David L. Hall, professor and former dean of the College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST), died on Dec. 26, 2015, in State College. He was 69.
A celebration of life service will be held at the Penn Stater Conference Center and Hotel from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 9, with a reception to follow.
Hall joined IST in 2001, where he served as associate dean for research and graduate programs. He was appointed dean of IST in January 2010, and concluded his deanship in July 2014. He remained an IST faculty member until his death.
Hall was founding director of Penn State's Center for Network-Centric Cognition and Information Fusion (NC2IF), chartered as a Penn State research center in 2008. NC2IF focuses on large-scale problems that provide opportunities for collaboration and encourages interdisciplinary research in computing systems and computer users. The center hosts the Extreme Events Laboratory and the Red Cell Analytics Lab at IST, and has been funded by many sources including the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.
As dean, Hall was committed to the growth of online education and oversaw efforts to provide online options for all IST degree programs. Under his leadership, the college recruited a new chaired professor focused on big data and medical informatics, established IST’s annual Startup Week to encourage the next generation of innovators in technology and joined the intercollege entrepreneurship minor. Hall was instrumental in establishing the Center for Enterprise Architecture, and was one of the initial drivers to create the Center for Online Innovation in Learning (COIL), in collaboration with the College of Education and Penn State World Campus.
Prior to joining IST, Hall served as associate director and senior scientist at Penn State’s Applied Research Laboratory (ARL), where he oversaw the 150-person Information and Network Systems Office.
Hall graduated from Prairie High School in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, before joining the U.S. Air Force. He received his bachelor's degree in math and physics from the University of Iowa, and his master’s degree and doctorate in astronomy from Penn State.
He is survived by his wife, Beth, his two daughters, Sonya and Cristin, and four grandchildren, Aaron, Allison, and twins Jonah and Sabrina.