|
DR.
TRUDIE KIBBE REED CHOSEN B-CC’S NEXT PRESIDENT
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The new
president of Bethune-Cookman College, the fifth in the school’s
100-year history, will be Dr. Trudie Kibbe Reed, the sitting
president and CEO of Philander Smith College in Little Rock,
Arkansas. Dr. Reed was on the B-CC campus when the Board of Trustees
unanimously voted on Tuesday evening to offer her the position. She
is expected to begin her new duties July 1, according to Dr. J. Stanley Marshall, chairman of the B-CC Board of Trustees.
“Dr. Reed possesses the skills, qualities and
characteristics to achieve success as the next president of Bethune-Cookman,”
Dr. Marshall stated. “She is an experienced president, a champion
of the liberal arts, a tenured professor, and she has the enthusiasm
and determination to take this school to new levels of
prominence.”
As president of Philander Smith, a historically
black, United Methodist Church-related college, from 1998 to the
present, Dr. Reed increased the academic rating of the school,
unfroze faculty tenure and launched faculty development programs.
She has developed the nation’s first academic minor in Black
Family Studies and broke fund-raising records by spearheading a
capital campaign that raised more than 30.5 million dollars in two
years.
She doubled the College’s retention rate in
one year, implemented a culture of service and leadership on campus
and fostered a campus-wide appreciation for character development
through the liberal arts.
“Dr. Reed knows B-CC’s well,” Dr.
Marshall says. “Two years ago she chaired the University Senate of
the United Methodist Church Accreditation Committee that
exhaustively reviewed the college’s academic and fiscal operations
to make recommendations to the United Methodist Church’s Board of
Higher Education and Ministry for B-CC’s reaccredidation. The
Methodists have continuously accredited B-CC since its affiliation
which began in 1923.
“We are greatly pleased to have someone with
Dr. Reed’s experience agree to serve as our president,’’ Dr.
Marshall says. “She has a passion for the mission of Bethune-Cookman
College and a strength of character that will enrich this campus and
reaffirm our historic commitment to academic excellence and
community service.”
Dr. Reed will be the College’s second female
president, joining founder Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune.
“As I become the fifth president of this
great institution, I will always remember the vision and the
philosophy of Dr. Bethune,’’ Reed said. “There are unlimited
resources for taking this institution to the next level and I am
committed with energy and vitality and faith in God to take this
leadership responsibility very seriously and continue the rich
legacy of this institution.’’
The search for B-CC’s new president was
resumed in February of this year when Trustee and Central Florida
businessman Irving Matthews was appointed to chair a search
committee that extensively involved the Bethune-Cookman campus
community. A professional search firm was retained to facilitate the
committee’s effort.
The 18-member search committee represented
various college populations, including faculty, staff,
administration student government and board members. The committee
included Robert Billingslea, Burney Bivens, Matthew Brown, Myrtle
Brown, J.F. Bryan, IV (Vice
Chair), Dr. M.
McCoy Gibbs, Dr. Larry Handfield, Dr. Wendell P. Holmes, Jr.,
Michael P. Johnson, Sonja Lewis, Dr. Aubrey Long, Mary Alice Massey,
E. Dean Montgomery, Cathy Washington, Rachel White and Dr. Eugene
Zimmerman. Dr. J. Stanley Marshall served in an ex-officio capacity
on the search committee.
“The committee worked well together. There
was a good sense of collegiality and a strong desire to work toward
consensus building by respecting the viewpoints of everyone
involved,” Mr. Matthews said. “I am confident to say that we did
our best and we are very, very pleased with the outcome.”
-30-
Bethune-Cookman
is a comprehensive college, which offers degrees in liberal arts as
well as professional fields, such as business, education and
nursing. A United Methodist Church-affiliated school, the College
has a diverse and international student population of more than
2,700 and a solid reputation for academic excellence and community
service. As evidence of its outstanding program, the College has
been listed in the Templeton Honor Roll of Character Building
Colleges and Universities, and it was ranked by Black Enterprise
magazine as one of the “Top 50” schools in the nation for
black students. B-CC is one of 10 charter member colleges of
Project Pericles, a program to create civic leadership and
involvement on its member campuses. The College will celebrate
its 100th year of founding on October 4, 2004.
For
more information, contact our website www.bethune.cookman.edu.
back
|