Kathleen McCartney Named Acting Dean of the Harvard
Graduate School of Education
Cambridge, MA -- June 6, 2005 -- Kathleen McCartney, Gerald
S. Lesser Professor in Early Childhood Development and Academic Dean,
will serve as acting dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education
pending the appointment of a permanent dean, President Lawrence H. Summers
announced today. Ellen Condliffe Lagemann, the current dean, announced
her intention in March to step down at the end of this academic year.
The search for a permanent dean will begin immediately after commencement.
A nationally-recognized scholar on child development, McCartney has been
a member of the faculty at Harvard's Graduate School of Education since
2000 and has served, since the beginning of this academic year, as the
academic dean of the School. McCartney's research focuses on the interplay
among child care, parenting, and poverty contexts, and her work informs
theoretical questions related to early experience as well as policy questions
concerning child care.
"Kathy McCartney is an outstanding scholar who has made important leadership
contributions to the Ed School over the past year in her role as academic
dean," President Summers said. "She will bring energy and continuity to
this new role, and I am confident that she will be able to maintain forward
progress on key initiatives launched under Dean Lagemann's leadership
over the last three years. I am grateful for her willingness to help guide
the Ed School through this time of transition."
"I am gratified by the trust that President Summers and Provost Hyman
have shown in asking me to take on this assignment," said McCartney. "They
have assured me of their support for the School and for our efforts to
move forward on key priorities--making faculty appointments, strengthening
our masters and doctoral programs, and working to build relationships
with practice and with other Harvard Schools--as the search for permanent
dean moves forward."
As a principal investigator of the National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development,
McCartney and her colleagues have led a national, longitudinal study of
1,364 children from birth through age 15 over the past 16 years. Major
findings from this research were published in 2005 in Child Care and
Child Development by Guilford Press.
"Professor McCartney is a first-rate researcher whose work is grounded
in practice," Provost Steven E. Hyman stated. "She is a gifted teacher
who brings a wealth of expertise on early child development and policy
analysis to the Ed School. Based on broad consultation with Professor
McCartney's faculty colleagues, I am confident that she will bring the
same imagination and rigor to her new administrative role."
Professor McCartney has published numerous journal articles across several
disciplines and teaches courses on early childhood development. In April
2005, she served as co-chair of the biennial meeting of the Society for
Research in Child Development. She has also served on the editorial board
of the journal Child Development, is a fellow of the American Psychological
Society, and a member of the American Psychological Association.
Previously, Professor McCartney was a Bush Fellow in Child Development
and Social Policy at Yale University where she earned her Ph.D. in 1982.
From 1982 to 1987, she served as an assistant professor in the psychology
department of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Subsequently, she
joined the faculty of the University of New Hampshire (UNH), where she
directed the UNH Child Study & Development Center, a laboratory school
for 138 children. McCartney became a member of Harvard's Ed School faculty
in fall 2000.
McCartney's other research projects include "The Social Ecology of After-School
Care, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development" (1993-1997),
"The Social Ecology of Infant Child Care, National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development" (1989-1995), and "How Children Make Their
Own Language Environments, National Institutes of Mental Health" (1987-1988).
She has also been a Visiting Research Scholar at the Center for Research
on Women at Wellesley College.
McCartney received her bachelor's degree, summa cum laude, from
Tufts University, and her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in psychology from Yale
University.