From Wikipedia - Reading time: 7 min
Sally Kornbluth | |
|---|---|
Kornbluth in 2023 | |
| 18th President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
| Assumed office January 1, 2023 | |
| Preceded by | Leo Rafael Reif |
| Provost of Duke University | |
| In office July 1, 2014 – December 31, 2022 | |
| Preceded by | Peter Lange |
| Succeeded by | Jennifer Francis (interim) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Sally Ann Kornbluth |
| Education | Williams College (BA) Emmanuel College, Cambridge (BS) Rockefeller University (PhD) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Cellular biology |
| Institutions | Duke University Duke Kunshan University |
| Thesis | Modulation of Cellular src family Tyrosine Kinases: Phosphorylation State and Polyomavirus Middle T Antigen Binding (1989) |
| Doctoral advisor | Hidesaburo Hanafusa |
| Other academic advisors | John Newport |
| Doctoral students | Daniel Colón-Ramos |
Sally Ann Kornbluth is a cell biologist and academic administrator, currently serving as the 18th president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since January 2023.[1]
Kornbluth previously served as provost of Duke University from 2014 to 2022 and vice dean for basic sciences of Duke University School of Medicine from 2006 to 2014.[2]
Kornbluth was born in Paterson, New Jersey[3] and grew up in Fair Lawn, New Jersey.[3] Her father George was an accountant[3] and her mother, Marisa Galvany, was an opera singer.[4]
Kornbluth received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in political science from Williams College in 1982 and a Bachelor of Science with a major in genetics from Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1984. She received a Doctor of Philosophy in molecular oncology from the Rockefeller University in 1989.[5]
While at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, she was a Herchel Smith Scholar. She worked at the laboratory of Hidesaburo Hanafusa when at Rockefeller University, [6] and performed postdoctoral training with John Newport at the University of California, San Diego.[7][8]
Kornbluth became a member of the faculty at Duke University in 1994. She served as vice dean for basic sciences at Duke University School of Medicine from 2006 to 2014.[9] Her research focuses on cell growth and programmed cell death and how cancer cells evade apoptosis.[10][11] She is also interested in the role of programmed cell death in regulating the length of female fertility in vertebrates, in a mechanism regulated by caspase-2.[8][12][13]
She received the Basic Science Research Mentoring Award from the Duke School of Medicine in 2012 and the Distinguished Faculty Award from the Duke Medical Alumni Association in 2013. She was elected as a member of the Institute of Medicine in 2013.[9]
In 2014, after a national search, she was selected as Provost of Duke University, the first woman to serve in this role.[7][14] As Provost, she has overseen a leadership transition in which female Deans have become a majority at Duke.[15] Kornbluth is an advocate of liberal arts education and has stated that her own experience in a liberal arts education at Williams College led her to a career in the sciences.[16] Ellen Davis, a professor of Bible and Practical Theology at Duke and a member of the search committee that selected Kornbluth as Provost, commented that Kornbluth's liberal arts education "gives her a strong base to understand and guide our programs."[7] She is also an advocate for on-line learning as a driver of pedagogic innovation.[17]
In her capacity of Chair of the Board of Trustees at Duke Kunshan University,[18] Kornbluth has overseen the appointment of Al Bloom as the university's Executive Vice Chancellor in 2020,[19] and the launch of the WHU-Duke Research Institute in collaboration with Duke and Wuhan universities in 2014.[20]
In 2022, Kornbluth was selected as the 18th president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and succeeded L. Rafael Reif in this role in 2023.[21][22]
On December 5 2023, a hearing took place in the U.S. Congress regarding allegations of antisemitism at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). President Sally Kornbluth, who was questioned by Rep. Elise Stefanik repeatedly refused to acknowledge that calling for the genocide of Jews was harassment [23].
Kornbluth is married to Daniel Lew, the James B. Duke Professor of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology at the Duke University School of Medicine.[3] They have two children.[3] Kornbluth is Jewish.[3]