Nazzareno Diodato | Earth and Planetary Sciences | Best Paper Award

Dr. Nazzareno Diodato | Earth and Planetary Sciences | Best Paper Award 

Met European Research Observatory | Italy

Dr. Nazzareno Diodato is an internationally recognized climate scientist and environmental hydrologist whose research bridges climate dynamics, hydrology, geomorphology, and data-driven environmental modeling. Educated at the University of Naples Federico II, where he earned his degree in Architecture with an Environmental–Territorial and Geospatial Planning focus (1996), Dr. Diodato further advanced his expertise through postgraduate training with the COMET/MetEd Program of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), alongside professional certifications from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and ESRI. He is the Founding Director and Fellow Research Career Scientist of the Met European Research Observatory, an institution internationally acknowledged for scientific excellence and endorsed by the UCAR International Affiliates Program. Dr. Diodato’s research centers on understanding climate–hydrology interactions across multiple temporal and spatial scales, with particular emphasis on the Mediterranean region. His work integrates historical documentary evidence, instrumental observations, geostatistics, and modern data-driven and generative modeling techniques to reconstruct long-term hydroclimatic variability and improve decadal-scale predictions. A defining contribution of his career is the reconstruction of millennium-long records of rainfall erosivity, storminess, snowfall, groundwater recharge, and hydrological extremes, providing unprecedented insight into how climate oscillations—such as the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation—modulate water resources and environmental hazards. As a leader of interdisciplinary initiatives, Dr. Diodato has played a pivotal role in establishing the Interdisciplinary Group for Environment and Water Research (IGEWaR), which focuses on feedbacks between the hydrosphere and other Earth system components, including the biosphere, cryosphere, and lithosphere. Under his guidance, IGEWaR’s Future Plan prioritizes ecosystem and hydrological responses to climate change, spanning surface and subsurface processes and emphasizing uncertainty reduction in historical reconstructions.

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Featured Publications

Richard Beach | Ecology | Best Researcher Award | 13648

Prof. Richard Beach | Ecology | Best Researcher Award 

University of Minnesota | United States

Professor Richard W. Beach is an internationally respected scholar and Professor Emeritus of English Education at the College of Education and Human Development, University of Minnesota. With a distinguished academic career spanning over five decades, Dr. Beach has been a pioneering voice in the fields of literacy education, literature pedagogy, digital media in education, and adolescent identity in English classrooms. He holds a B.A. in English from Wesleyan University, an M.A. in Education from Trinity College, and a Ph.D. in Education from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Professor Beach is the author, co-author, or editor of 30 major academic books, most published by leading educational publishers such as Routledge, Teachers College Press, and the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE). His body of work reflects a deep and sustained commitment to rethinking how literature, writing, media, and critical inquiry are taught in secondary and post-secondary classrooms. His books such as Teaching Literature to Adolescents, Teaching Climate Change to Adolescents, and Teaching to Exceed the English Language Arts Standards have become foundational texts in English teacher education and are widely used in teacher training programs internationally. His work has garnered broad academic recognition, with an estimated 4,000+ citations and an h-index of 30+, reflecting both the influence and reach of his scholarship across educational research domains. He has collaborated with prominent scholars and co-edited multidisciplinary volumes like Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Literacy Research, and continues to shape the discourse around literacy instruction, digital literacies, and critical pedagogy in the ELA classroom. Dr. Beach’s research is characterized by its responsiveness to changing cultural, technological, and ecological landscapes. He has advocated for student-centered approaches to learning that honor learners’ identities, social worlds, and real-world concerns. His recent work on teaching climate change and fostering critical digital literacies demonstrates a progressive and action-oriented vision for education.

Profiles:  Scopus | Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Beach, R. (1993). A teacher’s introduction to reader-response theories. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.

Taylor, B. M., & Beach, R. W. (1984). The effects of text structure instruction on middle-grade students’ comprehension and production of expository text. Reading Research Quarterly, 19(2), 134–146.

Purves, A. C., & Beach, R. (1972). Literature and the reader: Research in response to literature, reading interests, and the teaching of literature. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.

Newell, G. E., Beach, R., Smith, J., & VanDerHeide, J. (2011). Teaching and learning argumentative reading and writing: A review of research. Reading Research Quarterly, 46(3), 273–304.

Appleman, D., Beach, R., Simon, R., & Fecho, B. (2016). Teaching literature to adolescents (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Routledge.

Galda, L., & Beach, R. (2001). Response to literature as a cultural activity. Reading Research Quarterly, 36(1), 64–73.

Beach, R. (1976). Self-evaluation strategies of extensive revisers and nonrevisers. College Composition and Communication, 27(2), 160–164.