May 21, 2018
Former Gates Foundation director selected as State System of Higher Education’s next chancellor
Contact: Kevin Hensil, khensil@passhe.edu
Harrisburg – Underscoring its commitment to ensuring student success and to its efforts to redesign the State System for the future, the Board of Governors of Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education today selected a national leader in higher education to serve as the next chancellor.
Daniel Greenstein, who led the Postsecondary Success strategy at the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation for the past six years and who previously was a top administrator
in the University of California system, will become the State System’s fifth chancellor
in September. The Gates Foundation is one of the largest philanthropic organizations
in the world, and one of the most generous supporters of public higher education—awarding
more than $125 million in grants and contracts annually.
Board of Governors Chairwoman Cynthia D. Shapira called Greenstein’s selection “a
game changer” that will move the State System to the forefront of public university
systems in the United States.
“With the appointment of Dr. Greenstein as chancellor, the State System makes the
strong statement that we are committed to our mission of providing accessible, affordable,
quality higher education to students while serving the needs of the Commonwealth,
even as we redesign ourselves for the future,” Shapira said.
“Dan comes to us with an incredible level of knowledge and experience and the demonstrated
temperament necessary to achieve great things. He will use all of that to help achieve
excellence for our students and stakeholders, and—indeed—to write the template for
21st Century public higher education in the nation.”
As director of the Gates Foundation’s Postsecondary Success strategy, Greenstein worked
with other higher education leaders across the country on initiatives designed to
raise educational-attainment levels and to promote economic mobility, especially among
low-income and minority students. He developed and implemented a national strategy
for increasing the number of degrees awarded and for reducing the attainment gaps
among majority and non-majority students at U.S. colleges and universities.
“I am thrilled for the educators and students of Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher
Education who will now have Dan Greenstein as their leader and advocate,” said Allan
Golston, president of U.S. Programs with the Gates Foundation. “Dan is passionately
committed to the role that higher education institutions play as drivers of economic
and social mobility. He has helped us at the Foundation and in the field see the power
and potential of institutions like Pennsylvania’s state colleges and universities
to deliver transformative experiences for students no matter where they come from
or what they dream of, using data and innovation to drive great outcomes for students.”
Greenstein said he is excited to take on the new role.
“This system took a bold—even courageous—step two years ago when it chose to take
a hard look at itself. That effort to redesign the system—led by Chair Shapira and
the Board of Governors—has pushed the State System to the forefront of innovation
nationally,” said Greenstein. “I am eager to work closely with the Board, as well
as with faculty, staff and trustees at the universities of this great public system
as we solidify our future and fulfill our public obligation to our students and the
state.”
The focus on ensuring student success is key, according to Greenstein.
Delivering a message directly to students, he said, “Student success is more than
just graduating with a degree; it means leaving one of our universities fully prepared
with everything you need—the education, the skills, and the ability to work collaboratively—to
productively engage in the new economy and to effectively contribute to your communities.
“And let me be crystal clear, I do mean all of our students; regardless of zip code
or background, all must and all will have an opportunity to succeed.”
The universities and the State System as a whole also must share in that success,
he said.
“The 14 universities that make up this system play a vital role for the people and
the Commonwealth,” said Greenstein. “For more than 100,000 students—and I’m proud
to now say, ‘our students’—the universities provide a bridge to opportunity; an affordable
and reliable pathway to upward mobility, into the middle class and beyond.
“These universities are the lifeblood of countless who live in communities across
Pennsylvania. Nearly 90 percent of our students are residents who stay here to live
and work after they graduate, making our universities the engines that drive economic
development and strengthen the very fabric of our society.”
Before joining the Gates Foundation in 2012, Greenstein spent nearly a decade in leadership
roles in the University of California system, including serving as vice provost of
strategic planning, programs and accountability in the Office of the President. He
was responsible for introducing UC Online, revising the system’s long-range enrollment
plan and developing a transparent means for distributing state resources to the UC
campuses.
He also provided leadership to the Regents’ Commission of the Future, focusing on
educational and curriculum reforms designed to improve student success, reduce students’
time to degree and make more effective use of the system’s constrained academic program
capacity.
“Dan Greenstein is a superb choice as chancellor for the State System,” said Wyatt
R. Hume, an internationally acclaimed scholar who previously served as provost and
executive vice president of the UC System and is now dean of the University of Utah
School of Dentistry. “He has a strong track record of leading and facilitating change
to improve institutional effectiveness and quality. He brings together a unique combination
of abilities as a visionary, a leader and a consensus-builder, with rich and deep
experience in higher education system design and management.”
Michael M. Crow, president of Arizona State University, one of the nation’s leading
public metropolitan research institutions, and another long-time colleague, added,
“Pennsylvania’s State System has indeed made a bold statement in choosing Dan Greenstein—a
truly transformative leader in higher education—as its next chancellor. He has a national
presence as a forward-thinking individual committed to expanding educational opportunities
to all students, and to challenging others to do the same. Both his passion for students
and reputation in the higher education arena boost the State System’s national prominence.”
Greenstein’s selection as chancellor comes at the conclusion of a national search
launched in the fall of 2017 following the retirement of former Chancellor Frank T.
Brogan. Former Clarion University President Karen M. Whitney has served as interim
chancellor since then, and will continue in that role until Greenstein’s arrival on
Sept. 4.
“The State System couldn’t have found a better individual to lead the way forward
as we continue with our system redesign,” Whitney said. “Dan Greenstein is an energetic,
innovative, nationally respected leader. I look forward to working with him over the
next several months during this period of transition.”
The system redesign grew out of a top-to-bottom review of the State System and its
14 universities that was completed nearly a year ago. As a result of that review,
the Board last fall adopted three priorities: ensuring student success, leveraging
the strengths of the universities and transforming the system’s governance structure.
The effort to redesign the State System already has yielded positive results. The
Board has affirmed a mission statement focused on the goal of having every student
graduate in a timely manner with pathways for success. It has eliminated more than
a dozen out-of-date and burdensome policies and has streamlined the processes for
academic program approval, facilities planning and real property acquisition and disposal.
The universities are aligning their academic programs with regional workforce needs,
and the System is working to enhance university flexibility to align and achieve regional
affordability through strategic pricing efforts and to develop a more successful approach
to collaborative procurement of both goods and services.
It will be the new chancellor’s role to build on the momentum already achieved and
to provide the leadership necessary to make even more significant changes.
“Throughout his very impressive career in higher education, Dr. Greenstein has demonstrated
a unique talent to work with others across a broad spectrum to achieve great success
on behalf of students,” said Board of Governors Vice Chair Harold C. Shields, who
co-chaired the chancellor search committee and who also serves on the Council of Trustees
at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. “He is exactly who we need right now to lead
our redesign effort. He is a great choice for the System, for our universities, and—especially—for
our students.”
“I was very impressed with Dr. Greenstein's interview. He’s an innovator who has consistently
demonstrated a commitment to student success,” said Ryan Long, who served as president
of the Student Government Association at West Chester University of Pennsylvania before
graduating earlier this month and who was the student representative on the search
committee. “He clearly understands the challenges facing our system, but he also recognizes
the unique strengths and identities of each of our 14 institutions. The revitalization
of our system is important to me and all State System students and alumni. Under his
leadership, I believe we will achieve preeminence as an outstanding model of public
higher education."
Other members of the search committee were Board of Governors Vice Chair David M.
Maser; Board members Thomas S. Muller and Samuel H. Smith; Laura Delbrugge, a faculty
member and chair of the Foreign Language Department at Indiana University of Pennsylvania;
and Donna Wilson, interim president at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania.
“I was immediately impressed with the unique blend of humanities, social sciences,
technology and administrative experience that Dr. Greenstein brings to the table,”
said Delbrugge. “He fundamentally believes in the mission of a public university system
and has a proven ability to work collaboratively—across many stakeholder groups—as
an advocate for inclusion and student success. That powerful combination of skills
and attitudes makes him an exciting choice to lead the State System at this critical
juncture.”
“Dr. Greenstein’s proven commitment to student achievement, innovation and equity
is exactly what our universities need right now,” said Wilson. “Dan’s expertise and
national experience in higher education will drive our system forward. His leadership
is going to change the conversation about the State System.”
Greenstein’s selection also was lauded by Ken Mash, president of the Association of
Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties (APSCUF), the union that represents
faculty and athletic coaches in the State System.
“My colleagues and I look forward to Dr. Greenstein’s leadership,” Mash said. “He
comes to the State System armed with experience as a faculty member, an administrator
and as a nationally recognized advocate for innovative and proven approaches to public
higher education. His ability to explain how it is that accessible, high quality and
affordable higher education benefits all citizens is precisely what our System and
our Commonwealth needs at this very moment.”
Greenstein earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in history from the University of
Pennsylvania, studied at the London School of Economics and earned a Ph.D. in social
studies from Oxford University.
He began his academic career in 1989 as a senior lecturer in modern history at Glasgow
University in Scotland, where he also was the founding director of the university’s
arts faculty computing service and founder of the Department of Humanities Computing.
He was the founding director of Arts and Humanities Data Service in London, which
built a national internet service to support research and teaching at universities
in the United Kingdom by ensuring ready access to high-quality, online information
sources.
Moving back to the United States in 1999, he became executive director of the Digital
Library Federation in Washington, D.C., facilitating collaboration among 26 major
research universities in their development of shared network infrastructure and academic
information services.
Greenstein moved on to the University of California system in 2002, where he initially
built next-generation services for UC’s 100 library system, which contains more than
35 million volumes. Greenstein was named vice provost for strategic planning, programs
and accountability in 2006 and remained in that role for six years before moving on
to the Gates Foundation.