Difference between revisions of "Michele M. Moody-Adams"

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(New page: thumb|Michele M. Moody-Adams '''Michele M. Moody-Adams''' will be the 15th Dean of Columbia College, succeeding Austin Quigley on July 1, 2009. She...)
 
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[[Image:MicheleMoody-Adams.jpg|thumb|Michele M. Moody-Adams]]
 
[[Image:MicheleMoody-Adams.jpg|thumb|Michele M. Moody-Adams]]
'''Michele M. Moody-Adams''' will be the 15th Dean of [[Columbia College]], succeeding [[Austin Quigley]] on July 1, 2009. She will be the first woman, and african-american, to hold the post. Prior to her accepting the deanship, Moody-Adams was the Hutchinson Professor and Director of the Program on Ethics and Public Life at the Sage School of Philosophy at [[Cornell]], where she was also the vice provost for undergraduate education.
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'''Michele M. Moody-Adams''' will be the 15th Dean of [[Columbia College]], succeeding [[Austin Quigley]] on July 1, 2009. She will be the first woman, and first African-American, to hold the post. Prior to her accepting the deanship, Moody-Adams was the Hutchinson Professor and Director of the Program on Ethics and Public Life at the Sage School of Philosophy at [[Cornell]], where she was also the vice provost for undergraduate education.
  
 
Moody-Adams will also take on the additional title of Vice President for Undergraduate Education, which on its face appears to be an increase in status from her predecessors title of Associate Vice President. If the move is what it appears to be, then it means that the central administration will have a direct representative of the undergraduate schools, rather than the schools being spoken for by the [[Vice President of Arts and Sciences]].
 
Moody-Adams will also take on the additional title of Vice President for Undergraduate Education, which on its face appears to be an increase in status from her predecessors title of Associate Vice President. If the move is what it appears to be, then it means that the central administration will have a direct representative of the undergraduate schools, rather than the schools being spoken for by the [[Vice President of Arts and Sciences]].
  
 
Moody-Adams will be accompanied to Columbia by her husband, a Victorianist.
 
Moody-Adams will be accompanied to Columbia by her husband, a Victorianist.
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==Education==
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Moody-Adams graduated from [[Wellesley College]] in [[1978]] with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy. She attended Somerville College at the [[University of Oxford]] on a [[Marshall Scholarship]] and received a B.A. in philosophy, politics, and economics in [[1980]], and went on to earn Ph.D. in philosophy from [[Harvard University]] in 1986. Moody-Adams wrote her dissertation on “Moral Philosophy Naturalized: Morality and Mitigated Skepticism in [[Hume]]” under the supervision of philosopher [[John Rawls]]. Before coming to Cornell in the fall of 2000, Moody-Adams worked at Indiana University, Bloomington as associate dean for undergraduate education.
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
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[[Category:Deans of Columbia College|Moody-Adams, Michele M.]]
 
[[Category:Deans of Columbia College|Moody-Adams, Michele M.]]
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[[Category:Philosophy professors|Moody-Adams]]

Revision as of 20:48, 1 March 2009

Michele M. Moody-Adams

Michele M. Moody-Adams will be the 15th Dean of Columbia College, succeeding Austin Quigley on July 1, 2009. She will be the first woman, and first African-American, to hold the post. Prior to her accepting the deanship, Moody-Adams was the Hutchinson Professor and Director of the Program on Ethics and Public Life at the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell, where she was also the vice provost for undergraduate education.

Moody-Adams will also take on the additional title of Vice President for Undergraduate Education, which on its face appears to be an increase in status from her predecessors title of Associate Vice President. If the move is what it appears to be, then it means that the central administration will have a direct representative of the undergraduate schools, rather than the schools being spoken for by the Vice President of Arts and Sciences.

Moody-Adams will be accompanied to Columbia by her husband, a Victorianist.

Education

Moody-Adams graduated from Wellesley College in 1978 with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy. She attended Somerville College at the University of Oxford on a Marshall Scholarship and received a B.A. in philosophy, politics, and economics in 1980, and went on to earn Ph.D. in philosophy from Harvard University in 1986. Moody-Adams wrote her dissertation on “Moral Philosophy Naturalized: Morality and Mitigated Skepticism in Hume” under the supervision of philosopher John Rawls. Before coming to Cornell in the fall of 2000, Moody-Adams worked at Indiana University, Bloomington as associate dean for undergraduate education.

External links


Preceded by
Austin Quigley
Dean of Columbia College 
2009-
Succeeded by
'Incumbent'