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Rensselaer Announces Appointment of Dean of Science
Rensselaer has appointed Wei Zhao as dean of the School of
Science. Zhao, who is currently senior associate vice president
for research at Texas A&M University, will take over the
position from acting dean Samuel Wait Jr. ’53 in January
2007.
Also a professor of computer science, Zhao worked on the
long-term strategic plan in accordance with the Texas A&M
Vision 2020 campaign, supervised the Office of
Sponsored Research and the Office of Compliance, directed the
Institute of Telecommunication and Information Technology, and
led the campuswide homeland security initiative that was
sponsored by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for more
than $17 million.
In 2005, Zhao became director of the Division of Computer
and Network Systems at the National Science Foundation. Last
year, his division processed more than 2,500 proposals and
awarded research grants of more than $190 million, comprising
80 percent of total federal research funding in the area of
computer and network systems.
“Dr. Zhao is an outstanding leader with an expansive vision
for the School of Science,” said Acting Provost Robert Palazzo.
“He brings his considerable skills and experience to Rensselaer
at a time when many new faculty have joined the Institute,
research awards are growing, student quality is improving, and
we are moving boldly into new fields that will be critically
important in the 21st century.”
Zhao served as a senior lecturer at the University of
Adelaide in Australia from 1988-1990, at which time he joined
Texas A&M as an associate professor. He was tenured the
following year, appointed to full professor, and then appointed
head of the Department of Computer Science, one of the largest
computer science departments in the nation. In his four years
as department head, Zhao helped create three new laboratories,
grow research funding from $1 million to more than $4 million
annually, and recruit a number of talented junior faculty
members. In addition, the department saw a substantial
improvement in the U.S. News & World Report
rankings during his tenure.
During an active career in computer science research, Zhao
has published more than 250 papers in journals, conferences,
and book chapters. His area of interest spans real-time
computing systems, real-time communications systems and
networks, security in networks, and techniques to camouflage
networks.
Zhao received his bachelor’s degree in physics from the
Shaanxi Normal University in 1977; and a master’s degree in
computer science in 1982 and a doctorate in computer science in
1986, both from the University of Massachusetts.
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Published
October 30,
2006
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