Brandywine

Penn State Brandywine Chancellor Kristin Woolever to retire July 31

Penn State Brandywine Chancellor Kristin Woolever will retire from the University on July 31. Credit: Michael McDade / Penn State. Creative Commons

MEDIA, Pa. — After nearly six years of dedicated leadership and service, Penn State Brandywine Chancellor Kristin Woolever will retire from the University on July 31. Cynthia Lightfoot, director of academic affairs, will serve as interim chancellor starting Aug. 1.

On Feb. 1, 2014, Woolever became Brandywine’s fourth executive officer since its founding in 1967. Throughout her tenure as chancellor, Woolever has worked diligently to advance Brandywine’s commitment to educational quality, academic excellence and student success, while also elevating the campus’ profile in the community and region.

“What first interested me in a career in higher education was my love for literature. I was always a reader and I enjoyed thinking about literature as a reflection of life and a way to understand life,” Woolever explained. “During my junior year of college I served as a teaching assistant. I realized that I was a good teacher and I could get other people excited about literature.”

Under Woolever’s leadership, Brandywine achieved several major milestones, some of which include:

  • Transforming from a commuter to a residential campus with the opening of Orchard Hall and the Student Union.
  • Adding three four-year degree programs and five minors.
  • Securing an Invent Penn State seed grant to advance entrepreneurship within the local community.
  • Launching the campus’ Center for Ethics & Civic Engagement.

“It has been my privilege to lead Penn State Brandywine from a commuter campus to a residential one,” Woolever said, “but what I’m most proud of is that I’ve had a hand in shaping the future through the students we affect. Preparing students for a world that needs educated, well-rounded people is what we do. It’s all for the students.”

In addition to serving as chancellor, Woolever holds the rank of professor of English. Prior to joining Brandywine, she served as president of Prescott College in Arizona. Before leading Prescott, Woolever served as dean and director of the campus at the University of New Hampshire-Manchester and director of the Centre for Creative Change at Antioch University in Seattle. Woolever spent 17 years at Northeastern University, holding such positions as director of assessment, director of graduate studies, director of the computer lab, professor of English, interim dean of cooperative education, and acting chair of the Department of English.

Woolever earned a bachelor's degree from Allegheny College and master's and doctoral degrees in English from the University of Pittsburgh.

“Being chancellor at Penn State Brandywine has truly been a wonderful experience,” Woolever said. “We really are a community — a community of students, faculty and staff that is striving for excellence in all that we do. I’m happy and proud to have been a part of that.”

Last Updated July 26, 2019

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