* Elizabeth Moore,’91, Family & Community Manager at Head Start in Helena.
* Amy Nikolaisen, ’95, middle school counselor in Seattle.
* Kendra Baran, ’97, program coordinator at Synopsis, Inc. in California.
* Kathy Kinskey, ’95, marriage & family therapist at the Mental Health Corporation of Denver.
* Erin Rand, ’95, worked for the Peace Corps and is now working toward an MA in Women’s Studies at University of Washington.
* Shona Geier, ‘96, office manager for a doctor’s office.
* Vern Kramer, ’96, customs inspector for the US Treasury Department.
* Jeanne Ritterson, ’97, a grant writer for the Children’s Hospital & Clinics Foundation.
* Michael Wood, ’97, works at a diabetic research lab.
* Patrick Keane, ’97, a consultant in San Francisco working with commerce exchanging products in Japan.
Dr. Perkins has spent the past 14 years researching in the field of Biopsychology. Her research mainly involves the brain structure of sheep. While on sabbatical during the 1997-1998 academic year she experimented with the development of a drug that can be used by ranchers to predict breeding performance in male mammals. Through her work Carroll received its first patent.
Perkins has been featured in the London Times, Science News, New Scientist, and Annuals of Biopsychology. She has been an invited speaker at the International Symposium on Human Development, the International Ethological Society, and the Northwest Coalition for Human Dignity.
She incorporates her work into the classroom by demonstrating how to expand the frontiers of knowledge. She has been awarded with the Carroll College Distinguished Scholar Award.