TCâs New Chief Academic Officer: Stephanie J. Rowley
An educational psychologist and institution builder who unites great minds
¶¶Òőapp named Stephanie J. Rowley, a prominent educational psychologist and multidisciplinary research administrator at the University of Michigan (U-M), its next Provost, Dean of the College and Vice President for Academic Affairs, effective July 1, 2019. Rowley succeeded Thomas James, who will remain Professor and Co-Director â with Ansley T. Erickson, Associate Professor of History & Education â of TCâs Center on History and Education.
âStephanie Rowley is an eminent scholar and a consummate institution builder with a record of success in uniting great minds to develop innovative approaches and solutions to societyâs pressing challenges,â said TC President Thomas Bailey. âShe will help us make the most of our many strengths and deepen and expand our already vibrant connections to our surrounding community and external partner organizations.â
Stephanie J. Rowley (Photo: Courtesy of Michigan Photography)
âI was initially drawn by TCâs rich history and reputation, but soon realized that this role would be an ideal fit for me because of the possibilities for combining multidisciplinary strengths,â Rowley said. âTC has so many visible and highly engaged scholars. Thereâs so much opportunity to connect with New York City and its public schools and to reap the benefits of being in such a diverse and dynamic place.â
A Professor of Psychology in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Rowley has served as Associate Vice President for Research (Social Sciences and Humanities), in U-Mâs Office of Research. She previously chaired U-Mâs Department of Psychology and its Combined Program in Education and Psychology.
Thereâs so much opportunity to connect with New York City and its public schools and to reap the benefits of being in such a diverse and dynamic place.
â Stephanie J. Rowley, Provost, Dean of the College & Vice President for Academic Affairs
As a research administrator, Rowley has ensured the participation of social scientists and humanists in key multidisciplinary University initiatives. As a scholar, she has explored how parentsâ social experiences, attitudes and beliefs influence how they socialize their children, and how that socialization process affects childrenâs motivation in school.
S. Jack Hu, U-Mâs Vice President for Research, said Rowley has provided âexceptional leadership in developing and coordinating innovative initiatives.â Elizabeth Cole, U-Mâs Interim Dean, said Rowley has made âlasting impacts through her collaborative style, her commitment to diversity and inclusion, and her unfailing support for faculty research.â
Combining the Fundamental and the Applied: JoAnne Williams, TCâs new Finance & Administration VP
A focus on maximizing TCâs impact on society
JoAnne Williams, who has held top administrative positions in academia and industry, became ¶¶Òőappâs Vice President for Finance & Administration in February.
JoAnne Williams, TCâs new Finance & Administration VP
JoAnne Williams, TCâs new Finance & Administration VP (Photograph: Bruce Gilbert)
Born in Costa Rica, Williams grew up and worked throughout South America and Europe. She earned a law degree at University of Detroit Mercy; worked for General Motors, Electronic Data Systems and Siemens handling issues related to product development and research, intellectual property rights, initial public offerings, computer-aided engineering design and business ventures worldwide; and eventually switched to academia. She served as Clemson Universityâs Assistant Vice President for Research & Economic Development; as Associate Dean of Administration for Cornell Universityâs College of Engineering; and most recently, as Vice Dean for Administration for Rutgers Universityâs School of Arts & Sciences in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Her responsibilities there included fiscal planning, administrative services and facilities. She also oversaw the Office of Human Resources, the Office of Finance and Business Affairs, and the Office of Information Technology.
Williams is excited about leveraging TCâs assets to achieve the maximum impact to society. She says she has quickly realized that âthe name â¶¶Òőappâ is a bit of a misnomer, because there is so much other wonderful stuff going on here.â She also sees âa real desire to do intentional things to improve the world â a combination of the fundamental and the applied.â
In Praise of Failure
A Nobel Laureate delivers TCâs inaugural Yu Panglin Lecture
CHEMICAL REACTION Martin Chalfie charmed his audience (Photograph: Bruce Gilbert)
Calling failure âpart of discovering nature and the world around us,â 2008 chemistry Nobel Laureate delivered the inaugural Yu Panglin Lecture of TCâs Education for Persistence and Innovation Center (EPIC) in March. TC President Thomas Bailey and Dennis Pang, Yu Panglin Charitable Trust Chairman, expanded the Trustâs partnership with EPIC.
Chalfie, University Professor at Columbia, has produced a biological marker for gene expression. The late Yu Panglin, a global real estate developer who overcame poverty, donated his fortune to charity. The Yu Panglin Charitable Trust supports work in medicine, education and disaster relief.
Theyâve Got Mail: Thanking TCâs faculty
TCâs first Faculty Appreciation Week, in March, yielded hundreds of online testimonials to facultyâs brilliance, mentorship and concern for a better world.
Doctoral student Jessica Smagler thanked Dirck Roosevelt, Associate Professor in Curriculum & Teaching, âfor always building me up when I start to doubt myself.â
A female student thanked Dolores Perin, Professor of Psychology & Education, for âbeing someone I can trust, ask advice, and rely on as a woman and a mentor in the academy!â
Others spoke of awakening to TCâs richness: âProfessor Erica Walker â Your patience is beyond all understanding . . . you have encouraged me to slow down and embrace the experience.â
And this anonymous note confirmed that faculty help students realize their dreams:
Lisa Wright: You once asked us, âWhat is your superpower?â and challenged us to think about our strengths. I have seen your power â in your work with students, faculty and staff. Thank you for sharing your superpower and challenging us to find the power within ourselves.
The Civic Engineer
Tom James has a created a community that fosters ideas
Two words reflect Tom Jamesâ 12-year tenure as TCâs Provost, Dean and VP for Academic Affairs: âinnovationâ and âcivility.â
Safeguarding the Commons James says the current climate in America reminds him of âThe Tragedy of the Commons,â an essay about Britainâs 19th-century privatization of its pasture land. âEducation,â he says, âis one of our commons as a democratic society.â (Photograph: Bruce Gilbert)
âChange comes from everywhere in an organization,â says James, who stepped down July 1st but remains Professor and Co-Director (with Ansley Erickson) of TCâs Center on History and Education. âThe challenge is to create cooperation and mutual respect so everyone feels free to think, speak and act.â
In 2007, James established the Provostâs Investment Fund to seed promising cross-disciplinary faculty projects. He has led TCâs hiring of over 70 new faculty members who âare envisioning and shaping the future of their fields.â And he has helped faculty members â and faculty of color in particular â become department chairs, chaired professors, heads of TC centers and institutes, senior advisors and associate deans.
âI want us to be a community where people develop their leadership potential,â he says. âThat matters not just for TC, but for all education, health and psychology.â
At a time of rising segregation and class and political tensions, TC must emphasize educationâs importance: âWhatâs happening in this country reminds me of Garrett Hardinâs essay on âThe Tragedy of the Commonsâ [about the 19th-century privatization of Britainâs common pastures]. Public education is one of our commons as a democratic society.â At TC, safeguarding that commons begins with reaffirming ¶¶Òőapp âas a learning organization, for ourselves as well as for students.â
Following a sabbatical, James will engage in research, teaching and service, including a seminar aiming to create a sequel to the late TC president and education historian Lawrence A. Creminâs History of ¶¶Òőapp, which covered the first half of TCâs nearly 130-year history. And James will keep advocating for education for all. âI believe our march toward universal access and educational rights is unstoppable, because thatâs what this society is all about.â â JOE LEVINE
Change comes from everywhere in an organization. The challenge is to create cooperation and mutual respect so everyone feels free to think, speak and act.
â Thomas James
A Full Plate at TCâs Tisch Food Center
Serving wholesome school lunch sounds simple â but not in New York City. TCâs Laurie M. Tisch Center for Food, Education & Policy in the Nutrition Education Program is evaluating efforts to transform 1,700 school cafeterias to prepare fresh food from scratch.
Separately, Executive Director Pamela Koch will teach an online summer course to equip public school teachers to teach food and nutrition education. In January, the Center testified for a bill requiring annual reporting to the City Council on nutrition education in schools. And the Center is supporting the WELL Campaign, a legislative effort to provide New York students with health-supporting schools.
Erica Walker is TCâs Clifford Brewster Upton Professor
Erica N. Walker, an authority on the sociocultural factors and educational policies and practices that facilitate math engagement, learning and performance, is TCâs new Clifford Brewster Upton Professor of Mathematical Education.
Erica Walker Clifford Brewster Upton Professor of Mathematical Education (Photograph: Bruce Gilbert)
Walker chairs TCâs Department of Mathematics, Science & Technology and directs its . A former high school teacher, she has written Building Mathematics Learning Communities: Improving Outcomes in Urban High Schools and Beyond Banneker: Black Mathematicians and the Paths to Excellence. In 2015, she delivered the Mathematical Association of Americaâs 100th-anniversary lecture.
âThe Upton Chair signifies a true thought leader in mathematics education,â said Provost Thomas James. âProfessor Walkerâs new paradigm for leveraging informal mathematical âsocializationâ has inspired more young students to engage in creative problem-solving and identify as âmath people.â She has created a successful model for peer tutoring in high schools. And she is universally respected as a statesperson at ¶¶Òőapp and in academia.â
Loud Reports: Headline-Makers from TC
Education assessmentâs next wave; getting reading programs on the same page; âschools of choiceâ that are too choosy (Illustration: Jasu Hu)
As 44 states began meeting the 2015 Every Student Succeeds Actâs testing and accountability requirements, TC measurement-evaluation expert Madhabi Chatterji warned in a National Education Policy Center publication of a new wave of inappropriate high-stakes testing. Many states planned to use testing to rank, rate or examine schoolsâ or education systemsâ growth, which Chatterji likened to âmisreading a Fahrenheit thermometer in degrees Celsius.â
Thomas Hatch, Co-Director of TCâs National Center for Restructuring Education, Schools & Teaching (NCREST), and colleagues Meesuk Ahn, Daniel Ferguson and Alyson Rumberger reported that the 100-plus intermediary organizations and support providers that help New York City public schools with Kâ3 reading have the goals, services, reach and personnel to improve outcomes. The authors call for âexplicit strategiesâ for âgreater coherence . . . to increase the effectiveness of the sector overall.â
Economists Peter Bergman (TC) and Isaac McFarlin, Jr., (University of Florida College of Education) sent emails from fictitious parents to thousands of charter and traditional public schools of choice. Each email asked if any student could apply but randomly signaled the inquiring studentâs disability status, behavior quality or prior academic achievement and randomly implied race, gender or household structure. Charters and traditional public schools of choice more often ignored inquiries from students they perceived as more challenging to educate, with charters ignoring inquiries from special-needs students at higher rates â a âkey source of potential inequality,â Bergman says.
IN BRIEF
WARâS MORAL INJURIES
Psychological treatment can help military veterans who witness or experience violence. But what about those who participated in violence? âSomething before God cannot necessarily be fixed by cognitive therapy,â , founder of the TC Spirituality Mind Body Institute, told 24 visiting U.S. Army chaplains in October. The chaplains must seek to cultivate the spiritual growth to counter such âmoral injury,â Miller said. âYou are the embodiment of spiritual life. When you speak from your core, you are giving others permission to do so as well.â
PROBING ANTI-SEMITISMâS RISE
TCâs December symposium âAnti-Semitism Today: Why are Hate Crimes on the Rise in the U.S.?â probed the 57 percent increase in acts of discrimination and outright hatred toward Jews during Donald Trumpâs first year as President. Unless the United States tackles racism and anti-Semitism on social media, said American Jewish Committee CEO , âwe are sitting ducks.â And , Director of Manhattan Collegeâs Holocaust, Genocide and Interfaith Education Center, who is Muslim, said universities must âcreate an inclusive environmentâ to discuss groupsâ experiences. TC staff member organized the event.
A Better World Through a Stronger TC
The College inaugurates a new president, and a new chapter begins
CAREER PATHING Inaugurated as TCâs 11th President, Thomas Bailey called on the College to create pathways to success for all. (Photograph: Don Pollard)
Thomas Bailey was inaugurated as ¶¶Òőappâs 11th president on December 7, 2018. The ceremony, in Riverside Church, capped a week of festivities that included a faculty symposium, student musical performances and a spaghetti dinner hosted by Bailey and his wife, Carmenza. In remarks to faculty, students, staff, alumni and friends, Bailey said that âby building a stronger and more effective ¶¶Òőapp, we will strengthen our ability to help build a stronger and more equitable society â and by truly marshaling our resources to achieve our broader social goals, we will become a stronger and more effective and sustainable institution.â
Reading from a poem she wrote, faculty member Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz declared: âKnow that we support you, Mr. President, in your vision. We lift the pen to co-write the story you seek to tell.â
Read more at tc.edu/inauguration