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List of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill leaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Polk Place looking toward Wilson Library on the UNC campus

Leaders of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were known as Presidents until the formation of the Consolidated University of North Carolina in 1932. Between 1934 and 1945, the title Dean of Administration was used for the leader of the university (subordinate to the President of the Consolidated University system), which in turn became Chancellor. An asterisk (*) indicates an interim or acting appointment.[1][2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • MPA@UNC | Program Overview
  • 2015 UNC-Chapel Hill Spring Commencement | Full Ceremony
  • 2015 Winter Commencement Ceremony | UNC-Chapel Hill

Transcription

Hi, I'm Dean Mike Smith at the UNC School of Government. And I'm really proud to welcome you to MPA@UNC. [MUSIC PLAYING] The School of Government has been training public service leaders in North Carolina and across the country for over 80 years. We have decided to offer our MPA online, because we believe we can offer the highest quality program possible. If you work in public interest, or if you do public interest law like I do, everyone knows that the School of Government is the premier institution not just in our state but nationwide. We have alums in public leadership positions all over the country, incredibly successful in state, local, and federal government. And our program is aimed at creating leaders and giving them the skills to be successful anywhere in the country, frankly, anywhere in the world. In my particular case, I'm at the tail end of my military career. And I'm looking to have to make a transition. So the MPA@UNC program presented a tremendous opportunity to set myself up for a transition of continued public service and to be able to continue to perform at a high level in my day-to-day duties, which is very important. What makes MPA@UNC unique is the experience of the faculty and their tight connections with practitioners. If they bring the education from a real-world perspective, that makes it more readily usable and helpful. To me, the ability to take that same material, that same faculty, and deliver it to anyone anywhere in the world has been an absolute wonderful outcome. Does anybody have any questions so far? The technology is amazing. It brings students together with faculty in a setting that really kind of captures face-to-face interactions. I just have a few questions about the pay-for-performances item that we had yesterday. There is no back row. You're going to get more out of this class than you are going to get if you're in the back row of a class of 50 people. So reading was really what's called a meta-analysis. Adding to the deck of materials that students review in advance of the live session is bringing to life PowerPoint presentations, of video clips that bring theories and concepts and literature to life. This morning, I want to talk to you about models. The two different kinds of models we're going to be talking about-- There hasn't been a class I have taken that I haven't been able to immediately use in my field of work. Having experienced students in the classroom really creates a dynamic, where not only are they taking what they're learning in the classroom and applying it, but they are also bringing their considerable experience into that classroom. Mike, you look like you have a counterargument. What are you thinking about this issue? Well, you know, the compliance rates vary, but-- Every single one of my classmates is rock-solid. And they bring a degree of professional experience to the program, which I feel is one of the great benefits of our program. And that's part of the experience. And that's what I love most about it. My management style has gotten better. And the people I supervise say, hey, Mike, we really like that you're in this program. So it's not just that I'm getting the benefit. But, I think, holistically, our office is improving. So I think it's a win-win, not just for me but for my entire office. We do a lot of great things in public service and help a lot of lives, most of which people will never know. And if you're doing it right, people don't know. And I'd like for people to remember that there is someone working to make life better and make things work the way that we all feel that it should. Well, we've got a lot of local issues, that I read about, that public officials are grappling with. And I would like to be part of the solution to deal with some of those things. And this program is tailored for that. It's custom-built for that. [MUSIC PLAYING]

Presiding Professors

Rev. David Ker (1794-1796)
Name Term
Rev. David Ker 1794-1796
Charles Wilson Harris 1796
Rev. Joseph Caldwell 1796-1797
1799-1804
James Smiley Gillaspie (or Gillespie) 1797-1799

Presidents

Rev. Joseph Caldwell (1796-1797, 1799-1812, and 1816-1835)
Kemp P. Battle (1876-1891)
Name Term
Rev. Joseph Caldwell 1804-1812
1816-1835
Robert Hett Chapman 1812-1816
Elisha Mitchell * 1835
David Lowry Swain 1835-1868
Rev. Solomon Pool 1869-1872
Rev. Charles Phillips 1875-1876
Kemp Plummer Battle 1876-1891
George Tayloe Winston 1891-1896
Edwin Anderson Alderman 1896-1900
Francis Preston Venable 1900-1914
Edward Kidder Graham 1914-1918
Marvin Hendrix Stacy* 1918-1919
Harry Woodburn Chase 1919-1930
Frank Porter Graham 1930-1932

Dean of Administration

Name Term
Robert Burton House 1934-1945

Chancellors

Name Term
Robert Burton House 1945-1957
William Brantley Aycock 1957-1964
Paul Frederick Sharp 1964-1965
Joseph Carlyle Sitterson 1965-1972
Nelson Ferebee Taylor 1972-1980
Christopher Columbus Fordham 1980-1988
Paul Hardin III 1988-1995
Michael Hooker 1995-1999
William Octavius McCoy * 1999-2000
James Moeser 2000-2008
Herbert Holden Thorp 2008-2013[3]
Carol L. Folt 2013- 2019[4][5]
Kevin Guskiewicz 2019–2024
Lee Roberts 2024-present

References

  1. ^ "Previous Presidents and Chancellors". UNC Office of the Chancellor. 2008. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  2. ^ "Presidents and Chancellors, UNC and UNC-Chapel Hill". North Carolina Collection. UNC University Libraries. 2006. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  3. ^ "Dr. Holden Thorp: Chancellor-Elect, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill". UNC Office of the Chancellor. 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-11.
  4. ^ Stancil, Jane; Blythe, Anne. UNC-CH names Carol Folt first female chancellor Archived 2013-04-14 at the Wayback Machine. The News & Observer, 2013-04-13.
  5. ^ "Chancellor Folt announces resignation, orders Confederate Monument pedestal to be removed intact". University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. January 14, 2019. Retrieved 2019-01-14.
This page was last edited on 19 January 2024, at 21:31
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