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  • Finalist for URI's top post builds consensus for excellence

    Money quote:
    "She also hails from a traditional Armenian family and speaks Armenian."

    http://www.projo.com/news/content /URI_ANDREWS_PROFILE_04-06-09_SGDU9KT_v14.34f1100. html


    Finalist for URI's top post builds consensus for excellence

    01:00 AM EDT on Monday, April 6, 2009

    By Linda Borg

    Journal Staff Writer

    PROVIDENCE - Sona Karentz Andrews is that rare academic leader,
    someone comfortable with the considerable administrative and financial
    responsibilities of a major university who hasn't lost touch with the
    professors who make the work possible.

    "She brings people together," said Ralph W. Kuncl, an old friend who
    is provost of the University of Rochester. "Her faculty knows she
    cares deeply about their scholarship. She's also made it possible for
    her current institution to make significant changes."

    Andrews, 55, the provost and vice president for academic affairs at
    Boise State University, is one of three finalists for the presidency
    of the University of Rhode Island, a position held for 18 years by
    Robert Carothers, who is retiring.


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    Bios of the presidential hopefuls A provost wears many hats. Andrews,
    a geoscientist by profession, oversees the entire academic operation
    at Boise State, including all faculty hiring, academic programs and
    new degree programs.

    But Andrews, who was born in Providence, has accomplished so much
    more. During her four years at Boise State, she helped the university
    double its research grant funding, recruit and retain talented staff
    and add a dozen new graduate-level programs, at least half of them in
    the sciences. Boise State has also bought its first-ever research
    park, which the university hopes will serve as an incubator for
    related technologies.

    In many ways, Andrews said, URI's aspirations are no different than
    those of Boise State, Idaho's largest educational institution, with
    more than 19,500 students enrolled in eight colleges. In her letter to
    URI's presidential search committee, Andrews wrote that both
    institutions want to enhance student retention, improve graduation
    rates, create a more diverse environment and expand research activity.

    "Sona raised the stature of the college as a research institution,"
    said Boise President Robert Kustra, adding that the university began
    as an undergraduate teaching college. "She made a significant
    difference in the hiring of quality faculty, chairs and deans. She put
    a big emphasis on scholarship and research."

    But colleagues say that Andrews has never lost sight of the importance
    of building relationships with individual faculty members. Kustra said
    she still reads every scholarly article published by faculty members,
    including papers published outside her own discipline.

    "She is very likable," Kuncl said. "Put her in a room with 30 people
    and she will know everyone very soon. People who meet her know that
    they are meeting someone special."

    Like many large public universities, Boise State struggled with the
    question of how to keep students from dropping out after their
    freshman year. It was Andrews who figured out that introductory math
    was the stumbling block, Kustra said. Andrews sat down with the math
    department and together they reorganized the way the university taught
    entry-level math.

    As Boise began to improve its graduate science programs, top-notch
    research institutions began raiding its faculty. Kustra credits
    Andrews with stopping those losses by increasing faculty salaries. In
    one instance, she raised the salary levels of the entire geosciences
    department, no small feat in an era of diminishing resources.

    Andrews is also the point person with both the Idaho legislature and
    the state's congressional delegation, serving on state task forces and
    giving testimony before legislative committees.

    "All of those activities mean that Sona must be an unusual partner
    with the [Boise] president," Kuncl said. "It takes an unusual amount
    of trust to put those activities in the hands of a provost."

    Andrews is as competitive in her personal life as she is in her
    professional one. According to Kuster, Andrews just broke her
    collarbone skiing and loves to mountain bike in Idaho's rugged
    terrain. She also hails from a traditional Armenian family and speaks
    Armenian.

    Her husband, Joseph, is an endocrinologist at the University of
    Wisconsin; her son, Christopher, is in graduate school at George Mason
    University and her stepdaughter is enrolled in medical school.

    Andrews spent the bulk of her career at the University of Wisconsin in
    Milwaukee, where she began as an associate professor of geography in
    1988 and rose to vice provost of academic affairs in 2003. She
    graduated from Worcester State College in Massachusetts in 1975 and
    earned her doctorate from Arizona State University in 1981.

    [email protected]
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