|
Rodin Legacy >

Profile
Judith Rodin, Ph.D.
President, The University of Pennsylvania
1994 - Present
In 1994, Dr. Judith Rodin became the first woman to be named to
the presidency of an Ivy League institution. During nearly a decade
of
service, Rodin has guided the University through a period of
unprecedented growth and development that has transformed Penn's
academic core and dramatically enhanced the quality of life on campus
and in the surrounding community. Under her leadership, Penn has
invigorated its resources, doubling its research funding and tripling
both its annual fundraising and the size of its endowment; launched
a comprehensive and widely acclaimed neighborhood revitalization
program;
attracted record numbers of undergraduate applicants, creating Penn's
most selective classes ever; and risen in the U.S. News & World
Report rankings of top national research universities from 16th
in 1994 to
5th in 2003. Dr. Rodin's presidency has also marked the largest capital
construction period in Penn's history, with more than $1 billion
invested in new buildings, renovations and restorations.
In addition to being the first woman to be named to the presidency
of an Ivy League institution, Dr. Rodin is also the first Penn alumna to
serve as president. She holds faculty appointments as a professor of
psychology in the School of Arts and Sciences and as a professor of
medicine and psychiatry in the School of Medicine. She returned to
Penn after 22 years on the faculty of Yale University, where she served
as provost from 1992 through 1994.
Rodin serves on the boards of the Brookings Institution and Catalyst,
and on the boards of Aetna, Inc., AMR Corporation, Electronic Data
Systems and Comcast Corporation. She is also a Trustee of the BlackRock
Funds. She chaired the Council of Presidents of the Universities
Research Association. She chairs the board of Innovation Philadelphia
and the Knowledge Industry Partnership, serves on the steering committee
of college presidents for America Reads and the executive committee
of the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. Rodin is also a member of the
Council on Competitiveness.
Rodin served on President Clinton's Committee of Advisors on Science
and Technology and co-chaired the transition team of Philadelphia Mayor
John F. Street. She also served from 1994-95 on a Presidential panel to
review security at the White House.
Rodin has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
the American Philosophical Society, and the Institute of Medicine of the
National Academy of Sciences.
After completing her Ph.D. at Columbia University in 1970, Rodin joined
the faculty of New York University as an assistant professor of
psychology. She moved to Yale in 1972, was promoted to associate
professor in 1975, named a full professor of psychology in 1979, and
added the title of professor of medicine and psychiatry in 1985. Prior
to her appointment as Yale's provost in 1992, she served two years
as chair of the department of psychology and one year as dean of the
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. From 1983 to 1993, she chaired
an international research network studying health and behavior for the
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Renowned for her work on the relationship between psychological and
biological processes in human health and behavior, Rodin has published
more than 200 articles and chapters in academic publications and
authored or co-authored ten books.
July 29, 2003

|

|