Monday, January 27, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 4

since 1891

MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 2014

University of Michigan taps Schlissel as next president Search committee to find provost’s replacement to take shape over the next week, Paxson says By MICHAEL DUBIN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 was named the next president of the University of Michigan Friday morning, priming him to leave Brown after three years in the top administrative post. He will remain at Brown for the rest of the academic year, taking the helm at Michigan July 1. Schlissel, who came to Brown in 2011 after serving as dean of biological sciences at the University of California at Berkeley, played a leading role in the year-long process of crafting President Christina Paxson’s strategic plan, which was approved by the Corporation in October. He has also served as the University’s second-in-command during a time of tremendous administrative change. Just seven members of the current 19-person senior staff predate his 2011 arrival. The Michigan Board of Regents unanimously approved and announced Schlissel’s selection at a special 10 a.m. meeting Friday, bringing an end to a seven-month search that began when current President Mary Sue Coleman announced her plans to retire last April. Schlissel’s ascension to the top job at Michigan continues his rapid rise through the academic ranks, climbing from dean at Berkeley to provost at Brown to president at Michigan in a span

Campus reacts to the announcement, page 2.

of just six years. His departure leaves the University with simultaneous openings for two top administrative posts, following Katherine Bergeron’s Jan. 1 exit as dean of the College to become the president of Connecticut College. Schlissel is chair of the 13-person search committee for the new dean, whom administrators hope to select this spring to assume the post in July, he told The Herald in October. The dean search is still in its “relatively early stages,” Paxson said, and Schlissel’s departure will prompt her to take a more active role early in the process. Schlissel said the original plan was to present a list of three finalists to Paxson, but she will now play a more hands-on role in making the list. Overlap between candidates for the two positions is “unlikely,” Paxson said. “People enter those jobs at different stages in their careers.” “There’s not going to be any overlap in the types of candidates, paltry little,” said Stephen Nelson, a higher education expert and senior scholar at the Leadership Alliance at Brown. Plans to search for Schlissel’s successor will take shape in the coming weeks, Paxson wrote in a community-wide email announcing his departure Friday. Paxson wrote to faculty members Saturday morning to solicit input on their visions for the next provost, including their opinions on the merits of considering only internal candidates or engaging in a nationwide search, she told The Herald. She said she intends to form a search committee within about a week and has already begun that process, adding that she aims to have a new provost in place by July 1, or Sept. 1 at the latest. There

Provost leaves mark on Brown By MICHAEL DUBIN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

COURTESY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY

Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 will exit his post at the end of this academic year. President Christina Paxson aims to have a successor in place by July 1. will not be an interim provost. “Since his arrival, Mark has applied a rare combination of energy, thoughtfulness and discipline to strengthen every aspect of Brown,” Paxson wrote in the email, calling him a “valuable partner in the strategic planning process.” “I credit the University of Michigan’s presidential search committee for their exceptional wisdom and judgment in choosing Mark to lead one of our nation’s preeminent public research universities,” she wrote. Schlissel is “exceptionally well positioned for the Michigan job,” Paxson told The Herald, citing in particular his background in medicine as an appropriate fit

for Michigan’s “major medical research enterprise.” Schlissel is “recognized as a highly rated scholar and teacher,” said Michigan Regent Katherine White during Friday’s announcement, according to remarks posted on University of Michigan’s website. “He has experience as an academic administrator at virtually every level.” The firm leading Michigan’s search, Russell Reynolds Associates, first reached out to Schlissel in early October, around the same time a former Berkeley colleague told Schlissel he had recommended him for the position, Schlissel said. Schlissel received a tentative offer » See SCHLISSEL, page 3

When Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 departs for the University of Michigan presidency July 1, he will leave behind a legacy that includes leadership of an expansive strategic planning process, an accredited School of Public Health, tough financial decisions and enhanced environmental teaching and research. Upon the announcement of his selection as provost in April 2011, Schlissel lauded Brown’s “commitment not to rest on its laurels but to aspire to even greater impact on our society.” Schlissel pursued that social impact throughout his two and a half years at Brown, though his intentions have occasionally run up against the reality of an economic downturn, and the results have sometimes met criticism from a variety of factions at the University. A plan for the future Together with President Christina Paxson, Schlissel presided over last year’s strategic planning process, supervising the work of the six committees, helping to draft the plan and attending several events to solicit feedback after its release. » See LEGACY, page 2

An economics experiment: Bears split weekend against No. 10 Yale Flipping the lecture class After only 10 penalty M. ICE HOCKEY

minutes in first game, Bruno racks up 48 minutes in second game

Students in nontraditional microeconomics class show greater engagement, but comparable grades

By ANDREW FLAX SENIOR STAFF WRITER

INSIDE

Friday: Brown 3, Yale 1 In Friday’s game, Bruno (8-8-3, 5-61 ECAC) took down the Elis on the

By GADI COHEN STAFF WRITER

KATIE LIEBOWITZ / HERALD

Despite building confidence by toppling conference foe No. 10 Yale Friday, the Bears fell apart Saturday under the strain of several penalties. strength of their third and fourth lines. Matt Lorito ’15 started the scoring by giving the Bears a 1-0 lead in the second period, but Yale quickly responded to tie the score heading into the third period. Then the young Bears took over. Pryzbek and Kramer scored just 86 seconds apart in the third to put Brown up by two. Steel made 42 saves, locking down a Yale offense that was fourth in the

ECAC and averaging 3.29 goals per game. “I felt great tonight,” Steel said. Head Coach Brendan Whittet ’94 was satisfied with the way his young players stood up against tough competition. “Sometimes as a freshman it’s hard,” Whittet said. “I think as the season’s gone on we’ve seen more of what will make the freshmen successful.” » See HOCKEY, page 3

The first time Pedro Dal Bo taught microeconomics — as a teaching assistant 20 years ago to students in Argentina — it was with the traditional blackboard and chalk. But last semester, after years of teaching in a conventional manner, Dal Bo decided to conduct an experiment. Though Dal Bo, associate professor of economics, taught two sections of ECON 1110: “Intermediate Microeconomics” last semester, one of them was modeled after a new “flipped classroom” teaching style that is gaining traction in schools across the country.

Sports

Science & Research Hundreds of student programmers team with major tech companies at Hack@Brown

Researchers dive into question of ancient aquatic reptile pigmentation

McGonagill ’14 treys carry men’s basketball to first Ivy League win

Bears tie and lose to Yale in women’s hockey home-andhome weekend

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WEATHER

In a home-and-home against No. 10 Yale this weekend, the Bears picked up a win at Meehan Auditorium Friday supported by the efforts of three first-years but were blown out in New Haven the following day. Zack Pryzbek ’17 and Kyle Kramer ’17 each scored third-period goals Friday, while goalie Tyler Steel ’17 contributed a strong performance in the 3-1 win. Pryzbek and Massimo Lamacchia ’15 were both ejected in a 6-0 loss Saturday, as Yale scored four power-play goals. The Bears now sit in seventh place in the ECAC.

The other section served as a control group, taught in the traditional manner. In the flipped section, students attended lectures on Mondays and Fridays, went over questions in problemsolving sessions on Wednesdays and watched explanatory videos recorded by Dal Bo throughout the week. Problem-solving sessions consisted of both individual and group work, supervised by seven undergraduate TAs, culled from previous semesters of the course. There were no significant differences in final grades between the two sections, Dal Bo said, but he believes the flipped teaching style rewarded students with a deeper form of learning. “Students crammed less,” Dal Bo said. “It’s not clear that what you learn from the exam is going to stick 10 years out of the exam.” “The (flipped) class was much more » See MICRO, page 2 T O D AY

TOMORROW

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20 / 10


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