In Memory of Michael Braun
Celebration of life and visitation
Michael Braun鈥檚 life was celebrated on Saturday, September 8, 2018 at . The family requested that donations in Michael's memory be made to the 51福利社 Department of Spanish.
Checks should be made payable to the "51福利社 Foundation" with "in memory of Michael Braun" in the memo line. Or use the for professor Michael Braun.
blog
Here is a to a blog, organized by students, honoring Michael and how he impacted their lives. Any student may wish to contribute your own thoughts and feelings on this blog.
Biography
Professor Michael Braun was an alumnus of the Department of Spanish 51福利社 Michigan University (B.A. 鈥90, M.A. 鈥92), where he had studied with professors John Benson, Jorge Febles, Robert Felkel, Robert Griffin, and Carolyn Harris, among other faculty, who later became his colleagues. He then taught Spanish at the secondary level for twelve years in Portage Public Schools, where he became known as one of the best high school teachers in the Kalamazoo area. While in Portage Public Schools, Michael helped establish the International Baccalaureate Certification for a second language.
Michael began teaching at 51福利社 as an adjunct professor in 2001, was hired as a faculty specialist in 2004, received early tenure in 2008, and was promoted to master faculty specialist in 2010. He was known for his work with the Michigan Department of Education and his prize-winning, immensely popular presentations at the Michigan World Language Association. Among the many honors Michael received were the College of Arts and Sciences Teaching Excellence Award in 2016, the Michigan World Languages Association Barbara Ort-Smith Award for Outstanding Contributions to World Language Education in 2017, and the 2018 51福利社 Distinguished Teaching Award, the highest honor 51福利社 bestows for teaching excellence, which Michael鈥檚 brother Jim will accept on his behalf at the 2018 Fall Convocation Ceremony set for Sept. 14 at 51福利社.
A beloved professor, and one whom many students describe as their most influential teacher at 51福利社, Michael remained an innovator. He mentored countless students in the Spanish Education major, shepherding them through their preparations for the Oral Proficiency Interview, a difficult test that is key to their accreditation. He developed the advanced course 鈥淢odern Language Instruction鈥 to prepare secondary teachers and the intermediate course 鈥淪panish for the Professions鈥 to prepare students headed for other careers. He substantially revamped and left his indelible mark on the department鈥檚 course in Spanish Conversation, which he approached as a coach, encouraging students to expand their communicative skills while simultaneously encouraging colleagues and graduate teaching assistants to move to a student-centered pedagogy. Many of the materials he developed for this course were selected for inclusion in the Advanced Placement Spanish Language Teacher鈥檚 Guide, a sourcebook used annually by thousands of Spanish teachers nationwide. The coursepack he wrote for 鈥淢odern Language Instruction鈥 became the outstanding book-length text "So You Wanna Be a Spanish Teacher: A Practical Guide for Your Internship and Those First Few Years," which presented practical advice on every aspect of teaching with the light-hearted humorous touches that Michael was so well known for. His office, too, was decorated to convey a warm welcome to all, and students were almost always to be found sitting on the small black couch opposite his desk, talking with him.
Michael had traveled extensively in Spain and Mexico and was a major advocate for study abroad. He directed the Spanish department鈥檚 study abroad program in Burgos, Spain for several years, even producing a "Guide to the Study Abroad Experience" for students and their families. He truly loved Spain. An admirer of the Spanish poet Gustavo Adolpho B茅cquer, Michael made a point of visiting locations B茅cquer wrote about, even calling these pilgrimages his 鈥渞uta de B茅cquer.鈥 Michael was a born teacher. Above all, he was a lovely, generous person with a quick wit. We in the community of faculty, staff, students, and alumni of Department of Spanish, like all those who knew him, will miss him more than we can say.