PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
MAY 11, 2023 VOL. 30 NO. 16
Gosselin Is New Dean of Admission
INSIDE 2x First Headline Year Convocation
Author Tracy Kidder will return as xxxxx. guest speaker and discuss his new xbook, Headline Rough Sleepers. xxx.
4-5 Seniors to Remember Members of the Class of 2023 reflect x Headline xxxxx. on their experiences at BC.
6 Group Effort
Morrissey College and Lynch School faculty collaborate on a project that’s just received an NSF grant.
BY SEAN SMITH CHRONICLE EDITOR
Grant Gosselin, who in five years as director of undergraduate admission has helped Boston College achieve remarkable success in recruitment and enrollment despite the COVID-19 pandemic, has been appointed as dean of undergraduate admission and financial aid, effective June 1. In his new position, Gosselin will continue oversight of the University’s Office of Undergraduate Admission while working closely with the Office of Financial Aid administration and staff. He also will play a key role in shaping strategies and objectives for BC’s undergraduate recruitment and enrollment. “I am excited to accept the job as dean of undergraduate admission and financial aid,” said Gosselin, a 1997 graduate of the Carroll School of Management, a 2002 graduate of the Lynch School of Education and Human Development, and parent of a current BC undergraduate. “I have tremendous respect for the talented people in the offices of Undergraduate Admission
Grant Gosselin photo by lee pellegrini
and Financial Aid, who are leaders in their respective fields, and look forward to building on our relationship. “I’m especially pleased that, as dean,
I will work on the overall vision of our undergraduate admission program, yet still provide day-to-day engagement with students and families who want to be part of BC.” Gosselin honed his expertise in undergraduate admission at BC—where he served as senior assistant director of undergraduate admission and associate director of marketing and international admission—before going on to Babson College and Wheaton College. As chief enrollment officer at both Babson and Wheaton, he set historic highs in applications and enrolled students, as well as in international student recruitment. He also implemented a new admission marketing strategy that included affordability and yield campaigns and a high school counselor communications plan. Since returning to BC in 2018, Gosselin has been instrumental in a host of impressive achievements in undergraduate admission: In the last five years, undergraduate applications have risen 20 percent, the admit rate has dropped from 28 to 15
Bellarmine Award Goes to Education Innovator Walsh Nobel Laureate Romer Will Join BC BY PHIL GLOUDEMANS STAFF WRITER
BY ED HAYWARD STAFF WRITER
Mary E. Walsh—namesake of the Lynch School of Education and Human Development’s Center for Thriving Children—is this year’s recipient of the Saint Robert Bellarmine, S.J., Award in recognition of her exemplary career and significant contributions that have consistently and purposefully advanced the mission of Boston College. Walsh, the Daniel E. Kearns Professor in Urban Education and Innovative Leadership at the Lynch School, will receive the faculty honor from University President William P. Leahy, S.J., at the University Commencement Exercises on May 22. She is the fourth recipient of the award, named for the Italian cardinal, influential professor, and one of the leading figures in the Counter-Reformation. Drawing from research in child development and learning, Walsh, a clinical developmental psychologist and BC faculty member since 1989, has advanced a pathbreaking, evidence-based “whole child” approach to supporting students in school. Under her leadership, the Walsh Center
Nobel laureate Paul M. Romer, one of the most influential economists of this century, will join Boston College as the Seidner University Professor in the Carroll School of Management, beginning this fall. Romer, a 2018 Nobel honoree, will launch the Carroll School’s new Center for the Economics of Ideas and join the faculty of the Finance Department, which is consistently ranked among the nation’s best undergraduate finance programs and among the most productive for faculty scholarship. “Paul Romer’s pioneering work spans economics, technology, urbanism, and a range of other fields—consistently challenging conventional wisdom and summoning up new ways of understanding fundamentals,” said Provost and Dean of Faculties David Quigley. “He possesses a remarkable fluency across topics and ways of knowing. His scholarship and teaching, and his leadership of the new Center for the Economics of Ideas at Boston College, promise to expand on his pathbreaking accomplishments and open up new horizons to direct change
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for the common good.” The Seidner University Professorship was made possible through a gift from BC Trustee Marc Seidner ’88 and the Seidner family. “I’m very excited about the course that Boston College is setting with the new Center for the Economics of Ideas,” said Romer, who joins BC following 13 years at New York University. “In the pursuit of progress, the market can be the vehicle, but the values of science, scholarship, and enlightenment must be the compass. We’ve got plenty of disruption. What’s missing is direction.” Andy Boynton, the John and Linda Powers Family Dean of the Carroll School of Management, said the addition of Romer to a world-class faculty offers great opportunities for both Boston College and the Carroll School.
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Paul Romer will lead the Center for the Economics of Ideas as the Seidner University Professor in the Carroll School of Management.
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photo by joshua dalsimer
QUOTE I had many teachers at BC who cared deeply about our intellectual lives, yet cared as much about the kind of people we would become...I dedicate these awards to them. –carroll school faculty member thomas wesner, page 3