Dr. Scott
Vandervelde, assistant professor in the School of Accounting, is the winner of the Moore
School's 2007 Alfred G. Smith, Jr. Teaching Award, the school's highest teaching honor. The award
was presented April 27 at the last faculty meeting of the 2006-2007 academic year. Prior to
earning his Ph.D. degree at the University of Iowa, Vandervelde was an auditor at Arthur Andersen.
Vandervelde, who joined the Moore School faculty in the fall of 2002, teaches undergraduate and
graduate courses in auditing.
A study by
Dr. Douglas P. Woodward on the effects of Mexican
immigration on South Carolina's economy received a Notable State Document Award in

March 2006 from the South
Carolina State Library. Woodward is professor of economics and director of the Moore School's
Division of Research. The study by Woodward and a team of international business graduate students,
entitled "Mexican Immigrants: The New Face of the South Carolina Labor Force," was released
last year. It represented the first phase in an ongoing effort by Woodward to understand more
fully this exploding segment of the employment base, which has not been tracked. The State Library
has presented the awards each spring since 1991 to recognize state governmental publications of
"outstanding merit and usefulness to the citizens of South Carolina."
Dr. Stacy L. Wood, Moore
Research Fellow and associate professor of marketing, is director of the Center for Neuroeconomic
Research (CNR) at the Moore School. The CNR is a new center aimed at facilitating "the
understanding, use, and dissemination of neuroeconomic research within the academic
community." Neuroeconomics is an interdisciplinary field that integrates research in
cognitive psychology, economics, and consumer behavior with neuroscience investigation of brain
activity. The goal of neuroeconomic research? To "better inform models of judgment and
decision-making through an understanding of brain mechanisms."