After 35 years of service at Gordon College, President R. Judson Carlberg, Ph.D., has announced his retirement effective June 30, 2011.
Under Carlberg’s 19-year tenure as president, the College has experienced substantial growth and recognition for its academic excellence, global programs and campus facilities.
“For the last few years, my wife, Jan, and I have known we were in a season of transition, a season of anticipating our stepping down from leadership at Gordon College,” Carlberg said recently in a campus gathering of students, faculty and staff.
“Yet as we enter this time of transition, I remain optimistic about Gordon’s future. We have the strongest leadership team and faculty that I have seen here at Gordon. Many new trustees are now serving on the board, bringing new ideas, substantial resources and a heart for Christian higher education in New England. But we will miss this place, the place we call home.”
Carlberg’s trademark commitment to academic freedom began when he first came to Gordon in 1976 from Michigan where he’d served as academic provost of John Wesley College. He was only 35 years old at the time. As dean of Gordon’s faculty, Carlberg led a faculty development program that won national recognition and recruited top professors in their fields.
Robert Judson Carlberg was named Gordon’s seventh president in 1992.
Since then, numerous faculty research projects and distinctive academic programs grew as a direct result of his advocacy and support. From the visual and theatre arts to music, sciences and political studies, Carlberg’s philosophy of truthful inquiry and scholarly integrity became lynchpins for shaping Gordon’s national reputation of academic excellence.
“Jud Carlberg’s leadership contributions as president have been significant to the growth and vision of Gordon College,” said Kurt A. Keilhacker, chair of the Board of Trustees since 2005. “He has inspired a high level of commitment to scholarship while remaining true to the Christian values that have anchored the College since A. J. Gordon began it in 1889. We will miss his tireless presence and faithful service to the great mission of equipping young women and men for worldwide Christian leadership, but we know that the foundation he helped build will provide a strong future for Gordon College.”
Total base enrollment grew 37 percent between 1976 and 2009. Three master’s degree programs as well as 17 new undergraduate majors and 13 minors were established, while global education opportunities were expanded.
As a result of Carlberg’s vision to provide cross-cultural learning experiences for students, and as part of his long-standing support of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities’ study-abroad programs, Carlberg actively participated in the development of the CCCU’s Latin American Studies Program in Costa Rica.
And Gordon now offers over 20 approved programs as well as the College’s own semester-long programs in foreign languages, the arts, urban studies and experiential education. Gordon in Aix (France) and Gordon in Orvieto (Italy) began in the1990s, and this spring will mark the advent of Gordon in Romania.
Carlberg also led the College’s return to its urban roots by establishing academic initiatives in Boston and Lynn, Massachusetts. Both the Gordon in Boston and the Gordon in Lynn programs focus on urban engagement, community service and international community.
Short-term summer and January seminars enable students to deepen their understanding of biblical (Israel), environmental (Honduras/Nicaragua/Haiti), Classical (Greece), and theatre (Britain) studies, to name but a few. Because of Carlberg’s commitment to allowing students to take their Gordon scholarship aid off-campus, student participation in study-abroad programs has grown to nearly 40 percent compared to the national average, which is closer to two percent.
Carlberg’s practical vision of equipping students to better understand and serve in the world has shaped hundreds of Gordon students.
Before his move to the presidency, Carlberg was appointed in 1990 to the role of senior vice president for development. There, he began his legacy of campus wide building initiatives by supporting then-President Richard Gross with the completion of the capital campaign and construction of the 1600-seat A.J. Gordon Memorial Chapel, a vibrant space for campus life and community events.
“I’ve long appreciated Jud’s leadership, friendship and vision and all he’s given to Gordon College,” said Thomas Phillips, retired Chairman and CEO of Raytheon Company and member of Gordon’s Board of Trustees since 1968. “Without his wisdom and commitment to Christian higher education, many young people might not have had the opportunity to pursue their callings on such a fine campus as Gordon. Jud’s 35 years of service at Gordon have been remarkable and instrumental to the future of the College.”
A native of Fall River, Massachusetts, he holds degrees from Wheaton College in Illinois (B.A.), Denver Seminary (M.Div.) and Michigan State University (M.A., Ph.D.). He and his wife, Jan, an author and speaker, have two grown children and four grandchildren.
Upon retirement, they will relocate to Gloucester, Massachusetts, where they will rest, fish and consider new opportunities in helping other campuses in the U.S. and abroad.
Source: http://www.gordon.edu/article.cfm?iArticleID=995&iReferrerPageID=5&iPrevCatID=30&bLive=1
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