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Senior NASA Scientist Joins Rensselaer as New Dean of the School of Science
Laurie Leshin, deputy associate administrator of exploration
systems for NASA, will join Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute as
dean of the School of Science. Leshin will bring experience as
a leader, educator, researcher, and administrator to leadership
of the school.
“As a member of the NASA leadership team, Dr. Leshin has
played an integral role in the success of the largest and most
important scientific endeavors in space exploration,” said
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson. “From her work with
the upcoming Mars Science Laboratory rover to her efforts in
crafting a new future for space exploration following the
retirement of the shuttle program, she has been a scientific
leader for this country. I look forward to her joining and
leading our growing community of scientists as we continue to
build on our success in science and research under the
priorities of The Rensselaer Plan.”
She joins Rensselaer on October 1. She will take over the
leadership position from Professor of Computer Science David
Spooner, who has served as acting dean of science since
2008.
“I am excited to join Rensselaer at a time of great
opportunity for the School of Science,” Leshin said. “I
hope that our work together within the school, making
transformative discoveries, shaping new interdisciplinary
fields, and training the next generation of scientists, will
propel Rensselaer to even greater heights.”
Leshin joined NASA in 2005 as director of science and
exploration at the Goddard Space Flight Center. As head of the
largest science organization within NASA, she was responsible
for the strategic management and organization of 550 scholars
and support staff in fields ranging from high-energy
astrophysics to climate change.
Leshin became the deputy associate administrator for
exploration systems at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.,
in 2010. The Exploration System Mission Directorate is
responsible for future NASA human spaceflight activities. This
includes the development of commercial capabilities for low
Earth orbit transport and new technologies to ferry humans to
destinations deeper in the universe, such as asteroids and
Mars. Her work involved daily oversight and planning for
the implementation of the largest proposed shift in human
spaceflight activities since the end of the Apollo program.
Prior to joining NASA, Leshin was a scientist and professor
at Arizona State University, beginning in 1998. Her research
focused on cosmo-chemistry, including the origin of the solar
system, water on Mars, and astrobiology. She was honored in
2001 for her research by being named the Dee and John Whiteman
Dean’s Distinguished Professor of Geological Sciences. She
would go on to help lead the development of the
first-of-its-kind interdisciplinary School of Earth and Space
Exploration at the university.
Leshin received the NASA Distinguished Public Service
Medal in 2004. She served on the Board of Directors of Women in
Aerospace and is currently a member of the Council of the
American Geophysical Union. The International Astronomical
Union has recognized her contributions to planetary science by
naming asteroid 4922, Leshin.
She earned her bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Arizona
State University and her master’s degree and doctorate in
geochemistry from the California Institute of Technology.
Leshin began her academic career as a postdoctoral research
fellow and later the W.W. Rubey Faculty Fellow at the
University of California, Los Angeles. During that time, she
received the Nier Prize from the Meteoritical Society, which is
awarded for outstanding research by a young scientist.
The Rensselaer School of Science leads in the creation and
dissemination of scientific knowledge that will be the core of
tomorrow’s technology. The school prepares students for a wide
variety of careers in the firmly established areas of
mathematics and natural sciences while forging ahead to develop
excellent new programs in emerging fields such as web science,
bioinformatics, and molecular biology. Strong,
interdisciplinary centers for research in astrobiology,
nanotechnology, biotechnology, terahertz research, fresh water
ecology, web science, and polymer science are leading the way
in the development of science that will change our society and
the world.
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Published
July 26,
2011 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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