ELIZABETH ANDERSON

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Adjunct Instructor of English
eanderson@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
A.A., Nashville State Community College
B.S., B.A., Middle Tennessee State University
M.A.Ed., Austin Peay State University
M.A., Middle Tennessee State University

Elizabeth Anderson began teaching at Cumberland University in the fall of 2019. She currently teaches Freshman Composition courses for Cumberland students and high school students in the Dual Enrollment program. Ms. Anderson specializes in late nineteenth to twentieth century American literature and composition. In addition to Cumberland, she also teaches courses at Belmont University and Nashville State Community College, and previously taught at Middle Tennessee State University.  Prior to teaching at the college level since 2010, Ms. Anderson taught English grammar and literature for nine years in various K-8 schools in the middle Tennessee area. 

In addition to her undergraduate degrees, Ms. Anderson holds a Master of Arts in Education from Austin Peay State University (2006) and a Master of Arts in English from Middle Tennessee State University (2019). She holds memberships in numerous professional and honorary organizations and intends to begin work on her Ph.D in the near future.  Ms. Anderson resides in Nashville with her beloved calico cats Sophie and Lando.

 

CHRISTOPHER TUCKER

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Adjunct Instructor of History
ctucker@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
B.A., Southern New Hampshire University
M.A., Dartmouth College
M.A., Clark University

Christopher Tucker joined Cumberland University in the Spring of 2018 as an online adjunct instructor of history. His research interests include American social, cultural, and political history. His first article “Melody and Mirth on Washington Street: John Ordway and Blackface Minstrelsy in Antebellum Boston|” was published in The Historian in 2012; his second article, “I Will Pay That Price as a Poet to Speak My Truth: Feminism, Activism, and the Historical Memory of Ntozake Shange’s For Colored Girls|” was featured in the Moravian Journal of Literature and Film in 2013. Currently, he is working on an article on police brutality and black social spaces in 1960s Springfield, Massachusetts. He has also published numerous book reviews for the North Carolina Historical Review; Journal of Popular Culture; Civil War Monitor; and Civil War History| among others.

Mr. Tucker holds a BA degree in history from Southern New Hampshire University, as well as graduate degrees from Dartmouth College (MA, Liberal Studies) and Clark University (MA, History). He has presented at academic conferences in Tennessee; Florida; throughout New England; and Birmingham, England. He has previously taught at Brandeis University; Eastern Nazarene College; and Newbury College, all in Massachusetts. He was also an employee of the Boston Red Sox from 2013-2017. He received the 2014 Boston Red Sox employee of the year for his service to the Fenway Park Tours department. A native of New England, he now lives in Florida, where he teaches full-time at the highly ranked Florida Southwestern Collegiate High School.

 

LAIN TOMLINSON

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Adjunct Instructor of Mathematics
ltomlinson@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Labry School of Science, Technology, and Business
B.Mus., Cumberland University
B.S., Cumberland University
M.S., Tarleton State University

Lain Tomlinson earned his B.S. in Mathematics and B.Mu. in Vocal Performance from Cumberland University in 2014, graduating with honors, and he earned his M.S. in Mathematics with an emphasis in Data Mining from Tarleton State University in 2016, where he worked as a research assistant. After receiving his M.S., Mr. Tomlinson worked at Cumberland University as an adjunct Mathematics instructor until 2018, when he was hired as a full-time instructor. He returned to the adjunct academic status in 2022. In addition to working at Cumberland, Mr. Tomlinson has also worked as a Mathematics Teacher at Wilson Central High School (2017-2018) and as a Publications Assistant for the Tennessee Secretary of State (2014-2015), where he helped edit the 2015-2016 Tennessee Blue Book. He has also been a private math tutor since 2008.

Outside of Cumberland, Mr. Tomlinson also serves at Beckwith Missionary Baptist Church and has preached at different places throughout Middle Tennessee and Texas. He also plays and provides lead vocals in a local band, Lain Tomlinson & The Lost Troubadours, as well as performing solo.

 

JOEL WADE

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Adjunct Instructor of Criminal Justice
jwade@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
B.S., Tennessee Technological University
M.S., University of Tennessee, Chattanooga

Special Agent Joel F. Wade is a 20-year Law Enforcement veteran with nineteen of those years spent with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation as a Special Agent Criminal Investigator assigned to the Cybercrime & Digital Evidence Unit, specializing in Communication Intelligence as part of the Operational Technologies Squad.

Special Agent Wade spent fourteen years performing digital forensics examinations as a digital forensics examiner, where his emphasis was in researching small scale digital devices, reverse engineering applications, and malware on smartphones. Special Agent Wade has taught at the National Forensics Academy, TBI Special Agent Academy, TBI State and Local Academy, TBI Forensic Science Academy and TN-ICAC Conference in the area of Digital Forensics and Communication Intelligence. Special Agent Wade developed and teaches Digital Forensics, Mobile Forensics, and Introduction to Cyber Security as an Adjunct Professor at Cumberland University in Lebanon Tennessee.

Special Agent Wade received his Bachelors of Science in Psychology from Tennessee Technological University, w/ Minor in Sociology in May of
1999. Special Agent Wade received his Masters of Science in Criminal Justice Administration from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in August of 2002.

ROBERT SHANKLE

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Adjunct Instructor of Music
rshankle@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
B.A., University of North Carolina, Greensboro

MATTHEW ESPENSHADE

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Adjunct Instructor of Criminal Justice
mespenshade@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
B.S., St. Josephs University
M.S., Norwich University

Prior to joining Cumberland University’s faculty in 2019, Mr. Espenshade enjoyed a 24 year career as a Special Agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).  In his last assignment, Mr. Espenshade led the FBI’s Nashville office. In this executive leadership position, Mr. Espenshade directed the operations, intelligence, and administrative activity of approximately 100 employees throughout middle Tennessee.  

During his career in the FBI, Mr. Espenshade served as Legal Attaché in Budapest, Hungary and Nairobi, Kenya where he had responsibility for seven countries in east Africa (Kenya, Somalia, Uganda, Burundi, Tanzania, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Republic of the Congo).  In these positions, he was part of the Ambassador’s senior staff and the liaison officer to each country’s national police force. Over the course of his career, Mr. Espenshade responded to dozens of terrorism attacks including the Westgate Mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya in 2013 and the kidnapping of American citizens in Somalia.  Mr. Espenshade’s foreign assignments include a counterterrorism deployment to Afghanistan in 2003. 

Mr. Espenshade’s other FBI assignments include supervisory and investigative positions in Texas and New York City.  These experiences encompassed investigations of international terrorism, violent crime, public corruption, narcotics trafficking, organized crime, civil rights, and sophisticated fraud schemes.  He was a primary investigator in the 1998 bombings of the United States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania which led to the indictment of Usama bin Laden. Over the course of his career, Mr. Espenshade was awarded the FBI Director’s Award for Excellence in International Operations, the National Intelligence Meritorious Unit Citation for outstanding performance in the investigation and ultimate recovery of a kidnapped hostage in Somalia, and the Brigadier General Richard T. Ellis Award for Excellence in collaboration within the U.S. intelligence community.  Mr. Espenshade was also the recipient of numerous other awards for exceptional investigative and leadership accomplishments over the course of his career with the FBI and military that exceeded a 30-year period of time.   

Prior to joining the FBI, Mr. Espenshade served as a Military Intelligence officer in the U.S. Army.  He earned a B.S. from Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, PA and a M.S. in Organizational Leadership from Norwich University in Northfield, VT.   Mr. Espenshade is married to Lisa Espenshade, an educator with a 20 year career of teaching both science and special education in schools throughout the United States and international schools in Africa and Europe.  They have four school-aged children, Matalyn, Ava, Ella, and Seth. Mr. Espenshade is an elder at the Journey Church in Lebanon, TN where he teaches children’s classes and leads an adult small group bible study.  

 

WESLEA BELL

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Adjunct Instructor of English
wbell@cumberland.edu
Adjunct Faculty
The Millard and JJ Oakley School of Humanities, Education and the Arts
B.A., Mississippi College
M.A., Mississippi State University

Weslea Bell began her career in 1995 as a secondary English and gifted education instructor in Mississippi public schools. After moving to Tennessee in 1998, she moved to the college level and has been teaching both in online and traditional classroom settings since then. She spent several years writing professionally for newspapers, marketing companies, magazines and curriculum publishers in order to broaden her experience in the writing and publishing industry. This professional perspective has been beneficial in the classroom for teaching with sharper vision and with a deeper understanding of the way writing impacts society. Weslea looks forward to many more years interacting with students and continuing to learn as much from them as they do from her. 

 

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