Nancy L. Zimpher Explained

Nancy L. Zimpher
Order:12th
Chancellor of the
State University of New York
Term Start:June 1, 2009
Term End:September 4, 2017
Appointed:David Paterson
Predecessor:John J. O’Connor
Successor:Kristina M. Johnson
Birth Date:October 29, 1946
Birth Place:Gallipolis, Ohio, U.S.
Alma Mater:Ohio State University
Residence:Albany, New York, U.S.
Profession:Educator
Spouse:Kenneth R. Howey
Blank1:Institutions
Data1:Ohio State University
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
University of Cincinnati
State University of New York
Blank2:Salary
Data2:$545,400
Website:Office of the Chancellor

Nancy Lusk Zimpher (born October 29, 1946) is an American educator, state university leader, and former Chancellor of the State University of New York (SUNY).[1] Prior to her service at SUNY, Zimpher was a dean and professor of education at Ohio State University (where she had earned her bachelors, master's and doctoral degrees); then Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee between 1998 and 2003; and President of the University of Cincinnati from 2003 through May 2009. Zimpher was the first woman to serve as Chancellor of SUNY, UWM's first woman chancellor, and UC's first female president. Zimpher is a native of the village of Gallipolis in southern Ohio.[2]

Administrative career

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

At UWM (where she was the first female chancellor of that university), Zimpher created the now-defunct "Milwaukee Idea", a deliberately derivative variation on the historical Wisconsin Idea that "the University's boundaries are the State's boundaries", with a strategic plan that tied UWM, with its faculty knowledge base and research facilities, to the economic health and strength of the Greater Milwaukee area,[3] and raised the profile of UWM in the region vis-a-vis crosstown rival Marquette University.[4]

University of Cincinnati

At UC, she worked to eliminate the previous divisions among the colleges (such as by creating a single university commencement) and continuously championed UC|21, an academic plan which redefined UC as a "new urban research university" for the 21st century. It has also positioned Cincinnati as a candidate for AAU status. Her work was complicated by controversy over her ousting of longtime basketball coach Bob Huggins. Shortly after her arrival at UC, Huggins had been arrested for driving under the influence. This arrest, combined with the poor performance of Huggins' players in the classroom, were among many factors that led Zimpher to force Huggins to resign in 2005.[5] [6] [7]

State University of New York

Soon after taking over at SUNY, Zimpher promised to visit all 64 campuses in the sprawling system—the largest university system in the nation under a single governing board.[8]

Eight months after being sworn in, Zimpher had to deal with another athletic controversy, this time at Binghamton University. After a rash of incidents involving the school's basketball team, Zimpher ordered an audit of Binghamton's athletic department—to be overseen by the SUNY board of trustees, not Binghamton.[9] The resulting report tallied what the New York Times described as "a litany of transgressions, including lowered admission standards and changed grades." In its wake, Binghamton president Lois B. DeFleur retired in July, athletic director Joel Thirer resigned and basketball coach Kevin Broadus, was placed on paid administrative leave and ultimately stripped of coaching duties.[10]

Zimpher eventually assigned SUNY’s interim provost, David K. Lavallee, to lead an overall effort for the SUNY system to ensure that academics remain the highest priority; and Charles R. Westgate, a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Binghamton, as a special adviser for academics and athletics for the SUNY system: moves some critics of the over-emphasis on athletics decried as insufficient.[11]

Zimpher advocated the use of systemness to begin overhauling SUNY in her January 9, 2012 State of the University address.[12]

On May 31, 2016, Zimpher announced her intention to step down as SUNY chancellor on June 30, 2017.[13] [14] [15]

Family

Zimpher's husband is Kenneth R. Howey, Senior Fellow at the Rockefeller Institute of Government, a public policy research institute at the University at Albany. She was also married to Craig Zimpher, Director of OSU residence hall Scott House, while studying for their advanced degrees at The Ohio State University from c: 1968 through the early 1970s.

Key works

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 2009-02-11 . Challenges aplenty at SUNY . The Times Union . . 1A . 2009-02-17 .
  2. Web site: Nancy Zimpher, UC's new president, at a glance . 2008-09-04 .
  3. Web site: Zimpher to accept SUNY top job . 2022-10-16 . www.bizjournals.com.
  4. Goetz, Kristina. "UC's new leader keeps fast pace, personal touch." Cincinnati Enquirer, July 27, 2003
  5. News: The Basketball Coach Vs. the College President . The Wall Street Journal . Skip . Rozin . March 30, 2006.
  6. News: SI.com - SI on Campus - 2004-05 Hoops Preview: Least Rootable Teams - Thursday, November 11, 2004 @ 10:56AM. CNN .
  7. http://www.magazine.uc.edu/1205/huggins.htm UC Magazine
  8. News: Foderaro. Lisa W.. 2009-02-10. SUNY Chancellor to Build a Strategy by Consensus. en-US. The New York Times. 2022-10-16. 0362-4331.
  9. News: Thamel. Pete . Pete Thamel . 2009-10-03. SUNY Board to Oversee an Audit of Binghamton . en-US . . 2022-10-16. 0362-4331.
  10. News: Thamel. Pete . Pete Thamel . 2010-02-27. At Binghamton, Concern That Sports Still a Focus . en-US. . 2022-10-16. 0362-4331.
  11. News: Binghamton Will Keep Men's Team in Limbo. Pete. Thamel. The New York Times. March 23, 2010.
  12. Web site: Zimpher. Nancy. 2012 State of the University Address. State University of New York. dead. https://archive.today/20121212124925/http://www.suny.edu/chancellor/speeches_presentations/SOU2012.cfm. 2012-12-12.
  13. Web site: 5-31-16 Zimpher - SUNY. www.suny.edu.
  14. Web site: Announcement to SUNY Family. www.suny.edu.
  15. News: Nancy Zimpher to Resign as SUNY Chancellor in 2017. David W.. Chen. The New York Times. May 31, 2016.