April 16, 2001
Contact: Amy DiCresce, (313)
577-1429, adicresc@med.wayne.edu
Assistant
dean appointed to oversee basic science curriculum for WSU medical students
James Hazlett Jr.,
PhD, has been appointed assistant dean for basic science education at the
Wayne State University School of Medicine. In this position, he is responsible
for developing and directing the basic science curriculum for medical
students. Basic science courses generally comprise the first two years of
medical school, while the third and fourth years focus more on clinical
experiences.
“Dr. Hazlett has
been teaching medical students for more than three decades. In that time, he
has provided outstanding learning experiences to Wayne State scientists and
physicians, while earning the respect and admiration of the faculty and his
peers,” said Dr. Robert Frank, associate dean for academic and student
programs.
This assistant dean
position is a logical next step for Dr. Hazlett, who served on the WSU School
of Medicine Curriculum Committee and was instrumental in designing the present
Year I and II medical curriculum. He has also served as course director for
medical neuroscience and currently serves as course director for gross
anatomy, two critically important comprehensive areas that are required of all
medical students, and he has taught such courses as dissection, anatomy,
neuropharmacology and neuroanatomy. Dr. Hazlett will retain his faculty
appointment as associate professor of anatomy and cell biology at the school.
Since joining WSU
as an associate professor in 1980, Dr. Hazlett has been recognized with dozens
of teaching awards and was chosen Teacher of the Year three times – in 1985,
1991 and 1993. He has served on master’s and dissertation committees for
more than 20 students and has directed the theses and dissertations for seven
graduate students.
Former medical
student (’79) and graduate student (’84), Daniel Michael, MD, PhD, recalls
that Dr. Hazlett was an outstanding mentor and teacher. “Jim is always able
to get more from his students than they believe possible. He demands in-depth
knowledge and rigorous scientific method while demonstrating a genuine
compassion for students as human beings,” said Dr. Michael.
After earning a
master’s degree in anatomy from the Medical College of Georgia, Dr. Hazlett
completed a doctorate in anatomy at Ohio State University in 1971. He joined
the Department of Anatomy at Wayne State as an assistant professor and served
for seven years. He then took a faculty appointment at Loyola University of
Chicago’s Stritch School of Medicine, and returned to WSU in 1980.
Having served as an
ad hoc member of the National Grant Review Board for the National Science
Foundation, Dr. Hazlett has also provided national and state leadership to the
Society for Neurosciences. He has developed extensive course materials
including a self-instruction guide and cross-sectional atlas of the lower
limb.
His own research
interests include neuroanatomical and neurochemical approaches to study the
organization of hippocampal, somatosensory, thalamic and basal ganglia centers
and their connections in adult North American opossum. With these studies as
end points, he has analyzed the development of long ascending spinal
connections and basal ganglia circuits in the newborn (pouch-young) opossum.
He extended this work to include adult and developmental studies in a second
species of marsupial opossum. He also does grant research related to
visuomotor mechanisms, thalamic afferents, and regional blood-brain barrier
responses to central cholinergic activity.
With
more than 1,000 medical students, the Wayne State University School of
Medicine is the largest single-campus medical school in the country. Together
with the Detroit Medical Center, the school is a leader in patient care and
medical research in a number of areas including cancer, genetics, pediatrics
and the neurosciences.