Joan Ferrini-Mundy

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Joan Ferrini-Mundy
Ferrini-Mundy in 2018
21st President of the University of Maine
Assumed office
July 1, 2018
Preceded bySusan Hunter
Personal details
Born1954 (age 7071)
EducationUniversity of New Hampshire (BS, MS, PhD)
Academic background
ThesisSpatial ability, mathematics achievement, and spatial training in male and female calculus students (1980)
Doctoral advisorRichard Balomenos
Academic work
Disciplinemathematics education
Institutions

Joan Ferrini-Mundy (born 1954)[1] is an American academic. Her research interests include calculus teaching and learning, mathematics teacher learning, and STEM education policy. She is currently the president of the University of Maine.

Ferrini-Mundy earned a Ph.D. in mathematics education from the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in 1980 and spent two years there as a postdoctoral associate. After one year at Mount Holyoke College, she returned to UNH as a faculty member in mathematics until joining the faculty of Michigan State University in 1999. One year later, she chaired the writing group for Standards 2000, a publication from the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.[2]

Ferrini-Mundy served as director of the Mathematical Sciences Education Board at the National Academy of Sciences, and subsequently joined the mathematics and teacher education faculty of Michigan State University and served as associate dean for science and mathematics education  in the College of Natural Science and director of the Division of Science and Mathematics Education.

In 2007, Ferrini-Mundy joined the National Science Foundation (NSF) as the director of the new Division of Research on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings in the Directorate for Education and Human Resources; she remained a faculty member at Michigan State until 2010. From 2007 to 2009, she served on the education subcommittee of the National Science and Technology Council.[3]

In February 2011, Ferrini-Mundy became the assistant director of the National Science Foundation's Directorate for Education and Human Resources.[4] In this strategic role, she set the NSF's direction for scientific education.[4] In 2014 she was elected to the executive committee of the Association for Women in Mathematics for a 2-year term.[5]

In June 2017, she was appointed the chief operating officer of the NSF. One year later, she left the NSF to become the 21st president of the University of Maine.[6]

After becoming the president of the University of Maine in 2018, in 2021 she was also appointed University of Maine System (UMS) vice chancellor for research and innovation where she leads a formalized effort to make the University of Maine’s research infrastructure accessible to and supportive of all universities and faculty in the system.[6]

Awards and recognition

References

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