Seven Faculty Members Named as Society of Fellows Mentors

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Seven Dartmouth faculty who will serve as mentors to postdoctoral scholars as Dartmouth expands its intellectual community have been appointed by President Phil Hanlon 鈥77.

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These veteran faculty members will serve as the first faculty fellows in the Dartmouth Society of Fellows. Clockwise, from top left: Randall Balmer, Kathryn Cottingham, George O鈥橳oole, Peter Golder, Donald Pease, Pamela Kyle Crossley, and William Lotko. (Photos by Eli Burakian 鈥00, photo of Donald Pease by Joseph Mehling 鈥69)

 

These veteran faculty members will serve as the first faculty fellows in the Dartmouth , an interdisciplinary community that will support the integration of research and teaching excellence. The will mentor a cohort of newly minted postdocs, who will arrive on campus a year from now.

鈥淭he appointment of these faculty fellows allows us to use our greatest resource鈥攐ur faculty鈥攖o guide new scholars as they begin their academic careers. They will benefit from the mentorship of distinguished faculty leaders from each of Dartmouth鈥檚 four schools, and from great breadth of disciplinary and institutional perspective,鈥 says Provost Carolyn Dever, who along with Dean of the Faculty Michael Mastanduno announced the appointments.

The fellows are:

  • the Dartmouth Professor in the Arts & Sciences and chair, Department of Religion, who will serve as the Society鈥檚 inaugural director
  • , professor of biological sciences
  • , the Charles and Elfriede Collis Professor of History
  • , professor of marketing, Tuck School of Business
  • , the Sue and John Ballard 鈥55, TT 鈥56 Professor of Engineering, Thayer School of Engineering
  • , professor of microbiology and immunology, Geisel School of Medicine
  • , the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities, and professor of English

Their appointments come a year after President Hanlon announced the creation of the Society of Fellows in his inaugural address. He said then that the group would be part of his investment in the future of the College, bringing 鈥渋ntellectual energy (and) the excitement of new ideas鈥 to campus.

Hanlon said the young postdoctoral scholars will be 鈥渃hosen from across the full range of academic disciplines, and allowed the time and mentorship to develop their research and gain diverse scholarly perspectives from our faculty. They will learn the art of teaching from the true masters on this campus, while bringing to Dartmouth their own unique passions and innovation.鈥

The founding of the Society represents an important watershed in Dartmouth鈥檚 history, says Adrian Randolph, the Leon E. Williams Professor of Art History and associate dean of the arts and humanities.

鈥漈he vibrancy of scholarship and teaching at a place like Dartmouth demands intellectual pluralism across all disciplines. The Society of Fellows will bring to campus successive waves of postdoctoral scholars, who will continually refresh our diverse intellectual ecology. I am excited to see what evolves,鈥 Randolph says.

The selection process for the , who will arrive at Dartmouth in September 2015, is currently underway.

Balmer says the Society will play a central role in energizing intellectual life and scholarly productivity at the College.

鈥淚鈥檓 honored that the president has chosen me to lead this initiative, and I look forward to working with the other faculty fellows during its formative stages,鈥 he says

At Dartmouth, the postdoctoral fellows will pursue their own research while gaining mentored experience as teachers and members of the departments and programs they will join.

鈥淧ostdocs typically have a broader research perspective, beyond the narrow focus of most dissertations. The postdoctoral period is a time of adding scope, skills, and tools and most postdocs are hungry for breadth and new angles,鈥 Cottingham says.

The program also benefits Dartmouth by complementing existing curricula with postdocs鈥 expertise in underrepresented fields.

鈥淪uccessful postdoc experiences are always a two-way street,鈥 says Lotko. 鈥淭he host institution and the postdoc are both recognized for the accompanying scholarship. The postdoc and participating Dartmouth faculty usually continue to advance the line of inquiry even after the postdoc leaves, very probably continuing the Dartmouth collaboration.鈥

Lotko said departing fellows also leave a lasting mark on the College鈥檚 curriculum. 鈥淎nd wouldn鈥檛 it be great if Society postdocs look back on the experience as enabling in their professional and career development, with kudos for how Dartmouth did it?鈥

Additionally, Dartmouth undergraduates will benefit from the fellows鈥 presence, says Balmer.

鈥淢embers of the Society of Fellows will serve as role models. I would love to see more undergraduates become enamored of the life of the mind, and many of them might consider doctoral studies for themselves.鈥

Kelly Sundberg Seaman