On the Move /today/ en Daniel Baker steps down as director of LASP /today/2025/01/29/daniel-baker-steps-down-director-lasp Daniel Baker steps down as director of LASP Megan Maneval Wed, 01/29/2025 - 10:20 Categories: On the Move

At the end of 2024, CU Boulder Distinguished Professor Daniel Baker stepped down as the director of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), a position he held since 1994.

At the end of 2024, CU Boulder Distinguished Professor Daniel Baker stepped down as the director of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), a position he held since 1994.
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Wed, 29 Jan 2025 17:20:35 +0000 Megan Maneval 54055 at /today
Amanda Haertling Thein named dean of the School of Education /today/2025/01/17/amanda-haertling-thein-named-dean-school-education Amanda Haertling Thein named dean of the School of Education Megan Maneval Fri, 01/17/2025 - 07:44 Categories: On the Move

Provost Russell Moore today announced his appointment of Amanda Haertling Thein as dean of the School of Education, effective July 1. 

“Dr. Thein (pronounced ‘tine’) has the leadership acumen, commitment and vision for launching the upward trajectory of the School of Education in a time when research in education and education policy, and the preparation of the next generation of educators, couldn’t be more critical,” Moore said.

Thein currently serves as associate provost for graduate and professional education, dean of the Graduate College and professor of education at the University of Iowa. She is a nationally recognized scholar in English and literacy education with a passion for the work of educational democracy—work that is uniquely carried out through the research, teaching and service missions of schools and colleges of education.

“I am truly honored to have this opportunity to lead a community that shares my deep commitment to educational opportunity, public education as a bulwark of democracy, and public scholarship that asks vital questions and provides answers that serve students, teachers and schools across Colorado and the nation,” Thein said.   

As an academic leader and a tenured professor at a top research university, Thein has focused her scholarship and teaching on equity in high school English language arts instruction and teacher education. She has published nearly 40 journal articles, book chapters and books; secured external funding; and served for six years as co-editor of an international literacy journal. 

“I am excited to welcome Dr. Thein to CU Boulder,” Moore said. “Her leadership experience and her innovative approach to aligning faculty expertise, student interests, state and regional needs, and the broader educational challenges we face nationally and globally will bring strong assets to the School of Education and to CU Boulder.”

Thein earned a doctorate in curriculum and instruction from the University of Minnesota and a master’s in curriculum and instruction from the University of Denver. She earned a bachelor’s degree in English and an additional bachelor’s degree in journalism from CU Boulder.

“I am also excited by the possibility of giving back to the university that helped shape my path in life and contributing to its continued excellence,” Thein said.

Moore thanked the search advisory committee, led by Katherine Eggert, vice chancellor for academic planning and assessment, for their outstanding work. Moore also thanked Fernando Rosario-Ortiz for his continued leadership and service as interim dean during a critical transitional time.

Provost Russell Moore announced his appointment of Amanda Haertling Thein as the dean of the School of Education. Thein is a nationally recognized scholar in English and literacy education with a passion for the work of educational democracy.

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Fri, 17 Jan 2025 14:44:33 +0000 Megan Maneval 53978 at /today
Frank Eparvier named interim director of LASP /today/2024/11/22/frank-eparvier-named-interim-director-lasp Frank Eparvier named interim director of LASP Megan Maneval Fri, 11/22/2024 - 08:36 Categories: On the Move Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics

CU Boulder Dean of the Institutes Massimo Ruzzene named Frank Eparvier as interim director of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, effective Jan. 1, 2025.

CU Boulder Dean of the Institutes Massimo Ruzzene named Frank Eparvier as interim director of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, effective Jan. 1, 2025. window.location.href = `/researchinnovation/2024/11/19/frank-eparvier-named-interim-director-lasp`;

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Fri, 22 Nov 2024 15:36:06 +0000 Megan Maneval 53770 at /today
Patrick O’Rourke to join Children’s Hospital Colorado /today/2024/11/13/patrick-orourke-join-childrens-hospital-colorado Patrick O’Rourke to join Children’s Hospital Colorado Megan Maneval Wed, 11/13/2024 - 11:21 Categories: On the Move

Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating Officer Patrick O’Rourke announced today he is leaving CU Boulder at the end of the semester to begin a leadership role as senior vice president and chief legal officer at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora.

“This is a bittersweet decision, as I care deeply for our work in support of the campus mission,” said O’Rourke. “We have done remarkable work to support students, advance equity and inclusion, create new knowledge and support our community, and I will miss the opportunity to continue to support and work with the amazing leaders and staff within Strategic ƹƵ and Support.

“The opportunity at Children’s Hospital is meaningful to me in a number of ways, which ultimately is why I have chosen to make this move. I’ve been connected with Children’s Hospital since I first began practicing law in 1995 and have a close connection to its mission. I believe I can help Children’s Hospital serve its patients in a challenging health care environment.”

O’Rourke’s time at CU Boulder featured a number of significant achievements, including sustaining the campus community through the COVID-19 pandemic, moving to a new budget model, integrating a shared equity leadership model and building community wellness initiatives.

“Pat O’Rourke provided courageous leadership on the Boulder campus through the global COVID-19 pandemic, and his leadership of the Strategic ƹƵ and Support team has helped enable the strong foundation CU Boulder has today,” said Chancellor Justin Schwartz. “I want to personally thank Pat for his strong work enabling my transition as chancellor and his countless contributions to CU Boulder and the broader University of Colorado system during the past 18 years. I look forward to remaining connected with Pat and I wish him well as he takes on a critical leadership role at Children’s Hospital.”

CU President Todd Saliman expressed his gratitude for Pat’s leadership at CU as well, saying, “I am deeply grateful to Pat for his dedication and service to the University of Colorado, from his days as university counsel and secretary to the Board of Regents to his role as CU Boulder’s executive vice chancellor and chief operating officer, where he has been a guiding force in addressing complex challenges and advancing our goals. As he embarks on this new journey, I extend my deepest thanks for his years of service and wish him continued success in the future.”

O’Rourke will be supporting campus leadership and the SRS team to ensure a smooth transition through the end of term. This week Schwartz will begin engaging with members of the CU Boulder executive leadership team in a series of discussions to inform succession planning for O’Rourke’s role. Decisions on next steps are anticipated in early December.

CU Boulder’s Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating Officer Patrick O’Rourke will leave the university at the end of the semester to take a position as senior vice president and chief legal officer.

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Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:21:28 +0000 Megan Maneval 53694 at /today
Research & Innovation Office’s Emily CoBabe-Ammann to retire /today/2024/11/06/research-innovation-offices-emily-cobabe-ammann-retire Research & Innovation Office’s Emily CoBabe-Ammann to retire Megan Maneval Wed, 11/06/2024 - 14:18 Categories: On the Move

Emily CoBabe-Ammann announced her planned retirement as Research & Innovation Office senior advisor and executive associate director (acting), Center for National Security Initiatives, effective Jan. 1, 2025.

Emily CoBabe-Ammann announced her planned retirement as Research & Innovation Office senior advisor and executive associate director (acting), Center for National Security Initiatives, effective Jan. 1, 2025. window.location.href = `/center/nsi/2024/11/04/research-innovation-offices-cobabe-ammann-retire-end-year`;

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Wed, 06 Nov 2024 21:18:06 +0000 Megan Maneval 53646 at /today
Erika Randall appointed interim dean of undergraduate education /today/2024/10/18/erika-randall-appointed-interim-dean-undergraduate-education Erika Randall appointed interim dean of undergraduate education Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 10/18/2024 - 06:53 Categories: On the Move

Vice Chancellor for Academic Planning and Assessment Katherine Eggert today named Erika Randall interim dean and vice provost of undergraduate education, effective Nov. 4. She will serve in this role for up to two years.

“Erika Randall is a committed leader in student success initiatives and brings a wealth of experience and passion to this critical role,” said Eggert. “Her vision for helping all students fulfill their potential and achieve their goals in the College of Arts and Sciences and her ability to bring teams together across campus to ask critical questions and solve problems are potent, inclusive and effective.”

Randall currently serves as associate dean for student success in the College of Arts and Sciences where she oversees A&S Academic Advising and Coaching, the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program, the honors and academic programs, student recruitment and scholarships, and the curriculum office. She is a professor of dance in the Department of Theatre and Dance and a member of the Buff Undergraduate Success Leadership Implementation Team. She has been on the CU Boulder faculty since 2007 and was chair of the Department of Theatre & Dance from 2017 to 2022.

“The real and imagined barriers to transformation dissipate when we hold students and their success as our north star,” said Randall. “I look forward to thinking with my colleagues across the university and applying our knowledge, care, and experience to benefit all of our undergraduate students.”

Randall holds a master's degree in fine arts dance and choreography from The Ohio State University and a bachelor’s degree in dance from the University of Washington.

Randall succeeds Daryl Maeda, now interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.

The interim dean and vice provost of undergraduate education leads the Office of Undergraduate Education, which is charged with examining the entire undergraduate student academic experience, assessing outcomes, identifying gaps, and launching and supporting student success campus initiatives. This position reports to the vice chancellor for academic planning and assessment and serves on the provost’s cabinet. 

CU Boulder Provost Russell Moore praised Randall’s selection as dean and vice provost.

“Erika Randall combines a solution-minded approach to problem-solving with creativity and optimism in a way that I have rarely seen in an academic leader,” said Moore. “She will provide outstanding and energetic leadership in this vital post as we work to transform and improve the experience of our undergraduates.”

Vice Chancellor for Academic Planning and Assessment Katherine Eggert named Erika Randall interim dean and vice provost of undergraduate education.

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Libraries hire new archivist for Glenn Miller Collection /today/2024/09/17/libraries-hire-new-archivist-glenn-miller-collection Libraries hire new archivist for Glenn Miller Collection Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 09/17/2024 - 13:15 Categories: On the Move

The Glenn Miller Collection now has a dedicated archivist in the University Libraries whose job will be to review and catalog over 1,400 boxes of artifacts from the legendary big band era musician who once attended CU Boulder.

The Glenn Miller Collection now has a dedicated archivist in the University Libraries whose job will be to review and catalog over 1,400 boxes of artifacts from the legendary big band era musician who once attended CU Boulder. window.location.href = `https://libraries.colorado.edu/2024/09/12/libraries-hire-new-archivist-glenn-miller-collection`;

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Mandy Cole named associate vice chancellor for budget and finance /today/2024/09/16/mandy-cole-named-associate-vice-chancellor-budget-and-finance Mandy Cole named associate vice chancellor for budget and finance Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 09/16/2024 - 14:11 Categories: On the Move

In an email to the University Executive Leadership Team earlier this week, Vice Chancellor for Finance and Business Strategy Todd Haggerty announced Mandy Cole as associate vice chancellor for budget and finance, effective Sept. 9.

Cole joined CU Boulder's Finance and Business Strategy division in August 2021, leading the central campus Budget and Fiscal Planning team. The new role expands Cole’s oversight and direction to include the Campus Controller’s Office, headed by Campus Controller Julie deFalco.

“This role will be crucial to ensuring delivery of financial transformation outcomes aligned with campus priorities,” Haggerty wrote. “I am likewise thrilled to retain Mandy here at CU Boulder and to continue to support her growth and career trajectory.”

Named to the position by Todd Haggerty, Mandy Cole is now the campus’s associate vice chancellor for budget and finance.

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Mon, 16 Sep 2024 20:11:59 +0000 Anonymous 53352 at /today
Rudy Betancourt named director of CU Boulder Artist Series /today/2024/09/13/rudy-betancourt-named-director-cu-boulder-artist-series Rudy Betancourt named director of CU Boulder Artist Series Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 09/13/2024 - 10:59 Categories: On the Move College of Music

Rudy Betancourt has been named the new director of the College of Music’s long-running Artist Series, which has brought the finest jazz, classical, world music and dance performers to town for more than eight decades.

Rudy Betancourt has been named the new director of the College of Music’s long-running Artist Series, which has brought the finest jazz, classical, world music and dance performers to town for more than eight decades. window.location.href = `/music/2024/09/04/rudy-betancourt-named-director-cu-boulder-artist-series`;

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Russell Moore stepping down as CU Boulder provost after nearly 14 years /today/2024/09/13/russell-moore-stepping-down-cu-boulder-provost-after-nearly-14-years Russell Moore stepping down as CU Boulder provost after nearly 14 years Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 09/13/2024 - 08:26 Categories: On the Move

Provost Russ Moore speaks with Leeds School of Business Dean Vijay Khatri at the New Faculty Welcome event at the SEEC building on Aug. 19, 2024. (Photo by Glenn  Asakawa/CU Boulder)

Provost Russell Moore today announced he will be stepping down from his position as provost of the Boulder campus after 14 years of service in that role. Moore is CU Boulder’s longest serving provost and the longest continuously serving provost among the institutions in CU Boulder’s peer group, the Association of American Universities. 

He will continue to serve in his role until Chancellor Justin Schwartz names a new provost following a national search.

“The timing of this move gives Chancellor Schwartz the opportunity to seek new academic leadership and shape the academic mission according to his goals for CU Boulder,” Moore said.

Moore said he will step away “with pride in and satisfaction with my record of accomplishment,” which he said includes “having the most diverse and talented academic affairs leadership team in the history of the campus, and building an academic culture forged in openness and transparency and carried out in a spirit of compassion, cooperation and concern, and enriched with a commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion.”

During Moore’s time as provost: 

  • The university’s total enrollment grew from 32,252 undergraduate and graduate students in the 2011–12 academic year—Moore’ first full year as provost—to 37,153 in the 2023–24 academic year, an increase of 15%.
  • The university’s sponsored research funding grew from $380.7 million in the 2011–12 academic year to $684.2 million in the 2022–23 year, an increase of 80%.
  • He led a transformation of CU Boulder’s research and innovation culture, resulting in CU Boulder being recognized in 2023 as a leading university for startup creation. The most recent national data from AUTM (the leading global organization for recording data on university commercialization) showed that CU's creation of startups based on university discoveries was fifth among all U.S. universities.
  • He brought together the university’s academic and cocurricular missions in a series of projects dating from 2016 to advance student success. CU’s second fall retention rate for first-year students hit an all-time high of 89.1% in fall 2023 for the fall 2022 cohort.
  • He co-led the 2017 launch of the Academic Futures project, a faculty, staff and student grassroots-visioning effort to create a guiding blueprint for the university’s academic mission.
  • He completed the reorganization of the College of Arts and Sciences, the university’s largest college, in a five-year project from 2018 to 2023; led the effort to establish the College of Media, Communication, and Information (CMCI), completed in 2015 and CU Boulder’s first new college in 50 years; and called for the integration of the program in Environmental Design into CMCI in 2023.
  • He established a commitment to openness and transparency in shared governance and decision-making and is the first CU academic leader to conduct regular personal outreach to all the directorates within academic affairs, including CU Boulder’s nine colleges and schools, twice per year, via the provost’s open forums.  
  • He established a bedrock commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion and built the most diverse leadership team in the history of the academic affairs division.
  • He led the academic mission through the cataclysms of the COVID-19 pandemic, the confrontations and reconciliations within the academic community following the murder of George Floyd and other Black citizens, and the Marshall Fire, which claimed Moore’s own home.

Chancellor Schwartz heralded Moore’s service.

“Russ Moore has led CU Boulder’s academic mission through a time of bold transition and redefinition,” Schwartz said. “What he has achieved is significant, and how he did it is even more so: by listening, committing to action, and anchoring the mission in our best values. On behalf of our entire campus community, we are grateful for Russ’s service and for all that he has achieved.”

There will be a national search for Moore’s successor, and the university will share more information on the search process in the coming days and weeks.

Moore was named provost by then Chancellor Philip DiStefano on Oct. 13, 2010, and had previously served as interim provost from July 1, 2010, until his permanent appointment. Prior to that, he was interim vice chancellor for research from May 2009 to June 2010.

Moore also served as associate vice chancellor for research (2006–09), as chair of kinesiology and applied physiology (now integrative physiology) from 1994 to 2001, and was an assistant professor (1984–86), associate professor (1993–96) and then full professor (1996–present) in that department.

Moore holds an adjunct professorship in medicine (cardiology) at the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical Campus at the University of Colorado Denver. He also was an assistant and associate professor (1986–93) in the department of medicine and the department of cellular and molecular physiology at the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He did postdoctoral work at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas (1981–84).

Moore is the longest continuously serving provost among AAU institutions and will serve until a successor takes office.

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