|
|
|
Associate Professor of Anthropology
|
 |
|
Elizabeth
Miller
Office: KH C4073A
Phone: (323) 343-5205
FAX: (323) 343-2446
Email: bethmiller@calstatela.edu |
| |
| |Introduction|
|Teaching Interests| |Research
Interests| |Educational Background| |Professional
Background| |
|
Anth 463, Winter 2004 and 2005 Lecture Notes
|
| Introduction |
|
Dr. Miller has been a faculty member at CSULA since 1997. Her research
interests include: forensic anthropology,
particularly determination of postmortem interval; paleopathology;
Contact studies; and repatriation issues. She has served as the
Consulting Anthropologist to the Los
Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner/Coroner since
1998. She was elected a provisional member of the American
Academy of Forensic Sciences in 1999 and Fellow in 2006. Dr.
Miller is also a member of the International
Association for Identification, which established an anthropology
section in 2007 and will sooon be an Associate Member of the National
Association of Medical Examiners.
Dr. Miller is also active within the field of paleopathology, and
has been a member of the Paleopathology
Association since 1985. In 1998 she was a member of the Scientific
Programs Committee, which she co-chaired in 1999, and in 1999 and
2000 she served as Local Arrangements Chair, all for the annual
meetings of the Association. Dr. Miller was appointed to the Student
Concerns Committee of the Paleopathology Association in 1999, and
was elected co-Chair of that committee in 2000.
Additionally, Dr. Miller has been a member of the American
Association of Physical Anthropologists since 1985, and began
serving on the Career Development Committee in 1995. She continues
to serve on this committee. In 2001 she
was also appointed to the Student Affairs Committee for a one year
term.
Finally, Dr. Miller is currently the Faculty Advisor to the Anthropology
Honors Society of Lambda Alpha.. If you have any questions about
Lambda Alpha, please feel free to contact
her.
For more information on Physical Anthropology at Cal State LA,
click here.
|
| Teaching
Interests |
|
Dr. Miller's primary teaching goal is to provide
a thorough education in methods, theory and ethics for students
seeking careers in forensic anthropology, paleopathology and other
aspects of physical anthropology. This includes hands-on-training
in forensic methods and laboratory analysis of human skeletal remains
as well as general training in the handling of evidence, courtroom
procedure, and the legal and ethical issues of applying anthropology
to the law. It also includes the legal and ethical ramifications
of repatriation and burial laws, use of museum collections for research,
and understanding religious and scientific perspectives on human
evolution.
Dr. Miller is dedicated to offering graduate students an opportunity
to learn teaching methodology and techniques, and offers opportunities
for graduates students to learn how to construct exams, make syllabi,
and lecture to undergraduates.
In addition to the forensic anthropology (Anth
463) and Human Osteology (Anth
459) courses, Dr. Miller teaches a variety of courses in physical
anthropology and human evolution, including Advanced Forensic Anthropology,
Physical Anthropology Graduate Seminar, Human Evolution, Measurement
of Human Difference and Introduction to Physical Anthropology.
|
| Research
Interests |
| Representative Professional Activities |
| A copy of Dr. Miller's Curriculum
Vitae is available for download as a PDF file. (Adobe Acrobat
Reader is available for free here). |
| |
|
| Educational Background |
|
Ph.D. Anthropology 1995
Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
M.A. Anthropology 1989
Texas A & M University, College Station, TX
B.A. Geology 1985
Texas A & M University, College Station, TX
|
| |
| Professional Background |
|
Director, Osteology Lab
Repatriation Office
National Museum of Natural History
Smithsonian Institution
|
|