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Stephens College Announces Election of New President, Dianne Lynch, Ph.D.

Resources:
Presidential Search Web site
Dianne Lynch, Ph.D. (bio and high resolution image)
Stephens College Press Release
Ithaca College Press Release
Media Coverage

Stephens College President Wendy B. Libby accepts election as first female president of Stetson University in Florida

About Stephens
Facts and Figures
Historic Timeline
Notable Alumnae



Dianne Lynch, Ph.D.

(high resolution image)

Dianne Lynch, Ph.D. has served as dean of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, N.Y., since 2004. The Park School of Communications has approximately 1,400 students and 60 full-time faculty.

Lynch is a member of the national accrediting council for schools of journalism and mass communication (ACEJMC); a member of the national Journalism Advisory Council of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation; and a former Fulbright Senior Specialist in new media technologies and learning.

Prior to becoming dean at Ithaca College in 2004, Lynch was a faculty member and chair of the Department of Journalism at Saint Michael’s College in Burlington, Vermont, a private liberal arts college of approximately 1,800 students. In that capacity, she won local, regional and national awards for teaching, including recognition in 1999 as the national Journalism Teacher of the Year.

Lynch was the founding executive director of the national Online News Association. In that capacity, she was the editorial director of the first national study of the credibility of online news. She wrote a biweekly column about women and technology, “Wired Women,” for ABCNews.com from 2000 to 2003, and a weekly column on new media ethics for the Christian Science Monitor from 1998 to 2002.

She earned her master’s degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, studying feminist history in journalism, and her Ph.D. in Art History and Communications from McGill University in Montreal, where she studied feminist theory and social identity development. Lynch’s research focuses on the learning styles and knowledge production of “digital natives,” children who grow up in virtual environments.

Lynch is a member of the Board of Trustees of WSKG, a public broadcasting station serving 21 counties in New York and Pennsylvania.

She is married to Philip Coleman, who was for many years a high school chemistry and physics teacher and is now the coordinator of the Chemistry laboratories at Ithaca College. They have four children: Andrew, 28; Amelia, 25; Nicholas, 23; and Annie, 11; two dogs, Madison and Addy; and two cats, Willie and Bella.

 



Historic Timeline: Stephens College Changing the World


1833
Columbia Female Baptist Academy is established. Lucy Wales is appointed as the school’s preceptress. At that time, Columbia, Mo., is a frontier town with nine stores, two taverns, four grogshops and one Presbyterian meeting house. Andrew Jackson is the seventh president of the United States, which has a population of 10 million.

1837
The Academy receives its charter and construction begins on its first building.

1855
The first train crosses the Mississippi River at Rock Island, Ill., and comes through Columbia dropping off Stephens College students.

1856
Columbia Female Baptist College is established. Eight acres of land and a brick residence are purchased to form what is today the nucleus of the 200-acre campus.

1857
The College’s charter is secured.

1870
Columbia Female Baptist College is transferred to the Missouri Baptist General Association, and its name is changed to Stephens College in honor of James L. Stephens, a dry goods store owner from Columbia, Mo., who endowed it with $20,000.

1900
Stephens creates three academic departments: music, art and commercial (shorthand and typing).

1905
Stephens College becomes a junior college as associate in arts degrees are awarded for the first time.

1910
The College’s Board of Curators abandons the practice of leasing the College to the president and assumes management directly.

1912
James Madison Wood is appointed president of Stephens College and remains at the helm for 35 years. The College adds four academic departments: science, dramatic science, expression and Christian service for women.

1920
Director of Research Werrett Charters, Ph.D., begins conducting studies on women’s education to scientifically adapt the College’s curriculum to meet the specific needs of the students. His findings later lead to a revision in the curriculum based on seven areas, including humanities, social problems, philosophy of living, communications, physical health and mental health.

1933
Stephens College holds its centennial celebration. Approximately 5,000 women have graduated from the College.

1937
“First Lady of the American Theatre” Maude Adams is appointed professor of drama at Stephens College.

1944
Under the sponsorship of 12 of the nation’s leading airlines, Stephens College institutes the first course of study ever offered for the training of women in commercial aviation.

1950
Construction begins on the Firestone Baars Chapel, designed by architect Eero Saarinen. Having just designed the U.S. Embassy in London, Saarinen soon will begin work on the Gateway Arch in St. Louis.

1955
Stephens offers first-year students a lecture course titled “Ideas and Living Today,” which is taught by master teachers via closed-circuit television.

1960
The College creates the Searcy House Plan, a unique living/learning community designed for freshmen, which later becomes a nationally recognized educational model.

1968
Making the transition to a four-year college, Stephens receives full accreditation for awarding bachelor degrees.

1970
A new plan is proposed for undergraduate work that leads to the establishment of the University Without Walls.

1977
Historic Senior Hall, the original building in which the College was housed and its only residence hall until 1918, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

1983
Patsy H. Sampson is elected as the first woman president of Stephens College.

Stephens College celebrates its 150th year.

1994
Dr. Marcia S. Kierscht is inaugurated as the 22nd president of Stephens College.

1995
Stephens College embarks on the Stephens for the New Millennium Plan. The Plan emphasizes five goals: developing competitive and marketable academic programs that address the changing roles of women; right-sizing campus properties and facilities; improving technology; building a diverse community on campus; and enhancing fund raising.

Drawing on its experiences with the successful Searcy House Plan, the College creates the Prunty Science House Plan, a living/learning community for students interested in the study of mathematics, science and technology.

1996
Stephens hosts the only 1996 U.S. showing of “Toward a Peaceful World Free Of Nuclear Weapons,” an educational exhibit from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Peace Museums.

1997
Stephens introduces its first graduate programs, offering degrees for men and women through the School of Graduate and Continuing Education. The online Master of Business Administration Program incorporates three emphasis areas: management, entrepreneurial studies and clinical information systems management. The Master of Education in Counseling Program responds to national trends and needs at the elementary and secondary levels. Stephens College is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and a member of the North Central Association.

Stephens College launches its first comprehensive capital campaign, The Campaign for Stephens: It’s Her Turn, to raise $35 million. Campaign priorities include improving and renovating campus facilities, funding new academic equipment and technology, and increasing endowment. The capstone project is the restoration of Lela Raney Wood Hall, built in 1938. The campaign launched June 1, 1997, and concludes May 31, 2004.

1998
Stephens breaks ground on the creation of a new basketball/volleyball facility, the John and Mary Silverthorne Arena. The construction coincides with the announcement that Stephens is adding basketball — to existing programs in soccer, volleyball and tennis — as its fifth NCAA Division III sport.

2001
The Carnegie Foundation reclassifies Stephens from Baccalaureate College-General to Baccalaureate College-Liberal Arts, noting that the College offers at least 50 percent of its degrees in the liberal arts.

Stephens College receives its largest gift in College history, $5 million, from 1929 alumna Evalyn King Joachim.

2002
Reflecting the Carnegie Foundation’s 2001 reclassification, U.S. News and World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges” shows that Stephens joined the ranks of the best national liberal arts colleges in the nation.

Stephens alumna Gretchen Bush Kimball and husband William donate $2.5 million to Stephens, the largest donation in College history. Called the Kimball Challenge, the gift will match dollar-for-dollar donations and gifts up to $2.5 million to renovate Lela Raney Wood Hall. With its expected completion in Spring 2004, LRW will serve as a central location for student and administrative offices and also house the College’s renowned Historical Costume Collection.

2003
Wendy B. Libby, Ph.D., becomes the 23rd president of Stephens College on July 1.

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Notable Alumnae

From Broadway to the White House, graduates are carrying the Stephens College name across the world, pursing exciting careers and consistently earning coveted awards. The following are just a few of the remarkable women who form the Stephens College alumnae network.

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Media Coverage

New Presidents or Provosts (Inside Higher Ed, May 14, 2009)

Lynch likes personal touch
(Columbia Daily Tribune, April 24, 2009)

New Stephens College president happy to come to mid-Mo. (KRCG-TV13, April 23, 2009)

The Tribune's View: Dianne Lynch, New Stephens president (Columbia Daily Tribune, April 23, 2009)

New Stephens College President says she has dream job (KBIA 91.3 FM, April 23, 2009)

Stephens College appoints new president (KRCG-TV13, April 22, 2009)

Stephens College appoints new president
(KRCG-TV13, April 22, 2009)

New Stephens College President (KOMU-TV8, April 21, 2009)

Stephens College chooses new president (KRCG-TV13, April 21, 2009)

Stephens College names new president
(KMIZ ABC 17, April 21, 2009)

Stephens College names new president (KBIA 91.3 FM, April 21, 2009)

Stephens College announces new president (St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 21, 2009)

Stephens selects new president to replace Libby (Columbia Daily Tribune, April 21, 2009)

Stephens College names Ithaca dean Dianne Lynch its next president
(Columbia Missourian, April 21, 2009)

Dean Lynch to leave Park School for Stephens College presidency (THE ITHACAN, April 21, 2009)

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Updated on December 6, 2010

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