Harlene Hayne

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ChancellorAndy Crane
Preceded byDeborah Terry
ChancellorJohn Francis Ward
Royden John Somerville
Preceded byDavid Skegg
Harlene Hayne
Hayne in 2016
6th Vice-chancellor at Curtin University
Assumed office
April 2021
ChancellorAndy Crane
Preceded byDeborah Terry
8th Vice-chancellor at the University of Otago
In office
1 August 2011  March 2021
ChancellorJohn Francis Ward
Royden John Somerville
Preceded byDavid Skegg
Succeeded byDavid Murdoch
Personal details
BornVada Harlene Hayne
1961/1962 (age 64–65)[1]
Oklahoma, U.S.
Alma materColorado College (BA)
Rutgers University (MS, Ph.D.)
OccupationAcademic administrator, psychologist
Academic background
ThesisThe effect of multiple reminders on long-term retention in human infants (1988)
Doctoral advisorCarolyn Rovee-Collier
Academic work
DisciplinePsychology
Institutions

Vada Harlene Hayne CNZM (born 1961 or 1962) is an American-born academic administrator who was the vice-chancellor and a professor of psychology at the University of Otago in New Zealand,[2] before moving to Western Australia to take up the position of vice-chancellor at Curtin University in April 2021.[3]

She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2002,[4] and is also a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science.[2] She was recipient of the Robert L. Fantz Memorial Award from the American Psychological Foundation in 1997.[5]

She was the first female vice-chancellor of the University of Otago, and served in the role from 2011 to 2021.[6][7]

Born in Oklahoma and raised in Colorado,[1] Hayne attended Colorado College, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree. She continued her education at Rutgers University, completing a MS and PhD while working under the supervision of Carolyn Rovee-Collier.[4] She spent three years as a post-doctoral fellow at Princeton University, and moved to New Zealand in 1992 to join the University of Otago as a lecturer in the psychology department.[8][9]

Career

She served on the Academic Council of the Royal Society of New Zealand, the Marsden Fund Council, and the New Zealand National Science Panel.[2][8] She is an associate editor of Psychological Review and of the New Zealand Journal of Psychology.[8][10]

Hayne is a leading researcher in memory development in infants, children, adolescents and adults and her work has been cited in legal proceedings both nationally and internationally.[1]

During Hayne's tenure as Vice-Chancellor, staff numbers (FTE) increased from 3,749 in 2011 to 4,154 in 2020, her last full year as Vice-Chancellor.[11] Over the same period, student numbers decreased from 19,568 (EFTS) to 18,722, partly attributed to the introduction of an enrolment limitation system aimed at slowing growth and "giving priority to higher calibre students".[11] Hayne prioritised student support and wellbeing and undertook several initiatives to rein in the university's notorious student drinking culture.[11][12] Māori enrolments increased significantly during her term including in the medical programme.[11] She was close to her students and thanked them on her departure, writing 'My life has been made so much richer by knowing you".[11] The university's operating revenue increased from $592 million to $756 million during her tenure and net assets increased from $1.6 billion to $2.5 billion.[11] Several major capital projects were completed including a refurbished library building and new buildings for music, theatre and performing arts, dentistry, and the Christchurch School of Medicine following significant damage from the Christchurch earthquake.[11]

Hayne's tenure as vice-chancellor was associated with controversy regarding cuts to the university's humanities division. In 2017, she was accused of intimidating behaviour surrounding cuts to 16 full-time equivalent jobs in the division, and in 2018 following the decision to eliminate the entire Art History program. [13][14][15][16][17] In these cuts she worked closely with then Pro-Vice-Chancellor of Humanities, Tony Ballantyne.

In early October 2020, it was reported that Hayne would be finishing her term as Vice-Chancellor at the University of Otago in 2021 to assume the position of Vice Chancellor at Curtin University in Perth; before completing her second five-year term at Otago University.[18][19] In May 2025, Professor Hayne was appointed to a second 5-year term at Curtin University. Her successor as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Otago, Professor David Murdoch, stepped down less than 18 months after being appointed after a period of ill health and was replaced by The Hon Grant Robertson.[20][21]

Recognition

Selected works

References

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