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September 19, 2010 Keith Chan 506 Southampton Dr. Columbia, MO 65203 573 529-0660 [email protected] www.keithcchan.com Curriculum Vitae Areas of Interest Bioarchaeology, forensic anthropology, Peruvian prehistory, disease, statistics, anthropometry, information technology Education 2003- Ph.D. candidate (Anthropology - Bioarchaeology) University of Missouri, Columbia Dissertation Title: Life in the Late Intermediate Period at Armatambo, Perú 2001-2003 M.A. (Anthropology - Bioarchaeology) University of Missouri, Columbia Thesis Title: An Examination of Harris Lines and Femoral Diaphyseal Bending Rigidity Using Bootstrapping 1997-2001 B.A. (Anthropology) University of California, Berkeley Awards and Associations 2003-2007 Life Sciences Fellow at the University of Missouri, Columbia. This four year fellowship provides its fellows with preparation for earning a doctorate and stresses interaction, networking, and ethical scientific research 2005- Society for American Archaeology, Student Member 2003- Sigma Xi, Associate Member 2003- American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Student Member Teaching and Employment 2009 Co-Director. Anthropological Radiography Group Field School. Co-taught ten students from various radiology programs of the United States the methods and theory of bioarchaeology while 1 working on a skeletal collection in Lima, Perú. 2009 Scoring Team Leader. Assessment Resource Center. Worked with two other team leaders to manage a team of approximately 30 scorers of a standardized test. Duties included quality control to ensure consistency of assigned scores, and working one-on-one with scorers who were lagging in accuracy or productivity. 2009 Co-Teacher. Missouri River Regional Library. Introduced teens to the concept and production of “comic jams,” a form of collaborative comic art. 2008 Scoring Team Leader. Assessment Resource Center. Manage a team of approximately 10 scorers of a standardized test. Duties included quality control to ensure consistency of assigned scores, and working one-on-one with scorers who were lagging in accuracy or productivity. 2007 Co-Instructor. Bioarchaeological field school in Lima, Perú via the University of Missouri, Columbia. Co-taught four students from the United States and one from Perú the methodology of skeletal identification and data collection. Duties include assisting in identifying and collecting skeletal data, helping students adjust to Peruvian culture, and managing interpersonal conflicts. 2005 Volunteer Teaching Assistant. Monkeys, Apes and Humans class, University of Missouri, Columbia. Acted as teaching assistant in undergraduate class. Duties include grading exams and assignments, proctoring the final exam unassisted, and two guest lectures. 2004 Volunteer Teaching Assistant. Human Skeletal Identification class, University of Missouri, Columbia. Co-taught a class on human osteology. Duties include answering questions regarding the identification and function of human bones during the lab portion and leading review sessions. 2004 Guest lecture series. Introduction to Physical Anthropology class, University of Missouri, Columbia. Gave three lectures covering classification and behavior of primates for a class of approximately eighty students. 2003 Volunteer Teaching Assistant. Human Skeletal Identification class, University of Missouri, Columbia. Tasks included fielding student question during the lab sections. A guest lecture is given on my thesis research. 2 2002-2003 Library Research Assistant. Anthropology library, University of Missouri, Columbia. Duties include maintaining the collection of publications in the anthropology library’s collection, managing a crew of student volunteers and holding a biannual book sale. Fieldwork and Laboratory Research 2009 Radiographic data collection. Museo Nacional de Arqueología, Antropología, e Historia del Perú. Supervised the Anthropological Radiography Group as they radiographed the skeletal collection from Armatambo from the 2007 data collection period. Tasks include choosing burials to excavate, and ensuring quality control over the radiography process. 2007 Skeletal data collection. Museo Nacional de Arqueología, Antropología, e Historia del Perú. Collected data from skeletal remains from the Incan period site of Armatambo. Tasks include thorough examination of skeletons for indicators of sex, age, and disease processes, in addition to improving existing data collection forms. 2004 Archaeological excavation at Buena Vista, Perú. University of Missouri, Columbia. Expanded tasks from the previous field season include the education of a new crew of field students, acting as crew chief for a unit, and helping the students acculturate to Peruvian culture. 2003 Archaeological excavation at Buena Vista, Perú. University of Missouri, Columbia. Tasks include the preparation and excavation of units, collecting and organizing artifacts, and the production of plans, profiles, and artifact drawings. 2002 Forensics investigation. University of Missouri, Columbia. The laboratory’s standard procedure was followed to completion on a local forensics case. 2000-2001 Archaeological laboratory analysis. University of Missouri, Columbia. Artifacts from the Museum Support Center were sorted and recataloged. 2001 Archaeological excavation at the Presidio, San Francisco. University of California, Berkeley. Tasks include the excavation of units and the wetscreening of soil for artifacts. 3 Publications and Presentations 2010 “A Forensic Stature Equation that Estimates Better without Race or Sex” (submitted to the American Journal of Physical Anthropology). 2007 Curso Taller: Arqueometría y Bioarqueología en el Perú. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. Created and delivered a presentation in Spanish. The talk focused on current work on the Armatambo skeletal collection curated by the Museo Nacional de Arqueología, Antropología e Historia del Perú. 2007 Photography of Buena Vista site was featured in Mosaics, the annual magazine of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Missouri-Columbia. 2006 Annual Meeting of the Society of American Archaeologists. A paper based on collaboration with Kathy Forgey from the University of Illinois-Chicago titled “A Possible Sacrificee for the Temple of the Fox at Buena Vista Perú” was presented at this conference. 2005 Life Sciences Week Poster Session. A poster based on the thesis work of Rebecca Bergfield from the University of MissouriColumbia titled “Trace Element Analysis of Ancient Hair from Three Archaeological Sites in Perú” was presented at this event. 2004 Life Sciences Week Poster Session. A poster based on thesis research titled “Harris Lines and Cross Sectional Geometry at the Site of Paloma, Perú” was presented at this event. The author fielded questions for four hours over the course of a single day. Related Work 2010 2005 Computer Programmer. Updated Anthropomotron to version 1.3, adding notable stature estimation equations published after the first release of the program. Computer Programmer. Created and publicly released a computer program (Anthropomotron 1.1) that expedites calculations used in forensic anthropology and bioarchaeology. Tasks included the research of these formulae, their implementation using the Xcode programming tool, and thorough testing for bugs. Anthropomotron was featured on a promotional CD of freeware and shareware programs bundled with the April 2005 issue of Macworld magazine. 4 2003 President of the Anthropology Students Association, University of Missouri, Columbia. Duties include the hosting of biweekly member meetings, and the organization of several annual and biannual events, including faculty talks, trash pickup on a local hiking trail and a bake/book sale. 5