Dr. Patrick Luck joined the Florida Poly faculty for the first semester of classes in fall 2014 and teaches a variety of American history classes, including classes on the history of slavery and Native Americans. He also teaches a survey of the history of science and technology in world history.
Luck’s pedagogy emphasizes developing students’ critical thinking skills in a student-centered classroom. In many of his classes he uses Reacting to the Past, “an active learning pedagogy of role-playing games designed for higher education.” Through this pedagogy, students learn how to think historically while also practicing and improving academic skills
Luck’s research interests focus on the history of slavery in the Americas and the United States. His first book, Replanting a Slave Society: The Sugar and Cotton Revolutions in the Lower Mississippi Valley, analyzes the lower Mississippi valley’s sugar and cotton revolutions, which occurred and were consolidated in the years before and after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, and highlights the far-ranging, even national, consequences of these revolutions and what they illustrate about the functioning of slavery in the United States.
Luck’s next book-length project is a study of the intertwined lives of John McDonogh, a merchant, land-speculator, and sugar planter, and two young men he enslaved, David and Washington McDonogh. The book will explore how John’s paternalistic anti-slavery ideals opened new possibilities for David and Washington but also how the young men used those possibilities to make their own, independent lives in a society deeply antagonistic toward African-Americans.
Luck has presented his scholarship at prestigious conferences such as the annual meetings of the American Historical Association, the Southern Historical Association, the Louisiana Historical Association, the Society of Historians of the Early Republic, the Social Science History Association, and the Florida Conference of Historians.
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This session will demonstrate that practical risk management is for everyone, regardless of a formal program. Attendees will learn actionable and simple strategies that are easy to implement, enabling them to start immediately by focusing on their top risks to build greater operational resilience and ensure the sustained success of their auxiliary enterprises.
Michelle Powell serves as the pioneering Risk Manager at Florida Polytechnic University, the state’s sole 100% STEM-dedicated institution. Having been with the university for nearly 11 years, Michelle transitioned from a leadership role in Admissions in October 2023 to establish and evolve the risk management function from the ground up. In this solo capacity, Michelle builds robust frameworks for our dynamic, young university, overseeing our insurance portfolio, consulting on third-party and event risks, and developing critical campus-wide training programs. Michelle has obtained the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Enterprise Risk Management certificate and the Associate in Risk Management (ARM) and Construction Risk and Insurance Specialist (CRIS) designations. Her distinct background in mathematics and engineering, combined with extensive higher education leadership, brings an analytical and strategic approach enhancing the institution’s resilience.