in American Literature from the 17th Century to the Present (A Critical Collection). Since 2004, Dr. Lancaster has taught several classes. American Literature, World Literature, Women's Literature, Graduate Writing Seminars, Studies in Literary Biography and Non-Fiction, Literature and Film, and African American Fiction. The courses Dr. Lancaster enjoys teaching the most are the Honors English 1301 and 1302 courses. Her teaching philosophy reflects her interest in collaborative authorship. Instead of the “sage on the stage” teaching method, she prefers student-centered teaching that encourages learning by both students and teachers. She favors classroom dynamics that permit dialogue and foster a degree of student input. Also, she supports students thinking about the class as a community. The students spend a fair amount of time in smaller groups in which they talk, think and write together. Her teaching philosophy fits the Honors student dynamic well because these students are excited to learn about writing, and they are ready to work in a collaborative setting. In the Honors English courses, collaborative work is strongly encouraged. Honors students are ready to share their ideas and their insights, so the coursework is structured to foster this type of learning environment. In Honors courses, special attention is given to the six core levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy: Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation. Students are taught these various levels and then asked to connect each level to the various assignments. The pace is rigorous, but steady, and the students enjoy being challenged at every level.
For Dr. Lancaster, teaching the Honors’ students is more than a privilege; it is a joy!
Oluponmile Olonilua, Ph.D. is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at the Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs at Texas Southern University. She earned her Doctor of Philosophy degree in Urban Planning and Environmental Policy from Texas Southern University and made history as the first graduate of the program. She also received her Master of Public Administration degree from Texas Southern University and her Bachelor of Arts degree in English Studies from the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, Nigeria. Currently, she is the coordinator for the Emergency Management and Homeland Security degree program at Texas Southern University. She is a certified floodplain manager (CFM).
Dr Olonilua’s research interests include hazard mitigation/emergency management, diversity, equity, and inclusion planning, land use planning, evaluation planning, environmental planning, and policy and community development and public participation. Her research is in several journals including the Journal of Emergency Management, Journal of Risks, Hazards, Crisis and Public Policy, and Journal of Security, Intelligence and Resilience Education, among others. She co-chairs the Mary Fran Myers Scholarship award for the Natural Hazards Workshop, an award she received herself in 2009. She served as the Continuing Education Credit Coordinator for the Natural Hazards Workshop until 2020. Also, she is a Board Member of the Natural Hazards Mitigation Association and a member of the Texas Floodplain Managers Association.