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David J. Gotcher, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Sociology, Department Chair
Dr. David Gotcher



Degrees:
B.A., Abilene Christian University, 1973, in Bible
M.A., Memphis State University, 1993, in Sociology
Ph.D., Texas A & M University, 2000, in Sociology

Office:   Hardin Administration Building 120

Telephone:  Ext. 2306

Email:  gotcherd@acu.edu

Office Hours:

Monday and Wednesday



Tuesday and Thursday


Other times by appointment

 

 

9:00am - 11:00am

1:30pm - 3:00pm


9:30am - 11:00am

Schedule: 

SOCI 385


SOCI 388


SOCI

416

 

 W

  

 TR


 TR

 

                 

1:30-2:50 pm


8:00am-9:20am

 

Achievements:

Community Outreach Survey, with Bill Culp.  Analysis of survey data ranking city services, current issues and access to city government, for the City of Abilene, February, 2006. 

City of Abilene 2005-2009 Consolidated Plan, with Bill Culp and Allan Mooney.  Research done for the City of Abilene, August, 2005. 

Analysis of Texas Health Assessment Survey, with Allan Mooney.  Research done for the United Way of Abilene and the Texas Department of Health, November, 2003.

Forthcoming in Social Science Research, “The Effect of Climate on Migration: United States 1995 – 2000,” with Dudley L. Poston and Yuan Gu, August, 2003.

“First Report, The Effects of Disaster on Social Indicators:  An Analysis,” with Allan Mooney.  Research done for the State Crisis Consortium and the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation.  April, 2003.

"Summary Report: Our Community-What Matters A Survey By The United Way," a data analysis project for the United Way of Abilene, with Lisa Lana, May, 2003.

"The Effects of Disaster on Social Indicators: An Analysis," a data collection and analysis project for the Texas MHMR and the State Crisis Consortium, with Allan Mooney, April, 2003.

Presented "Structural Issues in American Society Effecting Child Poverty," at the Fifth Internation Conference on the Child, in Montreal, Canada, May, 2002

"Analyzing Economic Attainment Patterns of Foreigh Born Latin American Male Immigrants to the United States: An Example Using Hierarchical Linear Modeling," in Migration Themes, Volume 17, Number 3, September 2001.

Presented dissertation results at the Internation
Sociological Association Meetings on International Migration, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, November, 2000.