Gilda Barabino of Olin College Image by John Tlumacki/Boston Globe
Gilda Barabino is the first woman and first Black president of Olin College of Engineering in Needham.

07/06/2022
Boston Globe
By Kate Selig

An extraordinary number of local colleges and universities have presidential vacancies this year, presenting what some experts say could be a golden opportunity to diversify the highest levels of higher education, where women and people of color have historically been underrepresented, and reshape the leadership of an industry that鈥檚 been buffeted by the pandemic.

In Massachusetts alone, 11 institutions have or will have open presidencies in the coming year, ranging from big-name institutions like Harvard to liberal arts colleges like Smith and public schools like the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Only about one-third of college presidencies in the state are held by women, and 25 percent are people of color, according to a new study by the Women鈥檚 Power Gap Campaign at the Eos Foundation.

鈥淭his is a time of rapid change, but it鈥檚 one of opportunity as well,鈥 said Julie Chen, who recently began her chancellorship at 51视频, where she is the second woman, first Asian American, and first LGBTQ+ person to hold the role. 鈥淢y hope is that we continue to chip away at this until we get to the point where the diversity of our leaders reflects the diversity of the community.鈥

The Eos Foundation found the share of people of color leading colleges and universities increased moderately since its last survey in 2018 鈥 from 16 percent to 25 percent, and the share of women leaders has hardly budged at all.

Andrea Silbert, the foundation鈥檚 president, said institutions need to seize the moment to bring women and people of color to important roles 鈥 boards of trustees, senior administrative positions, and presidencies.

鈥淲e need bold change,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need to demand parity.鈥

The leadership turnover is both caused and compounded by the forces confronting higher education. Presidents are being called upon to lead their institutions not only through the pandemic but also to steer them through a time of social and racial reckoning. Amid inflation and the potential for a recession, students are reassessing the value of a college degree and coping with the fallout of pandemic learning, exacerbating a downward trend in enrollment at many institutions. Community colleges have been particularly hard-hit.

Simmons president Lynn Perry Wooten, who has extensively researched crisis leadership, said moments like these present an opportunity to inject diversity and innovation. Wooten is the school鈥檚 first Black president, and she said that as she was completing her PhD in the 鈥90s, institutions were making a push to invest in diversity. Those students have now grown up to have the age and experience to lead, she said.

鈥淚 see this as a turning point,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a time for us to redefine university presidencies.鈥

The number of high-profile institutions with openings is especially unusual 鈥 and these are the institutions where the lack of diversity in leadership is most stark. Among other institutions, the leaders of Harvard, Dartmouth, and MIT have announced that presidents will step down.

According to the Eos Foundation鈥檚 findings, there are no women presidents among any of the eight Massachusetts R1 universities, a designation indicating the doctoral university has 鈥渧ery high鈥 research activity. Five of those schools have never had a woman leader: Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern, UMass Amherst, and Tufts. Of the five, UMass Amherst and Tufts are looking for new leaders.

鈥淚t鈥檚 shocking,鈥 Tufts student body president Jaden Pena said of the lack of diversity. Tufts president Anthony Monaco will step down next summer, and Pena said he hopes diversity and inclusion will be at the forefront of the search committee鈥檚 mind.

Mary Churchill, a higher education expert and associate dean for strategic initiatives and community engagement at BU, said the disparities at elite institutions are not surprising: The more competitive the opportunity, the more likely it is to result in the selection of a white man.

Churchill said less-selective and less-well-resourced institutions are more challenging to lead and manage, resulting in less interest from white and male applicants. The demographics of predominantly white and male search committees and boards at elite institutions can also affect who is selected. And institutions that have hired a diverse candidate once can fall victim to a 鈥渙ne and done鈥 phenomenon, where the next leader chosen is a white man.

Institutions can also struggle to think outside of the box when looking for candidates, she said, and a lack of mentorship and encouragement of diverse faculty and administrators can contribute to them not seeking the job.

But Churchill said institutions can鈥檛 claim they鈥檙e facing a 鈥減ipeline problem鈥 when looking for diverse leaders, where institutions say there are not enough diverse candidates to allow for parity at the presidential level.

鈥淭he majority of undergraduates are women, the majority of master鈥檚 students are women, the majority of PhDs are women. We have women professors, chairs, deans, vice presidents, and provosts, yet there鈥檚 this challenge of getting them into the presidency,鈥 she said. There is also a trend of people of color taking on vice provost roles for diversity, equity, and inclusion that can lead to a presidency, she said.

Keight Tucker Kennedy, a partner at the executive search firm Isaacson, Miller, agreed. Kennedy, who has helped higher education institutions identify their future presidents, said it鈥檚 become easier to find diverse candidates in recent years. Of the firm鈥檚 presidential placements over the last decade, about 41 percent of the hires were women and 36 percent were people of color.

Kennedy said institutions that prioritize diversity, equity, and inclusion are more likely to attract and then hire diverse candidates.

Rhode Island College, a public college in Providence, is one such institution, said Shannon Gilkey, Rhode Island鈥檚 commissioner on postsecondary education. The college, which is searching for a new president, is federally designated as a Hispanic-serving institution and has a large number of commuter students.

鈥淚t will be critical for the president to have that perspective and understand how to serve that population,鈥 Gilkey said.

Experts added that institutions can also diversify their search by including candidates who do not follow the traditional pathway to the presidency. Candidates from underrepresented groups who did not intend from an early stage in their career to seek the presidency may not have followed the traditional track, experts said. Experiences outside academia can also bring valuable perspective.

Gilda Barabino, president of Olin College of Engineering and a Black female engineer, credited the college for recognizing her national leadership in professional societies, and for taking an atypical path through leadership positions in academia. Barabino served as a vice provost twice and then as a dean before becoming president.

鈥淭his is an opportunity to step back and see who鈥檚 been missing, where are the gaps, who鈥檚 not been at the table,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need to think about why. What do we need to do to reach those whom we鈥檝e not been reaching? Where have we not been looking?鈥

Those selections will have ripple effects. Chen, of 51视频, said the presidency was not on her radar until she was encouraged by others, including outgoing Chancellor Jacquie Moloney, to apply. Moloney, Chen said, didn鈥檛 take 鈥渘o鈥 for an answer.

鈥淚 know how much an impact it made on me when Jacquie Moloney became the first woman chancellor for 51视频, and so then I thought, OK, in that role, I can also be a model for not only women but students of color and LGBTQ students,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey can see and say, 鈥極K, that鈥檚 what a university president can look like.鈥欌