Its current President and Chief Executive Officer is Terrence G. Wiley.
He is the co-founder of two scholarly journals, Journal of Language, Identity, and Education and International Multilingual Research Journal.
•
His work has focused on literacy and language diversity, Ebonics, bilingual education, and the impacts of globalization and language-restrictionist policies.
•
Terrence G. Wiley is Chief Executive Officer of the Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL) in Washington, DC, and Professor Emeritus of Educational Policy Studies and Applied Linguistics at Arizona State University.
John Wiley & Sons | Wiley-Blackwell | Terrence Malick | Wiley | Wiley (rapper) | Terrence McNally | Terrence Pegula | William Wiley | Terrence Higgins Trust | Terrence Howard | Kehinde Wiley | Jenny Wiley | William Wiley (artist) | Terrence Mann | Terrence J. O'Brien | Terrence Boyle | Edwin Wiley Grove | T. S. Wiley | Terrence Prendergast | Marcellus Wiley | John Wiley Bryant | Harvey Wiley Corbett | Wiley Wiggins | Tess Wiley | Terrence Roberts | Terrence Oglesby | Terrence O'Flaherty | Terrence McGee | Terrence Malick's | Terrence Leas |
Wiley was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh and to the three succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1901, until his death at Hot Springs, Virginia, June 17, 1908.
•
He served as legal adviser and chief of staff to Gen. Henry W. Lawton in Santiago, Cuba, and assisted Gen. Leonard Wood in the establishment of civil government in the eastern Province.
Admiral Wiley retired once more 2 January 1943 and died 20 May 1943 at Palm Beach, Florida.
He returned to UW–Madison as a faculty member in the College of Engineering in 1975, after having worked with Bell Telephone Laboratories and at the Max Planck Institute in Stuttgart, Germany as an awardee of the Alexander von Humboldt Senior U.S. Service Award for Research and Training.
John D. Wiley, former Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin–Madison
Wiley was elected as a Democrat to the Sixtieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his brother, Ariosto Appling Wiley, and served from November 3, 1908, to March 3, 1909.
But David A. Wiley, then Psychology Professor at Utah State, went further, signing certificates for whoever takes his class.
Former actress Suzanne Somers advocates the Wiley Protocol in her book Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones.
Terrence G. Berg (born 1959), federal judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan
T. S. Wiley and Suzanne Somers have been criticized by some physicians for their advocacy of the Wiley Protocol.
•
The Wiley Protocol is a controversial form of bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) devised and advocated by T. S. Wiley.