Quantcast

Currently: A Few Clouds and 83° F

NEWS

Lyall announces upcoming retirement

Looking for a print version?
Simply choose ‘Print’ on your computer and a printer-friendly document will be generated.

by Cristina Daglas
Friday, February 6, 2004

After 12 years of service at the head of administration, University of Wisconsin System President Katharine C. Lyall announced her retirement at a short-notice press conference Wednesday.

“It has been my privilege to serve as President of the UW System for the past 12 years, ” Lyall said at the beginning of what would soon become her retirement announcement.

“This is an appropriate time for new energy and fresh leadership of the UW System,” Lyall continued after referencing the “Charting the Future” study, which is currently developing a “blueprint for the UW System’s continuing contributions to Wisconsin’s future.”

Lyall, 62, the UW System’s first female president, took her post 1992 and remained for much longer than the average university-system president — an average of five five years.

She plans to continue her leadership role until the end of the academic year, Sept. 1, or until her replacement is hired.

Board of Regents President Toby Marcovich plans to be a smooth transition. Marcovich is in the process of putting together a search committee to find the next president who has this new energy Lyall speaks of; which he hopes to ultimately select by the end of June. This is not something the board does happily, for Gov. Jim Doyle and Marcovich tried to persuade Lyall to continue as president.

Although this announcement comes as a shock to some, Lyall’s retirement plans were in the works for a few of years. After leaving Wisconsin, Lyall will move to Palo Alto, Calif., in September as a visiting senior scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, which she noted is a foundation with a primary goal of improving higher-education teaching. Lyall plans to stay in California for only a year before returning to Wisconsin to settle.

Lyall assures students that the transition will be smooth and also spoke of the help that will be needed from students with the next round of budget cuts or budget issues.

“I want to reassure students that their education will continue with quality,” Lyall said.

She noted one of her strongest accomplishments in her tenure as the UW System president by producing more than 300,000 graduates.

“These have been years of great challenge and many achievements during which UW institutions have produced more than 300,000 graduates and worked together to become more engaged in Wisconsin’s economy and its communities,” Lyall said.

With this, approximately half of all UW System graduates since its establishment in 1971 have Lyall’s signature on their diploma.

These graduates were affected by the leadership of Lyall; as have UW’s current students. Administrators and officials left and right are releasing statements after hearing of the announcement, in which all highlight her accomplishments and leadership.

UW Chancellor John D. Wiley expressed his gratitude for Lyall’s many years of hard work, dedication and student focus.

“Katharine epitomizes what it means to be a great university president in her proven ability to keep the UW System moving forward, even in the face of fiscal adversity,” he said in a statement. “Despite dwindling resources, she has made the system more accountable to its stakeholders by improving student success, efficiency and public service.”

Gov. Doyle also commented from a personal perspective on the future departure of Lyall from the UW System.

“On a personal level, I have great admiration for Katharine Lyall and I will miss working with her on a day-to-day basis,” Doyle said. “I know she had originally planned to retire a year ago, and I appreciate the fact that she stayed on to work with me and my administration through my first year as governor.”

However, Lyall managed to affect individuals nationwide and apart from Wisconsin. University officials nationwide are also commenting on Lyall’s 12-year tenure.

“The most remarkable thing about Katharine Lyall is her great skill as a leader of one of the largest and most complex university systems in the nation, paired with a genuine warmth and deep integrity that mark her as a person,” Stanley O. Ikenberry, former President of University of Illinois and former President of the American Council on Education, said. “Without question, she is one of the most admired and respected higher-education leaders in the country.


Find bars and restaurants! Place a shout-out!
Top Classified Ads (view all)

Place your classified ad online and have it show up here. Your ad will hit thousands of viewers a day!

DON'T READ ME! Too late. If you're reading this, guess how many other people are reading it. See... advertising in The Badger Herald does work!

Place a classified ad

Advertising