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Dr. Edward Carlson

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Dr. Edward Carlson sitting by microscope.Education is in Dr. Edward Carlson’s blood. His mother Rachel taught eight grades in a one-room schoolhouse in rural Wisconsin, and Carlson knew he’d follow in her footsteps the first time he stepped in front of a classroom.

“I had a brilliant high school biology teacher, and one of our assignments was to give a short lecture to the class.  I really enjoyed the whole experience—prepping the materials, being in front of the classroom, and teaching my fellow students. I was immediately hooked,” said Carlson, who recently completed 40 consecutive years in medical teaching, including nearly 30 as chair of UND’s School of Medicine and Health Sciences’ Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology.

What you might not know about this soft-spoken, dedicated professor, who retired as department chair on June 30, is that his teaching career nearly took an entirely different direction.

As a college student, the science aficionado was also a budding musician who played both trumpet and piano.  He was unsure which path to pursue when freshman music theory got the better of him.

“I just wasn’t into sight-singing and all that solfège stuff,” he joked.

So, he switched his major to biology, and music’s loss was UND’s gain.

Carlson first came to UND as a PhD student in 1966 at the recommendation of an undergraduate professor at Bethel College in St. Paul, Minnesota.

“He was an alum and recommended that I apply to the PhD program,” said Carlson.

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