St. John's New President

  • 17 replies
  • 7336 views

St. John's New President
« Reply #1 on: April 10, 2014, 12:21:12 PM »
Not sure if this has been released to public yet....


It is our great pleasure to announce that the Board of Trustees has elected Conrado M. Gempesaw, Ph.D., Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, as the 17th President of St. John’s University effective July 1, 2014. Dr. Gempesaw will succeed Rev. Joseph L. Levesque, C.M., who will be stepping down as planned at the conclusion of this academic year.

Dr. Gempesaw is an accomplished scholar, teacher, and administrator who comes to St. John’s with almost three decades of academic experience. At Miami University, he led the institution’s comprehensive strategic planning efforts and introduced new enrollment management strategies based on capacity planning that increased the school’s applicant pool and improved student diversity. Miami University comprises six colleges and more than 22,000 students and 1,000 faculty members. U.S. News & World Report recently ranked Miami third nationally for its exceptionally strong commitment to undergraduate teaching, 31st among national public universities, and 75th overall.

In Dr. Gempesaw, we have found a visionary leader who understands and embraces St. John’s mission as a Catholic and Vincentian university, and has the skills necessary to realize our goals for the future. We are confident he will help St. John’s continue its remarkable transformation from a commuter school into a global educational institution with enhanced and expanded facilities and new academic initiatives, while maintaining its mission of providing a world-class affordable education.

We would like to extend our deep appreciation to all of you who provided input and feedback throughout this process, and in particular, to the members of the Presidential Search Committee for their hard work in conducting this extensive national search. The 13-member committee represented multiple constituencies, including faculty, students, administrators, alumni, and trustees. As a result of their efforts, we had a final pool of truly exceptional candidates. The search was led by Mr. Bill Funk of R. William Funk and Associates, one of the nation’s leading higher education consulting firms, and Mary Harper Hagan, Senior Vice President for Human Resources and Strategic Planning, St. John’s University, whose professionalism ensured that the search process remained focused and on track.

As Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs at Miami University, Dr. Gempesaw led the development of new academic initiatives to enhance retention and graduation rates, increase international enrollment and global partnerships, establish student learning outcomes assessment practices, and create e-learning niche programs and market strategies.

Before joining Miami University, Dr. Gempesaw held several positions at the University of Delaware. As Dean of the Lerner College of Business and Economics, he was responsible for the University’s second largest college with five academic departments, 3,500 students, and 120 faculty members, as well as the university-wide Division of Professional and Continuing Studies. Prior to that, he served as the University’s interim Dean for the College of Arts and Sciences, with more than 8,000 students, 24 academic departments, and 600 faculty members. His other positions at the University of Delaware included Vice Provost for Academic Programs and Planning; Acting Associate Provost for International Programs and Special Sessions; Chairperson of the Department of Food and Resource Economics; and Acting Director, Operations Research Program. He also chaired the NCAA compliance effort at the University of Delaware. In 2000 and 2005, he co-chaired UD’s Middle States Commission on Higher Education Steering Committee for Accreditation. He also co-chaired UD’s NCAA Certification Self-Study Committee in 2002.

Dr. Gempesaw has also held faculty positions as a professor in the Department of Economics at Miami University’s Farmer School of Business, and professor in the Department of Economics and Department of Food and Resource Economics at the University of Delaware.

Dr. Gempesaw received his Ph.D. in agricultural economics from The Pennsylvania State University; a Master of Science degree in agricultural economics from West Virginia University; and a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from Ateneo de Davao University in the Philippines. He has published more than 100 papers in various academic journals on financial simulation analysis and modeling, higher education administration, agribusiness economics, and marketing and international trade.

Dr. Gempesaw and his wife, Clavel Albay Gempesaw, are members of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Oxford, Ohio. In Delaware, Dr. Gempesaw served on the St. Thomas More Oratory Advisory Council and the Diocese of Wilmington Catholic Youth Ministry’s (CYM) Athletic Committee, and was a CYM basketball referee. Clavel Albay Gempesaw earned her master’s degree and Ph.D. in urban affairs and public policy from the University of Delaware. They have two sons, Daniel, who earned Bachelor of Science degrees in mathematics and mechanical engineering from the University of Delaware and a Master of Science degree from Georgia Tech, and David, who earned his Bachelor of Science degree in accounting and finance from the University of Delaware and is currently a graduate student at Miami University.

Beginning today and over the coming months, many of you will have the opportunity to meet Dr. Gempesaw during his visits to St. John’s before he officially joins the University. Additionally, there will be ample time to express our gratitude to Fr. Levesque for his service, and we will keep you apprised of those plans. We look forward to a seamless transition to St. John’s new leadership and an outstanding future for our beloved University. Please join us in welcoming Dr. Gempesaw and his family to the St. John’s community.   
Follow Johnny Jungle on Twitter at @Johnny_Jungle

Re: St. John's New President
« Reply #2 on: April 10, 2014, 12:41:21 PM »
I don't know anything about him beyond what's written here, but I really like it.  Several of the things they highlight are what I think this school needed, so hopefully he'll do a good job.

Re: New President - Conrado Gempesaw
« Reply #3 on: April 10, 2014, 12:43:28 PM »
He was a CYO ref.  I like him.  :up:

sju89tr

  • *****
  • 2499
Re: New President - Conrado Gempesaw
« Reply #4 on: April 10, 2014, 12:46:26 PM »
Like the hire

uwsfan

  • **
  • 248
Re: St. John's New President
« Reply #5 on: April 10, 2014, 01:10:09 PM »
Good resume. Lets hope he is a visionary transformative leader who is not afraid to take some chances and shake things up if needed.
His focus should be on academic quality. If he is the  real deal, the law schools  recent woes should soon halt and it should rapidly climb back up the rankings; the overall university academic reputation should also begin to climb... soon. He should seriously explore adding an engineering school and transform the graduate business school into a much better and tougher program.

Re: St. John's New President
« Reply #6 on: April 10, 2014, 01:23:28 PM »
He should move forward with annexation of QC.  Better school for half the price.

Our new President
« Reply #7 on: April 11, 2014, 12:42:20 AM »
Does anyone know how our new President views a big time basketball program? Miami of Ohio is not exactly a hot bed for basketball. Does he see it as a positive for the university? Is he willing to spend the money? Does he understand the basketball link between the university and NYC? Or is he likely to downsize the program as Fordham and NYU did to pursue a more academic image ? What is his game plan given declining enrollment, and rising fixed costs? Has anyone met him? Impressions?

redslope

  • *****
  • 1823
Re: Our new President
« Reply #8 on: April 11, 2014, 10:43:17 AM »
Does anyone know how our new President views a big time basketball program? Miami of Ohio is not exactly a hot bed for basketball. Does he see it as a positive for the university? Is he willing to spend the money? Does he understand the basketball link between the university and NYC? Or is he likely to downsize the program as Fordham and NYU did to pursue a more academic image ? What is his game plan given declining enrollment, and rising fixed costs? Has anyone met him? Impressions?
Interesting questions but the best answer is what is the Board of Trustees' thoughts on the matter as they selected the new president to carry out their vision/school mission.

he has worked at 2 state/public universities; we are still a faith based institution which guides the school's mission in the Vincentian tradition,  He is Catholic and that was probably one of the things that was considered.  St. Francis has a lay president who is an alumnus and Catholic; Manhattan has a lay president who is Catholic but from Fordham.

The release said he would be meeting with alumni (donors) in the near future.  If anyone on the forum gets an invite, I would suggest that they take advantage and let him know of the importance of BB to the university
« Last Edit: April 11, 2014, 10:46:30 AM by redslope »

pmg911

  • *****
  • 4073
Re: Our new President
« Reply #9 on: April 11, 2014, 11:08:29 AM »


The release said he would be meeting with alumni (donors) in the near future.  If anyone on the forum gets an invite, I would suggest that they take advantage and let him know of the importance of BB to the university

Not trying to argue but I am honestly curious, what do you think that importance of the basketball program really is to the overall health of the University..? The hoops program has been nothing more than mediocre at best for over 10+ years and the University has prospered in that same time period.

dandy

  • **
  • 43
Re: Our new President
« Reply #10 on: April 11, 2014, 11:20:57 AM »
i can't speak to overall enrollment trends, but I will tell you that were it not for the basketball team, I would have never even considered coming to SJU, and I got an academic full ride and came from out of state.  I think the dorms are the most important factor in the boom, but I think the team is a big part of drawing folks outside of the typical (local) student recruitment pipeline.

nudginator59

  • *****
  • 1437
  • It's better to be a Smart ass then a Dumb shart
Re: Our new President
« Reply #11 on: April 11, 2014, 01:07:40 PM »
There are a lot of academic/ potential money issues that the new President will have to deal with. The whole scandal with Father Harrington and the Dr. Chang scandal is only scratching the surface...

Hopefully the new President  understands that BB can be a program that can unite the school like it once did.
Cougar O' Malley

Re: Our new President
« Reply #12 on: April 11, 2014, 03:49:49 PM »
If it were not for the basketball program, the school would not be as well known as it is. I admit the program was one of the principal factors I chose to go there. Enrollment has been declining. This is especially true at the law school. Believe Law School is down over 20%. Law schools are competing by offering 15% tuition discounts (see Brooklyn Law School),. Fewer people even applying to law school. Money is tight. School has to deal with tenured staff that can't be laid off. The question is does the basketball program make enough to pay for itself and make a contribution to the other sports and school finances? I don't know answer to that question. Maybe there are some stats out there.

Poison

  • *****
  • 16896
Re: Our new President
« Reply #13 on: April 11, 2014, 05:19:17 PM »

The release said he would be meeting with alumni (donors) in the near future.  If anyone on the forum gets an invite, I would suggest that they take advantage and let him know of the importance of BB to the university

Not trying to argue but I am honestly curious, what do you think that importance of the basketball program really is to the overall health of the University..? The hoops program has been nothing more than mediocre at best for over 10+ years and the University has prospered in that same time period.

The university has prospered, but how much longer do you think STJ is going to get 58K per year over 4 years for an undergrad degree? How is that really more valuable than a degree from Brooklyn College? What basketball does for STJ is it brings notoriety to the University. It's a national University. This ain't NYU. You cut, or even ignore basketball, the alumni you do have, are gong to be mad. Very mad.

As far as the new President goes, if he isn't a thief, and a hypocrite, I already like him better than Harrington.

Poison

  • *****
  • 16896
Re: Our new President
« Reply #14 on: April 11, 2014, 05:23:22 PM »
There are a lot of academic/ potential money issues that the new President will have to deal with. The whole scandal with Father Harrington and the Dr. Chang scandal is only scratching the surface...

Hopefully the new President  understands that BB can be a program that can unite the school like it once did.

I thought it was understood that in certain cultures, it's appropriate to hand your boss white envelopes with cash inside?


Re: Our new President
« Reply #15 on: April 11, 2014, 09:35:02 PM »
Does anyone know how our new President views a big time basketball program? Miami of Ohio is not exactly a hot bed for basketball. Does he see it as a positive for the university? Is he willing to spend the money? Does he understand the basketball link between the university and NYC? Or is he likely to downsize the program as Fordham and NYU did to pursue a more academic image ? What is his game plan given declining enrollment, and rising fixed costs? Has anyone met him? Impressions?
Interesting questions but the best answer is what is the Board of Trustees' thoughts on the matter as they selected the new president to carry out their vision/school mission.

he has worked at 2 state/public universities; we are still a faith based institution which guides the school's mission in the Vincentian tradition,  He is Catholic and that was probably one of the things that was considered.  St. Francis has a lay president who is an alumnus and Catholic; Manhattan has a lay president who is Catholic but from Fordham.

The release said he would be meeting with alumni (donors) in the near future.  If anyone on the forum gets an invite, I would suggest that they take advantage and let him know of the importance of BB to the university

1,027 fans showed up for St. John's vs. Robert Morris.  Clearly, basketball is not as important to fans as we posters may think.

nudginator59

  • *****
  • 1437
  • It's better to be a Smart ass then a Dumb shart
Re: Our new President
« Reply #16 on: April 12, 2014, 12:51:40 AM »
There are a lot of academic/ potential money issues that the new President will have to deal with. The whole scandal with Father Harrington and the Dr. Chang scandal is only scratching the surface...

Hopefully the new President  understands that BB can be a program that can unite the school like it once did.

I thought it was understood that in certain cultures, it's appropriate to hand your boss white envelopes with cash inside?



If only that was the worse of it... From what I have been hearing the new President is bringing a lot of positive buzz to the school.

He has said that he is going to start off with 3 priorities. The reason is that anything more then that means everything becomes a priority and nothing gets done. When we are proficient with these 3 priorities then we create 3 more...Hopefully SJU BB will be up there.
Cougar O' Malley

Re: St. John's New President
« Reply #17 on: April 16, 2014, 11:02:42 AM »
He reffed basketball games.  That has to tell you he has a spot in his heart for the sport...certainly more than his predecessor.