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 Joan F. Lorden, Ph.D.
Dr. Lorden joined the University of North
Carolina at Charlotte as Provost and Vice Chancellor for
Academic Affairs in 2003, where she provides leadership
for seven colleges, research institutes, and a
university-wide graduate school. She has overseen
significant growth in enrollment, instructional programs
at all levels, and funded research at UNC Charlotte,
North Carolina’s urban research university of over
24,000 students and 900 faculty. During her career, Dr.
Lorden has directed several programs designed to improve
the recruitment of women and minorities into doctoral
programs in science and engineering. She currently
serves as the principal investigator for an NSF ADVANCE
Institutional Transformation grant, designed to increase
the recruitment and retention of women faculty in
science and engineering. She is a member of the Howard
University Specialized Neuroscience Research Program
Advisory Committee and serves on the Board of Directors
for the Charlotte Research Institute and the Institute
for Social Capital. She is active in community
organizations, serving on the boards of several local
organizations, including the Blumenthal Center for the
Performing Arts and the Echo Foundation. She has served
as a member of the Charlotte Advisory Board for the
Knight Foundation.
Before moving to
Charlotte, Dr. Lorden served as Associate Provost for
Research and Dean of the Graduate School at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) where she was
a Professor of Psychology and directed the
university-wide graduate program in neuroscience. With
funding from NIH, NSF, and other agencies, she conducted
research in animal models of inherited movement
disorders and was awarded the Ireland Prize for
Scholarly Distinction by UAB. She has been a member of
review panels and study sections at NIH, NSF, DoD, and
private agencies. While at UAB, she established one of
the first offices for postdoctoral scholars. She has
chaired the Boards of Directors of the Council of
Graduate Schools (CGS) and Oak Ridge Associated
Universities and served as the Dean in Residence at the
Division of Graduate Education at NSF and as president
of the Conference of Southern Graduate Schools. She
continues her engagement in graduate education through
her service on the NRC Committee to Assess Research
Doctorate Programs.
Lorden received a B.A.
from the City College of New York and a Ph.D. in
psychology from Yale University. |