Setonian Online

The Student Voice of the Hill
News | Sports | A & E | Opinion | Exclusives | Features | Columns | Editorial | Police Blotter
Skip to content
  • Setonian Advertising Information 2012-2013
  • Setonian Magazine Submission Guidelines
  • Setonian Advertising 2012-2013
  • Brain Conference
« SHU rallies in Washington D.C.’s annual March of Life
Police Blotter »

SHU President of 25 years announces retirement

Katelyn Snyder, Senior Staff Writer

Since before Seton Hill University (SHU) had male students, the Griffin or iPads, the university was lead by President JoAnne Boyle. Boyle, SHU’s longest serving president, announced that she plans to retire by June 30, 2013. Students received letters and a campus wide email on January 17, 2013 notifying them of the announcement.

“The University is the strongest it’s ever been. It has strong financial positioning. Enrollment is high. We have fine students. Exciting programs have been developed for future needs of the region. We’ve done some extraordinary fundraising and two new buildings are planned. It seemed like a good time to look at accomplishments and leave the school in good hands,” said Boyle in a phone interview.

A SHU press release said that Boyle’s successor will be named by a selection committee headed by Michele Moore Ridge, chair of the Seton Hill University Board of Trustees. Trustees, alumni, faculty and student representatives will be a part of the recommendation process. According to Boyle, the search process will be extensive.

Boyle had some advice out of her 25 years as SHU’s president for her successor, though she noted that “it will be up to a new president to assess where the university is and where they want to go.”

“This is a wonderful job. There is nothing more exciting than thinking about young people and their futures and what will prepare them best. Looking globally. Making sure opportunities for students internationally are enriched. Those are all the things that I would advise,” said Boyle.

Boyle has led the school to many changes since she she was named president of SHU in 1987 (see sidebar).

“President Boyle has been an outstanding leader for Seton Hill University. She has worked diligently to strengthen the University’s academic and financial foundations and has led Seton Hill forward by focusing campus resources on programs, faculty, key personnel and facilities that position the University as an educational leader in the nation,” said Ridge in her announcement of Boyle’s retirement.

Boyle said the most visible change in SHU has been the change to being a coeducational university. Over all, however, she said she appreciated all of the areas SHU has grown.

“It’s energizing and wonderful. Growth means you’re alive,” said Boyle.

As for favorite memories, Boyle said they are student-centered.

“It’s so hard to pick one favorite memory. In one day there might be a hundred precious moments. Most of them are associated with something a student has done that I’ve learned about or that they’ve come to tell me about. Those are some powerful memories,” said Boyle.

Boyle has plans to fill up her time after retirement that harken back to her time as an English professor at SHU. Her extensive reading list features rereading the works of William Shakespeare, Joseph Conrad, and C.S. Forester. She also wants to read more modern award winning literature.

“I love reading. Reading is the most important thing to do every day. I have hardly had the time to keep up with the things I want to read.” Some Changes to SHU during Boyle’s Presidency

 

Sidebar:

-SHU became Coeducational

-SHU added graduate courses

-SHU became Coeducational
-SHU added graduate courses
-Restoration of the Administration Building
-Construction of McKenna Center, Farrell Hall, DeChantal Hall, and the Athletic Field house
-Expansion downtown including utilizing an existing building for the Visual Arts Center and building the  Performing Arts Center
-More than 100 endowed scholarship funds added
-Strengthened international faculty and student exchange programs
-Established NCCHE (National Catholic Center for Holocaust Education)
-Opened Women’s Business Center, Center for Family Therapy, Center for Orthodontics, and the Wukich Center for Entrepreneurial Opportunities
-Partnered with Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine (LECOM)
-Added 5 year Physicians Assistant program
-”iPad for Everyone” initiative
-Move to National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II and then to the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) in 2012.

Posted by abbeyfleckenstein, on January 29, 2013 at 6:47 pm, filed under News, Uncategorized and tagged LECOM, NCAA, NCCHE, President JoAnne Boyle, SHU. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.
« SHU rallies in Washington D.C.’s annual March of Life
Police Blotter »

One Comment

  1. ann infanger
    Posted January 31, 2013 at 1:50 pm | Permalink

    Congratulations on the fine article on Dr. Boyle retiring as President of Seton Hill University. I was just disappointed that the list of her accomplishments was relegated to “sidebar online.” It requires extra work to find the information online and people not comfortable with the computer may not get to see it!

    Sister Ann Infanger

Post a Comment

Your email is never shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

  • In Memoriam: Kristina Quigley

  • Recent Headlines

    • Students have the ability to help out- and they should use it
    • Robot & Romulus
    • Make A Wish Club sponsors Hunger on the Hill
    • May Viral Vids
    • A night for the ages
  • RSS Feed

    • All posts
    • All comments
  • Site

    • Admin Login
    • Advertising Rates
  • Campus Caught on Film

    Tree Crash
  • Sponsored Links

WordPress | Sandbox
WordPress Appliance - Powered by TurnKey Linux