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Conservation biologist named new faculty director of Morgridge Center

June 10, 2010 By

Photo of Nancy Mathews

Nancy Mathews

Photo: Jeff Miller

Nancy Mathews, a professor of environmental studies and chair of Conservation Biology and Sustainable Development at the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, has been named faculty director of the university’s Morgridge Center for Public Service. She succeeds Michael Thornton, who completes his term as the center’s faculty director at the end of June.

The Morgridge Center advances the Wisconsin Idea by developing and promoting civic engagement, strengthening teaching and learning, and facilitating collaborative partnerships through public service, academic service-learning, community-based research and engaged scholarship.

“I am deeply honored to be selected as the next faculty director of the Morgridge Center, and I look forward to advancing the mission to serve the campus and our constituents locally, regionally and globally as part of the Wisconsin Idea,” says Mathews, who has expressed a strong interest in building community partnerships and providing experiential learning opportunities for students.

“Professor Mathews’ appointment will add dramatic value to the activities of the center,” says UW–Madison Provost Paul DeLuca. “She is a skilled organizer and has a strong strategic vision for where the center can go. We anticipate that under Nancy’s leadership the Morgridge Center will achieve new prominence as an outstanding source of academic translational activities into communities. The institution is most pleased with this appointment.”

“John and I are exceedingly pleased that Nancy Mathews will be the new director of the Morgridge Center,” says Tashia Morgridge, who was a member of the search committee. John and Tashia Morgridge, both UW–Madison alumni, were instrumental in the creation of the center and provided a generous endowment for it.

“Nancy’s leadership style and experience coupled with her personal dynamism will help to lead the Morgridge Center forward,” Tashia Morgridge adds. “She has already suggested ways to broaden the scope and effectiveness of the center. The past directors have been the right people to guide the Morgridge Center through its formative years. Nancy is the right leader for this new phase of development.”

Mathews says that while service learning and engagement have been the hallmarks of the center since its creation in 1996, it has a new role to consider in advancing public scholarship over the next decade.

“We are entering a new era in higher education where public scholarship has become even more important at public research universities,” says Mathews. “The Morgridge Center is perfectly positioned to enhance the university’s reach in this area, and I also foresee many opportunities to promote [UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin’s] new initiatives in sustainability and global health through service learning, civic engagement and public scholarship.”

Mathews has been involved in numerous administrative leadership activities at UW–Madison. She directed the two-year Reaccreditation Project completed in 2009 and currently serves on the Biological Sciences Divisional Committee. She has served on many campus committees, including several key administrative search and screen committees. In addition to serving as chair of the Nelson Institute’s Biology and Sustainable Development Program, she also chairs the institute’s personnel committee.

Mathews earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from the Pennsylvania State University and her master’s and doctoral degrees in forest biology from the State University of New York-College of Environmental Science and Forest Biology. She joined the faculty of the UW–Madison Department of Wildlife Ecology in 1995 and the Nelson Institute in 2004. Mathews worked in private industry and for the federal government prior to coming to UW–Madison.

She has professional interests in several areas: community-based conservation; endangered species management; ungulate ecology; assessments of biodiversity; and ecosystem management. Her graduate students conduct research in each of those areas.

Mathews has studied the behavior of white-tailed deer for more than 20 years and has investigated the role of deer behavior and movement in the spread of chronic wasting disease.

She will begin her three-year appointment at the Morgridge Center on July 1. She will devote 75 percent of her time to the center and 25 percent to her faculty position.

“I am looking forward to working with the talented staff at the center,” says Mathews.