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Sypher named interim director of Discovery Learning Center
Beverly Davenport Sypher, an associate provost and professor of communication, has been appointed interim director of Purdue's Discovery Learning Center.
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Beverly Davenport Sypher |
Sypher succeeds co-directors Margaret M. Rowe and Jonathan M. Harbor as director of the center, the education-based research component of the university's Discovery Park.
"This is a critical stage for the growth of the learning center, so we're fortunate to be able to call on Beverly's 10 years of administrative experience to sustain the momentum of the center's activities and to provide the leadership for its continued success," said Provost Sally Mason. "With more than 300 faculty involved in the center, her background in organizational communication and assessment will no doubt be helpful in directing the interdisciplinary and collaborative efforts of the center."
The learning center is devoted to examining and enhancing the understanding of the processes by which people learn. Sypher said she wants to continue the focus on learning in K-12 and college classrooms and expand it to include the various arenas in which lifelong learning is demanded, including the workplace.
"The learning center is well known for research on K-12 and math education, so it's both a gift and a challenge to follow the strong leadership of Peggy Rowe and Jon Harbor," Sypher said. "The classroom is extremely important to the future of our country, and part of our challenge will be to take that knowledge we produce at Purdue and translate it into information that will make a difference."
Sypher will be partnering with other Discovery Park centers to develop methods for translating and evaluating knowledge about new technologies in math and science.
Sypher said she also wants to expand the assessment component of the learning center by partnering with other centers in Discovery Park to help shape and evaluate the effectiveness of outreach and education projects aimed at a wide range of ages and diverse cultures.
"Discovery Park, and particularly the learning center, is evidence of a national trend toward renewed social responsibility on the part of universities," Sypher said. "At Discovery Learning Center, we also want to concentrate on the learning adults must engage in throughout their lives. Issues of health, workplace productivity, computer literacy and a whole host of lifestyle choices depend upon translating scientific discoveries into usable information."
Sypher has been on the Purdue faculty since 2002. She previously was a senior fellow in the office of the provost at Virginia Tech University, divisional dean for the social sciences at the University of Kansas and chair of the Department of Communication at the University of Kentucky.
She has been recognized for excellence in teaching at both the university and national level, and is the author of numerous articles and books on organizational and health-related communication. She also is the principal investigator or co-principal investigator for some $6 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Education to enhance college student learning and numerous corporate and government contracts to examine a variety of work-life and health issues.
She earned her bachelor's degree in communication and journalism from Western Kentucky University in 1976 and her doctorate in communication from the University of Michigan in 1981. Sypher will continue as professor in the Department of Communication, where she teaches classes in organizational communication and organizational assessment.
"Teaching is what drew me into this line of work," Sypher said. "It keeps me focused on our most important work and is a reminder of what I came to the university to do."
The Discovery Learning Center has funded projects and facilitated partnerships on campus since March 2003. A groundbreaking ceremony for the center's new facility in Discovery Park was held Oct. 6.
Discovery Park is a $100 million interdisciplinary research hub that brings the university's scientists, researchers, engineers and management experts together on a project-based basis to make basic discoveries available to advance the Indiana economy and solve societal problems by inventing new products and processes. The park has been a critical factor in forming eight startup companies and in at least 40 patent filings.
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