Title

Rachael Pitts Hall

(they/them)
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Photo of Rachael Pitts Hall
Title/Position
Director of Faculty and Student Training, Academic Professional
Areas of Research

Areas of Research

Engineering Education
Contact

Contact

UAW 1107Georgia Tech
404.894.4689
Biography

Biography

Dr. Rachael Pitts Hall is the Director of Faculty and Student Training in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University. Trained as a chemist, they bring disciplinary expertise in the physical sciences alongside a strong focus on science education, professional development, and inclusive teaching practices. They lead and teach required professional development courses for undergraduate and graduate students and coordinate departmental initiatives focused on mentoring, curricular innovation, and evidence-based teaching. Their work emphasizes story-driven learning, reflective practice, and building supportive learning environments in engineering.

Education

Education

  • PhD in Chemistry, 2019, North Carolina State University
  • MS in Chemistry, 2014, Middle Tennessee State University
  • BS in Chemistry, 2011, Middle Tennessee State University
Research Interests

Research Interests

Dr. Rachael Pitts Hall’s scholarly work sits at the intersection of engineering education, professional identity development, and inclusive teaching and mentoring practices in biomedical engineering. Their work focuses on how story-driven and reflective pedagogies can support students’ sense of belonging, agency, and professional confidence, particularly during key transitions such as entering the major, teaching for the first time, and preparing for post-graduate careers.

Their interests include:

  • Story-driven learning and narrative as tools for professional identity formation
  • Inclusive teaching, mentoring, and TA professional development
  • Psychological safety, belonging, and classroom culture in STEM learning environments
  • Program-level design and assessment of professional development curricula

Dr. Hall’s work is practice-informed and design-oriented, emphasizing curricular innovation, faculty development, and evidence-based improvement of learning environments. While they collaborate closely with faculty, staff, and students on educational initiatives, they do not supervise graduate research students. Their contributions are primarily focused on teaching, program leadership, and scholarship related to engineering education and professional development.

Teaching Interests

Teaching Interests

Dr. Rachael Pitts Hall’s teaching centers on helping students develop the skills, confidence, and self-understanding needed to navigate complex professional and academic environments. They design learning experiences that emphasize reflection, storytelling, and connection as core tools for learning, communication, and ethical practice in engineering.

Their teaching interests include:

Professional development and career preparation in engineering

Story-driven and reflective learning in technical and professional contexts

Inclusive, student-centered pedagogy and psychological safety in the classroom

Teaching and mentoring development for graduate teaching assistants and faculty members

Teaming, communication, and feedback skills for engineers

Across courses and programs, Dr. Hall emphasizes process over performance, iterative learning, and asset-based approaches that recognize students’ diverse experiences and strengths. Their teaching is grounded in evidence-based practices and is closely connected to program-level curriculum design and continuous improvement.
Publications

Publications

M. M. Payne et al., "Pre-Conference Workshop: Using Story-Driven Learning to Support Students as STEM Professionals," 2025 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), Nashville, TN, USA, 2025, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/FIE63693.2025.11328439.
Anuran K. Gayen, Rachael S. Pitts Hall, Sean Lund, and Gavin J. Williams. “Promiscuity of an Alcohol-Dependent Hemiterpene Pathway for the In Vivo Production of a Non-Natural Alkylated Tryptophan Derivative” ACS Synthetic Biology 2025 14 (4), 1220-1229
Sean Lund, Rachael Hall, and Gavin J Williams. “An Artificial Pathway for Isoprenoid Biosynthesis Decoupled from Native Hemiterpene Metabolism”
ACS Synthetic Biology 2019 8 (2), 232-238
R Pitts Hall, “Stories of motivation in a professional development course for PhD students in BME” KEEN Engineering Unleashed Card, 5893
R Pitts Hall, E Zerbe “Storytelling activity related to teaming and assets” KEEN Engineering Unleashed Card 5890
R Pitts Hall, “Co-created Rules of Engagement for Classrooms and Teams” KEEN Engineering Unleashed Card 5828
R Pitts Hall, “Authorship PSS Activity,” KEEN Engineering Unleashed Card 4075

Featured In

Photo of the U.A. Whitaker Building at Georgia Tech in front of the grassy quad area
Coulter BME On Top
Both the graduate and undergraduate programs in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of…