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Experienced Academic and Administrative Leader Prabhat Hajela Named Provost of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Hajela Joined Rensselaer in 1990 and Served in a
Number of Roles, Including Acting Provost Since Jan.
1
Dr. Prabhat Hajela, an experienced academic and
administrative leader, has been appointed provost of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, effective July 1, 2012, it has been
announced by Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson. A
professor of aerospace engineering and vice provost at
Rensselaer, Hajela has served as acting provost since Jan. 1,
2012.
“Following an international search, Dr. Hajela emerged as
the leading candidate among an exceptionally strong pool of
candidates for the position,” Jackson said. “He brings to the
position a wealth of experience as a leader in teaching,
research, administration, and faculty governance gained during
his distinguished career in higher education. Since joining
Rensselaer in 1990, he has touched the lives of generations of
students and given guidance to scores of faculty members
through his work as an academic and administrative leader. This
experience will serve him well in his new position.”
“This is an exciting and transformational period for higher
education,” Hajela said. “New modes of communication have
redefined the landscape, offering enhanced connectivity and
access to education for millions of individuals on an
unprecedented global scale. Building on a storied tradition of
innovation in teaching and research, Rensselaer will lead with
transformational changes in its research and learning
environment.”
As vice provost since 2005, Hajela has been instrumental in
helping Rensselaer maintain its leadership position in
undergraduate education. Under the auspices of the
Undergraduate Plan, he led the expansion of undergraduate
research programs, developed several new study abroad and
international experience opportunities, and created the
framework for living and learning communities. He collaborated
closely with the Office of Student Life in the implementation
of the Clustered Learning, Advocacy, and Support for Students
(CLASS) program.
President Jackson said a top priority for the academic
leadership of Rensselaer will be to “continue to work toward
our shared objective of implementing The Rensselaer Plan and
further developing the academic resources of Rensselaer.”
“We have set ambitious goals as we seek to attract and
retain the very best faculty across the range of existing and
emerging fields represented at Rensselaer, and to further
enhance our research and learning environment as we continue to
evolve as a technological research university of global reach
and global impact,” she said.
Hajela's administrative mandate has included oversight of
all undergraduate programs at the Institute, including engaging
the five academic schools in program development and
implementation. He has supported activities related to the
operation of the academic enterprise, including summer and
outreach programs, international programs, academic support of
all students, learning outcomes assessment, promoting
pedagogical advances, and helping identify infrastructure
development priorities as related to instructional needs at the
Institute. He has provided management to the Advising and
Learning Assistance Center, Office of International Programs,
Office of Research and Innovation in Teaching and Learning,
Summer and Academic Outreach programs, and the ROTC
programs.
An expert in complex system analysis and design in the
presence of uncertainty, Hajela has published over 270 papers
and articles in the areas of structural and multidisciplinary
optimization, and is an author/editor of four books in these
areas. He has held editorial assignments and serves on the
editorial boards of several international journals. He has
conducted research at NASA's Langley and Glenn Research
Centers, and at the Eglin Air Force Armament Laboratory. He
also worked at the Boeing Company as the Boeing-A.D. Welliver
Fellow in 1995.
Hajela has been active in several national and international
organizations. He is a past vice president of the International
Society of Structural and Multidisciplinary Optimization, and a
past chair of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers’
(ASME) Aerospace Division, an organization that serves over
15,000 ASME members with interest in aerospace engineering. In
2003, he served as a Congressional Fellow responsible for
Science and Technology Policy in the Office of U.S. Senator
Conrad Burns (R-MT). He worked on several legislative issues
related to aerospace and telecommunications policy, including
the anti-SPAM legislation (CAN-SPAM) that was signed into law
in December 2003. He has served on different National Academies
panels related to aerospace and aviation research, including
the first Decadal Survey of Aeronautics.
In 2004, Hajela was the recipient of AIAA's Biennial
Multidisciplinary Design Optimization Award. He is a Lifetime
Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics (AIAA), a Fellow of the Aeronautical Society of
India (AeSI), and a Fellow of ASME.
Hajela received his undergraduate degree (with distinction)
in 1977 from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. He
received master's degrees in aerospace engineering from Iowa
State University (1979) and in mechanical engineering from
Stanford University (1981). He was awarded his Ph.D. in
aeronautics and astronautics from Stanford University in 1982
and did postdoctoral training at the University of California,
Los Angeles, before joining the University of Florida as a
faculty member in 1983, where he was promoted to the rank of
associate professor in 1987.
He was recruited to Rensselaer in the Department of
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering in
1990 and was promoted to full professor in 1992. He served
as president and chair of the prior Faculty Senate from 1999 to
2002, and was appointed vice provost in 2005. He also served as
administrative dean of the School of Humanities, Arts, and
Social Sciences during the 2010-11 academic year.
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Published
May 29,
2012 |
Contact: Mark Marchand
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: marchm3@rpi.edu |
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