Catharine Bond Hill

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Catharine "Cappy" Bond Hill
File:Catharine Bond Hill, Halloween 2007.jpg
Hill at the President's House in 2007
10th President of Vassar College
In office
2006 – present
Preceded by Frances D. Fergusson
Personal details
Spouse(s) Kent J. Kildahl
Children 3
Alma mater Williams College
Yale University
Brasenose College, Oxford
Profession Economist
Website president.vassar.edu

Catharine "Cappy" Bond Hill is the current president of Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, NY. She began in 2006, after former president Frances D. Fergusson retired. Before coming to Vassar, Hill was provost at Williams College.

Biography

A 1976 summa cum laude graduate of Williams College, Hill also earned an Oxbridge MA at Brasenose College, Oxford, with First Class Honours in politics, philosophy and economics, and a Ph.D. in economics at Yale University.

In her early career Hill worked for The World Bank (1982–1987) and the Congressional Budget Office (1981–1982). In 1985, however, Hill returned to her alma mater to teach economics, and she began her role as Williams provost in July 1999, holding major financial and academic responsibilities.[1] As chief financial officer of the college, she was responsible for the annual college budget and long-range financial planning, as well as the Controller's office. Hill was also responsible for the Williams College Museum of Art, the Williams College Libraries and the offices of Admissions, Financial Aid and Information Technology. In addition, she was a member of the Committee on Appointments and Promotions, which makes all reappointment and tenure decisions and allocates faculty positions. Hill chaired the Williams economics department from 1997 to 1999, as well as the college's Center for Development Economics from 1992 to 1994.

In what Hill has called one of the most transformative experiences of her life, she and her family lived from 1994-1997 in the Republic of Zambia, where she was the fiscal/trade advisor and then chief-of-party for the Harvard Institute for International Development's Project on Macroeconomic Reform. She has written widely from her experiences in Africa, including co-editing the books Promoting and Sustaining Economic Reform in Zambia (2004) and the widely-reviewed Public Expenditure in Africa (1996).[2]

Hill and her husband, Kent J. Kildahl, head of the Upper School at Riverdale Country School (Riverdale, New York), have three children. She is an Alumni Fellow at the Yale Corporation Board. In her spare time, Hill practices golf.

Vassar under Hill

Shortly after President Fergusson announced her retirement in 2005, Vassar began an extensive national search for her successor that yielded more than 200 candidates. Of those contenders, the Board of Trustees unanimously selected Hill as the tenth President of Vassar College. Hill succeeded Fergusson on July 1, 2006, and was officially inaugurated in a five-day celebration from Oct. 25 through Oct. 29 that included events for students such as “Cappy and the Chocolate Factory,” a party in the Students’ Building featuring live entertainment and desserts such as “Cappy candy bars,” a cotton candy wall and a chocolate fondue fountain. Hill highlighted her primary goal as improving affordability and access, and also, as she said at one of her first gatherings with students, to “articulate and build a consensus around a vision of an institution.”[3]

In one of the most notable events in Vassar's history, Hill returned the school to a Need-blind admission policy, which ensures that the financial need of an applicant will not be a criterion considered in the admissions process. When she first became President, Hill made clear that of her priorities for Vassar's future, a robust financial aid program would be paramount.[4] Hill announced the decision to go need-blind during her remarks at Vassar's 2007 Commencement ceremony, at which National Public Radio host Terry Gross was the speaker. Under HIll's leadership, Vassar has also replaced loans with grants in financial aid for low-income families, in further efforts to increase access to higher education.

References


Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.


Academic offices
Preceded by President of Vassar College
2006–present
Incumbent