Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Carnegie Museums president at center of controversy over Sweet Briar College closure; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 6/7/15

Marylynne Pitz, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Carnegie Museums president at center of controversy over Sweet Briar College closure:
"In August, Jo Ellen Parker arrived in Pittsburgh and became the 10th president of Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh and the first woman to lead the nonprofit consortium...
Maggie Saylor Patrick, a former Sweet Briar board member, in a commentary in the Washington Post’s online higher education section, blamed the closing on “poor leadership” during Ms. Parker’s presidency from 2009 through 2014. Key people in power, Ms. Patrick wrote, “froze out the broader board membership and even fired members who disagreed with their policies.”
Sweet Briar professor Daniel Gottlieb asserted in the same Washington Post section that the college’s leaders “have made misleading through numbers an art form.”
In a third Washington Post online essay, Diane Dalton, a current board member, called the attack on Ms. Parker unfair, saying she displayed “notably strong leadership at a time when a perfect storm of external forces beyond her control was brewing.” Two additional board members wrote in a fourth Washington Post column that the school’s financial woes “had been building for decades.”
Bill Hunt, chair of the trustees of Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, said he is pleased with Ms. Parker, calling her “a strong leader and visionary thinker.
“When we were searching for Carnegie Museums’ new president, our search firm, Spencer Stuart, proactively recruited Jo Ellen based on her impressive career as an educator, a college administrator and a thoughtful leader. As she was thoroughly vetted by both the search firm and our search committee — which included detailed discussions with many individuals, including Sweet Briar’s board chair — it became apparent that we had found our next president.”"

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