Diana
Chapman Walsh is the twelfth President of Wellesley College, a position
she assumed on October 1, 1993. She is the fourth alumna
to head Wellesley, the nation’s leading college for women. Under
her leadership, the college has undertaken a number of new initiatives,
including a
revision of the curriculum and expanded programs in global
education, experiential and service learning and technology-assisted
teaching and learning, and new programs in environmental sciences,
neurosciences and computer sciences.
Other important innovations during this period include the opening
of the Davis Museum and Cultural Center, the establishment of the Religious
and Spiritual Life Program, the construction of the Knapp Media and
Technology Center, the Knapp Social Science Center and the Newhouse
Center for the Humanities, the creation of the annual Ruhlman and Tanner
Conferences on student research
and
learning, restoration of the campus landscape, construction of a new
campus center, and other initiatives designed to strengthen the quality
of campus
intellectual life.
During Walsh’s tenure, Wellesley's endowment has grown from
$485 million to more than $1.4 billion. Management of the endowment
has been strengthened, as have many of the college’s
administrative structures. In 2000-2001, Wellesley marked its 125th
anniversary, and
launched
a five-year comprehensive fundraising campaign to support the institution's
major priorities, including increased endowment for financial aid,
strengthening of Wellesley’s academic programs, restoration of
the campus landscape and construction of several new facilities.
When The Wellesley Campaign ended in June 2005, the College had set
a record
for fundraising
by a liberal arts college, with gifts and pledges totaling $472.3 million.
Before assuming the Wellesley presidency, President Walsh was Florence
Sprague Norman and Laura Smart Norman Professor at the Harvard School
of Public Health, where she chaired the Department of Health and Social
Behavior. Prior to joining the Harvard faculty, she was at Boston University,
as a University Professor, and Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences
in the School of Public Health.
President Walsh is a 1966 graduate of Wellesley College, where she
majored in English. At Boston University, she earned an M.S. degree
in journalism (1971) and a Ph.D. in health policy from the University
Professors Program (1983). In 1994, she was awarded an honorary Doctor
of Humane Letters from Boston University. She received the honorary
degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa, from Deree College,
the post-secondary division of The American College of Greece, in June
1995, from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst in May 1999, and
from Northeastern University in 2003. She is a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
As a Kellogg National Fellow from 1987 to 1990, President Walsh traveled
throughout the United States and abroad studying workplace democracy
and principles of leadership, and writing poetry. She has written,
edited and co-edited numerous articles and fourteen books, including
a study of the practice of medicine within corporations, titled Corporate
Physicians: Between Medicine and Management, Yale University Press,
1987. President Walsh is a co-editor of Society and Health, Oxford
University Press, 1995, an analysis of social and cultural determinants
of health and illness. President Walsh currently serves on the boards
of Amherst College and the State Street Corporation .
Diana Chapman Walsh was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
and graduated from the Springside School in Chestnut Hill. Her husband,
Christopher T. Walsh, is the Hamilton Kuhn Professor in the Department
of Molecular Pharmacology and Biological Chemistry at the Harvard Medical
School. Their daughter, Allison Walsh Kurian, is a graduate of Stanford
University and Harvard Medical School and a practicing physician in
California.
012/06
Back
to DCW's Page
Back
to the Office for Public Affairs Homepage