During
his tenure at UNC-CH, Dean Small was active in numerous activities
and programs with faculty, students and staff and received various
awards and recognitions, including Appreciation Awards from
the SPH Minority Student Caucus (in 1973, 1978, 1980, 1983,
1986, 1990, 1993, and 1996) and an Outstanding Service Award
from the SPH Student Body in 1984. In 1984 he was appointed
to the North Carolina Environmental Management Commission by
Governor James B. Hunt for a four-year term. At the University
level, Dean Small was recognized as Student Organization Advisor
of the Year for 1992-93 and received the Harvey Elliot Beech
Award from the UNC Black Alumni in September 1993 for outstanding
achievement by a UNC-CH alumnus. In April 1999 Dean Small was
honored with the C. Knox Massey Award, including a $5,000
honorarium, for Unusual, Meritorious, and Superior Service to
the University of North Carolina. Nationally,
he was recognized by the Black Caucus of Health Workers of the
American Public Health Association with the Award for Outstanding
Health Service to the Minority Community at its Annual meeting
in 1990.
For
several years, Dean Small served as visiting professor at North
Carolina Central University (NCCU) and St. Augustine's
College (Raleigh). Dean Small and the late Roamless Hudson,
a colleague at St. Augustine's and fellow SPH alumnus,
established what became the first undergraduate program in industrial
hygiene and safety at a historically black institution of higher
learning. Dean Small maintains an active role in local community
health issues, serving as vice-chairman of the Durham County
Board of Health and on the Board of an organizaton dedicated
to serving homeless individuals and families in Durham County,
Housing for New Hope.
Presently
Dean Small is a faculty member in the Department of Health Education
at NCCU where he teaches courses in personal health and environmental
health and coordinates the Minority Aging Project. He also serves
as assistant golf coach at NCCU in the Department of Athletics.
He and his late wife Rosa are the parents of two adult daughters.
Virtual
plaque
commemorating Dean William T. Small Jr's contributions to public
health