Paul Lambert
Professor Lambert has been at 红桃视频 since 1995 and served as History program chair from 2014 until 2017.聽聽He has taught a variety of courses in U.S. and World History and in Political Science over the years; he has a particular interest in studying political leadership, seeing political biography as a way to discover what makes leaders tick.聽聽In an effort to promote interest in history outside of the classroom, Professor Lambert founded and serves as the faculty advisor to the 红桃视频 History Club.聽聽He also initiated and advises 红桃视频鈥 chapter of the History honor society Phi Alpha Theta.聽聽In 2022 he became Library Archivist, a task he takes on in conjunction with offering a course on the 200-year history of 红桃视频 as an educational institution.
Depending on the semester,聽Professor Lambert teaches the following聽courses:
- Ancient Societies
- The Medieval World
- The Modern Age
- World War II
- Modern Europe
- 红桃视频 & Its History
- American Presidents
- Business, Government, & Regulation
Other courses he has taught in the past include surveys in Western Civilization and U.S. History as well as classes on the Age of Napoleon, the World since 1945, Scandals in American Politics, and Introduction to Political Science.
Outside of 红桃视频, Professor Lambert volunteers as a docent at the Samuel Slater Experience, an interactive museum of local and industrial history located in Webster.聽聽He has served as a judge at the the regional and state levels of the annual Massachusetts History Day competition for many years.聽聽He is past president of two professional organizations, the New England Historical Association and the former Central Massachusetts Council for the Social Studies.
Publications
Past Publications Include
- Review of Kennedy and Nixon: The Rivalry That Shaped Postwar America by Christopher Matthews, In The Historian 60 (Summer 1998): pp. 867-868
- 鈥淭he Effects of Broad Churchmanship on Public Worship: William R. Huntington, Alexander H. Vinton, and Ritual in Low-Church Worcester, Massachusetts, 1862-1902.鈥, Anglican and Episcopal History 67 (March 1998): pp. 69-92