Gretchen Kalonji

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Born (1953-04-13) April 13, 1953 (age 72)
Children3
Gretchen Kalonji
Born (1953-04-13) April 13, 1953 (age 72)
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S., Ph.D.)
Children3
AwardsGeorge Westinghouse Award (ASEE) (1994)
Scientific career
FieldsMaterials science
InstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology
University of Washington
University of California, Santa Cruz
UNESCO
Sichuan University
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
ThesisSymmetry Principles in the Physics of Crystalline Interfaces (1982)
Doctoral advisorSamuel M. Allen
PartnerDenice Denton

Gretchen Lynn Kalonji (born April 13, 1953) is an American materials scientist and academic administrator. She is dean of Sichuan University-Hong Kong Polytechnic University Institute for Disaster Management and Reconstruction. Kalonji was previously the assistant director-general for natural sciences at UNESCO. She was the Kyocera Professor of Materials Science at University of Washington and an associate professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Kalonji was born April 13, 1953, in Chicago, Illinois to journalist parents and, after the age of seven, grew up moving between India, Hong Kong, Thailand, and East Africa. She was kicked out of school twice in Hong Kong during the 1967 leftist riots in which she participated in the siege of the U.S. embassy and protests against the Vietnam War. She was also kicked out of school in east Africa and eventually began working in metallurgy and learned practical skills in welding, milling, turning, elementary design, and drafting. Kalonji planned on applying for Kenyan citizenship after completing schooling in the United States. She enrolled at University of Maryland, College Park as a special student because she had not completed a high school diploma. She took courses in chemistry and materials science. After meeting Julia McCormick, the admissions director at MIT, Kalonji began undergraduate coursework at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in February 1979. Kalonji earned a B.Sc. in May 1980 and a Ph.D. in 1982 in materials science and engineering.[1] She completed her dissertation in five semesters after her B.S. under the direction of Samuel M. Allen in 1982.[2] She completed a cooperative internship at National Institute of Standards and Technology (then National Bureau of Standards) under mentor John W. Cahn. Kalonji's future research was influenced by courses she took with Robert W. Balluffi [Wikidata] and Bernie Wuensch.[3]

Career

Kalonji was an assistant and associate professor in the MIT department of materials science and engineering from 1982 to 1990. At MIT, Kalonji was the U.S. co-director of the Computer Science and Electronics Program at Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College. While at MIT, Kalonji was active in the Anti-Apartheid Movement. Kalonji and Willard Johnson, a professor of political science and one of the founders of TransAfrica, organized a faculty disinvestment from South Africa campaign, led demonstrations, and facilitated staff meetings.[3] In 1990, she became the Kyocera Professor of Materials Science at University of Washington. Kalonji joined the University of California as the director of international strategy development from 2005 to 2009 and the director of system-wide research development from 2009 to 2010. In 2006, she became a professor in the department of electrical engineering at University of California, Santa Cruz. On July 1, 2010, Kalonji became the assistant director-general for natural sciences at UNESCO. She is the first woman to hold this position at UNESCO.[1] Kalonji is the dean of Sichuan University-Hong Kong Polytechnic University Institute for Disaster Management and Reconstruction and a strategic advisory of institutional development at SCU.[4]

Personal life

Award and honors

References

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