Lagemann to Step Down as HGSE Dean at End of Academic
Year
Will remain on faculty to focus on teaching and research
March 21, 2005
Cambridge, MA -- Ellen Condliffe Lagemann announced
today that she will step down as Dean of the Graduate School of Education
at the close of the 2004–05 academic year and will refocus her
energies on scholarship and teaching as a member of the HGSE faculty.
"When I agreed to become Dean of the Ed School, I did so knowing
that I was first and foremost a scholar and a teacher," Lagemann
said. "Having now had the extraordinary opportunity of serving
as Dean of HGSE for three years, I have decided it is time for me to
return to teaching and scholarship.
"I remain committed to the well-being of the Ed School and to
the interests all of us share in education," added Lagemann, who
will continue as the Charles Warren Professor of the History of American
Education at HGSE. "I continue to believe and will always believe
that nothing is more important for this country or the world than education.
I intend to work with Larry Summers, Steve Hyman, and all members of
the HGSE community in the time ahead to ensure the smoothest possible
transition. I have come to love this community, and I will do all I
can to ensure its continuing welfare."
"I want to thank Ellen Lagemann for the initiative, dedication,
and drive that she has brought to HGSE during her time as Dean,"
said President Lawrence H. Summers. "Under her guidance, the Ed
School has progressed toward a core curriculum, reorganized its master's
degree programs and its academic areas, redoubled its efforts to contribute
to the improvement of K-12 education, and worked to strengthen its relationships
both with other Harvard schools and with the broader community of professional
educators. In addition, Ellen has been a consistently constructive voice
in discussions among the deans about key university priorities, including
planning for Allston and for HGSE's eventual new home there.
"After a span of more than a decade in a series of senior administrative
roles at NYU, the Spencer Foundation, and most recently HGSE, Ellen
has indicated her desire to devote her full-time efforts once again
to her academic work as a leading historian of American education,"
Summers added. "I am pleased that we will continue to benefit from
her insight and her devotion to educational improvement as a member
of the HGSE faculty."
One of Lagemann's most significant accomplishments at HGSE has been
the creation of the "usable knowledge initiative," which aims
to counter a major problem facing schools of education, the difficulty
of linking research to practice. The initiative has encompassed a series
of conferences and produced a book, Scaling Up Success, that explores
different models for taking successful programs from the classroom level
to the district level and, eventually, nationwide. During Lagemann's
tenure, this emphasis on translating theory into practice has become
part of the underlying ethos of HGSE.
Lagemann's deanship has further been marked by major initiatives to
develop innovative core courses for the HGSE curriculum, to reorient
the school's master's degree programs, and to reorganize its academic
organizational structure. She has also played a leading role in shaping
University-wide activities designed to enhance Harvard's role in the
improvement of K-12 education. She organized a seminar on the race achievement
gap that has now become a University-wide Initiative on Diversity and
Achievement. She also helped create a new center for research on urban
schooling. In addition, she has led the planning process for a new institute
that will eventually serve as an organizational umbrella for faculty-led
projects, programs, centers, and initiatives in various parts of Harvard
having to do with K-12 education.
Lagemann served from 2000 to 2002 as president of the Chicago-based
Spencer Foundation. From 1994 to 2002 she was a professor at New York
University, where she served as chair of the Department of the Humanities
and the Social Sciences and director of the Center for the Study of
American Culture and Education in the School of Education from 1994
to 2000. Earlier in her career, she taught for 16 years at Teachers
College, Columbia University, and was also a member of Columbia's Department
of History.
Lagemann is a past president of both the National Academy of Education
and the History of Education Society. She is an acclaimed historian
of education whose many published works include An Elusive Science:
The Troubling History of Education Research (2000), The Politics of
Knowledge: The Carnegie Corporation, Philanthropy, and Public Policy
(1992), and Private Power for the Public Good: A History of the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (1983). She received her
undergraduate degree from Smith College, before teaching high school
social studies in Roslyn, New York. She holds a master's degree in social
studies from Teachers College, and a Ph.D. in history and education
from Columbia.
Summers said that the search for a new HGSE Dean would begin promptly.
"I will be in touch soon about preliminary plans for the search,
and will want to ensure close consultation with the HGSE faculty and
the wider school community," he said in a message to the school's
faculty, students, and staff. "For now, I hope that you will join
me in extending appreciation to Ellen for her service to the Ed School
and the University, and wishing her well both in the concluding months
of her deanship and in all that lies ahead."