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Dr. Kirk
H. Schulz, president of Kansas State University will be speaking on "The Future of Kansas State
University in Addressing the Land Grant Mission". Dr.
Schulz was born in Portsmouth, Virginia, in 1963. He was raised
in Norfolk, Virginia, where he attended Norfolk Christian High
School. Following graduation from high school in 1981, he
attended Old Dominion University for 3 years, after which he
transferred to Virginia Tech in 1984. Kirk enrolled in the
Chemical Engineering program there, graduating with his B.S. and
Ph.D. degrees in Chemical Engineering in 1986 and 1991,
respectively. He did his doctoral work in metal oxide surface
chemistry under the direction of Dr. David Cox.
Following
graduation from Virginia Tech, Kirk took a faculty position as
an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University
of North Dakota in Grand Forks, North Dakota. Following 4 years
at UND, he moved in 1995 to Michigan Tech as an Assistant
Professor of Chemical Engineering. He was promoted to Associate
Professor in 1998, and assumed the Chairmanship of the
Department of Chemical Engineering at Michigan Tech that same
year. Kirk served on the faculty at Mississippi State University
from 2001 to 2009, assuming a series of administrative positions
of increasing responsibility. At MSU, he served as Director of
the Dave C. Swalm School of Chemical Engineering from 2001 to
2004, Dean of the James Worth Bagley College of Engineering from
2004 to 2006, and Vice President for Research and Economic
Development from 2007 to 2009.
In early
2009, Dr. Schulz was selected as the 13th President of Kansas
State University. Kirk is a member of the ABET Engineering
Accreditation Commission (EAC) and is an active member of AIChE,
ASEE, and ABET. In recognition of his work in chemical
engineering, he was named a Fellow of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2007 and a Fellow of
the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) in 2008.
He is married to Noel Nunnally Schulz, who is the Pasley
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at K-State.
They have two sons, Tim (18), a freshman at Mississippi State
University, and Andrew (14), a student at Manhattan High School. |
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