Interdisciplinary Core Faculty Hiring Committee Embodies Mission of Schiller Institute
by Stephanie M. McPherson
The Schiller Institute began in 2020 with the goal of creating a permanent foundation of support for interdisciplinary research and education at 天美传媒app. Now, Schiller has welcomed its first two Core faculty members鈥擧anqin Tian, Institute Professor of Global Sustainability, and Yi Ming, Institute Professor of Climate Science and Society鈥攁fter a year-long search conducted by a unique committee involving 13 faculty spanning 12 departments and four colleges within Boston College.
鈥淩eal advances come at the boundaries of the disciplines. And we can鈥檛 make significant change when we pursue science separately from the rest of the human experience. We have a responsibility to teach students to see the connections,鈥 says Laura J. Steinberg, Seidner Family Executive Director of the Schiller Institute. 鈥淲e now have on campus two of the most prominent climate scientists in the world, who are dedicated to pursuing research beyond the traditional bounds of their disciplines. Students will have the opportunity to work with them, take classes from them and be part of the learning community they create.鈥
The hiring committee responsible for bringing these experts to campus reflected the interdisciplinary mission of the Schiller Institute, with scholars in disciplines ranging from physics to earth sciences to history to social work assessing the 127 candidates who applied for the senior-level positions.
鈥淭he whole aim of the new Schiller hires is that they will build bridges across campus and interact with a wide range of faculty and students,鈥 says committee member Jeremy Shakun, Associate Professor in Earth and Environmental Sciences. (Both Ming and Tian have joint appointments between Schiller and EES.) 鈥淥ur search committee was almost like a focus group, helpful for seeing how well a candidate could speak to and link together a diverse audience.鈥
Many experts, one goal
The committee was brought together by Steinberg, who pulled from contacts among 天美传媒app鈥檚 many departments.
鈥淭he search committee embodied the collaborative spirit that we were asking the candidates to embrace. They are each inquisitive, passionate, out of the box thinkers who thoroughly enjoy the give and take of discussion. They actively demonstrated the 天美传媒app community鈥檚 enthusiasm for exploring new ideas and new approaches with others,鈥 says Steinberg.
Once assembled, the committee met regularly throughout the 2021 鈥 2022 school year to review applications, vet candidates, and interview the 22 long-listed applicants via Zoom. Productive conversations between a large group of people from very different backgrounds involved a steep learning curve, with natural scientists having to learn the language of social scientists and vice versa.
鈥淎n interdisciplinary search committee looking for folks who can cross traditional academic boundaries was new terrain for everyone, so it required flexibility, an open mind, and a lot of trust in each other,鈥 says Shakun.
And as the professors who made up the committee settled into their roles, they learned to stand up for each other鈥檚 fields during the interview process. For example, a natural scientist being interviewed expressed a disregard for incorporating ideas from the social sciences into climate change solutions鈥攕omething that the natural scientists in the interview session viewed as unacceptable, in defense of and in solidarity with their social science colleagues. These bonds only solidified throughout the process, with many faculty forming genuine connections and continuing their associations outside of the hiring committee.
鈥淭he work of the committee was not only about the promise of the future. During this process, we made a community among ourselves, made connections, sparked curiosity,鈥 says committee member Conevery Bolton Valencius, Professor of History. 鈥淚 now have colleagues across this campus who I can call about curriculum or even research that I would never have known if it were not for this Schiller committee.鈥
The diversity of expertise was also beneficial for assessing the candidates鈥 abilities to make clear sense of their work.
鈥淥nly maybe 30 percent of the committee members actually had expertise in climate change. I have zero,鈥 says committee member Kirsten Davison, Donahue and DiFelice Endowed Chair and Associate Dean for Research in the School of Social Work. 鈥淚t was a fascinating process because initially, you wonder if you deserve to be here evaluating this person. But after a while, you have things to say. I didn鈥檛 need a climate or sustainability background to assess if the candidates could clearly articulate their research vision and demonstrate a history of effective collaboration.鈥
In the end, everyone on the committee had one goal:
鈥淲e wanted the candidates to be able to answer: Why does your research matter to the world? How does it bring us closer to adapting to, mitigating, or solving the climate change problem?鈥 says Steinberg.
Tian was struck by the unique size and make-up of the committee. 鈥淭his is听 probably the largest committee I have ever had for an interview,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd you look at it as the combination of the community you鈥檙e entering into, really trying to build natural science and social science together.鈥
听A public campus visit听
After narrowing the candidates down to the most impressive, the committee submitted those finalists to what would be the candidate鈥檚 home department to further vet their scientific credentials. Once a consensus was reached between Schiller and the home department, ten finalists were invited to campus to interview in person.
Each candidate met with their potential home department for traditional interviews and a scientifically focused lecture. But Schiller invited them to do something rather unusual: participate in a general-audience level symposium open to the entire university community both in person and streamed via Zoom. Each participant was given about 35 minutes to explain the impact of their work, how it addresses the ongoing climate crisis, and how interdisciplinary collaboration supported by the Schiller Institute would advance their goals. They then took 20 minutes of questions from the audience of experts and non-experts alike.
Titled 鈥淐limate Change and the Energy Transition Symposia,鈥 the lectures were proof positive that the importance of the candidates鈥 research could translate across disciplines, across schools, and across expertise levels. Hiring committee members not only used this opportunity to assess the candidates but to also learn more about this important part of our interconnected world.
鈥淲e weren鈥檛 just sitting back to evaluate what these people were saying,鈥 says Valencius. 鈥淓verybody in the room was learning tremendously. And having the extraordinary finalists on campus giving their talks raised a lot of attention to issues of climate change throughout the campus.鈥
Interviews and public lectures aside, the process also involved inviting the candidates to dinner to get a sense of how everyone would get along as colleagues.
鈥淭he formal search process does not occur only in the seminar room, in the conference room. It is also at the dinner table,鈥 says Ming. 鈥淎nd that dinner was so memorable. Everyone was so warm, so open-minded. I just felt comfortable. It felt like Thanksgiving Day, a family dinner.鈥
The collegial atmosphere also stood out to Tian.
鈥淚n the interview process, they not only treated you as a professor, but they also treated you as a human,鈥 he said.
Strengthening connections, strengthening 天美传媒app
In the end, Ming and Tian were invited to join the Schiller Institute starting in the 2022-2023 school year. As Institute Core faculty with a focus on combatting climate change, they are expected to create interdisciplinary programs and classes accessible to anyone studying or researching in any department who wants to learn more about this world-changing challenge. They have already started laying the groundwork for upper-level climate change courses and environment-focused symposia within departments such as sociology and physics.
鈥淚n my previous work, most of my focus was on natural systems,鈥 says Tian. 鈥淏ut if we really want to solve climate change and sustainability, we need to bring human components to the package. That鈥檚 something I wanted to do in my next phase of my career, and what brought me to the Schiller and to Boston College.鈥
鈥淏oston College has been exceedingly strong in both arts and sciences,鈥 agrees Ming. 鈥淚 felt that by contributing to the building of the Schiller, I can make a positive impact on the university itself, to make it even stronger to better educate future leaders.鈥
The Schiller institute still has more Core faculty to hire in the other areas within energy, health, and the environment. Ming, Tian, and this interdisciplinary faculty committee will continue to do the work central to Schiller鈥檚 mission鈥攂oth in the hiring arena, and by making good use of the connections the committee has afforded them.
鈥淚鈥檓 really looking forward to discussing scientific and maybe even teaching collaborations,鈥 says committee member Fazel Tafti, Assistant Professor of Physics. 鈥淥ur job did not stop after we hired those faculty. It really has just started.鈥
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