President Jake B. Schrum has announced plans to retire from
Southwestern University at the end of the university’s 2012-2013 fiscal
year.
Schrum has served as president of Southwestern since July 1, 2000. He
is the 14th person to serve as president of Southwestern and the third
Southwestern graduate to serve as president of the university. Only
three other Southwestern University presidents have served longer.
President Schrum announced his plans to retire while giving his annual state of the university address to faculty and staff Aug. 23.
“It has been a special honor and privilege to lead my alma mater,” he
said. “Jane and I will be forever grateful for this opportunity.
Southwestern has a great future ahead of it and I look forward to
watching its continued progress.”
Dr. Robert W. Karr, chair of Southwestern’s Board of Trustees, said a
search committee composed of trustees, faculty members, students, staff
and alumni will start meeting in September to begin the search for a
successor. Karr said the trustees plan to announce a successor well
before President Schrum leaves office June 30, 2013.
“I know of no person more passionate about undergraduate liberal arts
education than Jake Schrum,” Karr said. “Southwestern’s 15th president
must exemplify that same passion while providing visionary leadership
consistent with the University’s core purpose of fostering a liberal
arts community whose values and actions encourage contributions toward
the well-being of humanity.”
The trustees have secured the services of a search firm to help them in their selection of a new president. The firm, AGB Search, is affiliated with the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges and specializes in assisting colleges and universities with leadership transitions.
President Schrum earned an undergraduate degree in psychology from
Southwestern in 1968 and went on to earn master of divinity degree from
Yale Divinity School in 1973. He began his career in higher education
administration by serving as a fundraiser for Yale, and then went on to
hold other positions in university advancement at Muhlenberg College,
Texas Wesleyan University, Southwestern University and Emory University.
He returned to Texas Wesleyan University to serve as its president from
1991 to 2000.
During his tenure at Southwestern, President Schrum has presided over
the largest fundraising campaign in the university’s history. That
campaign, which is known as Thinking Ahead: The Southwestern Campaign,
has raised more than $136 million of its $150 million goal. President
Schrum has been instrumental in developing relationships with new
funding sources such as The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which has given
Southwestern 16 grants totaling more than $8 million during his tenure.
President Schrum personally received three presidential leadership
grants from the Mellon Foundation and helped secure the relocation of
the National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education (NITLE), which is supported by the Mellon Foundation, to Southwestern in 2009.
Funds raised through the Thinking Ahead campaign have allowed
Southwestern to construct several new buildings during President
Schrum’s tenure, including a new admission center and the Prothro Center
for Lifelong Learning, which consolidates student services into one
building. Several buildings also have been renovated, such as the Alma
Thomas Fine Arts Center.
Funds raised through the campaign also enabled Southwestern to start
its signature program known as the Paideia program. The program was
designed to help students integrate what they learn in the classroom
with outside experiences such as civic engagement, intercultural
learning and research projects with professors. President Schrum helped
secure an $8.5 million gift from the Priddy Charitable Trust that
enabled Southwestern to add the faculty members necessary to implement
the program. While the original Paideia program was voluntary, a new
program that makes the benefits of Paideia available to all students
will be launched in the fall of 2014.
Another of President Schrum’s major accomplishments has been
increasing the number of students from underrepresented groups who
attend Southwestern. Thirty percent of the students in this fall’s
incoming class at Southwestern are students from underrepresented groups
compared to 21.8 percent in the fall of 2000.
President Schrum also personally pushed for an emphasis on
sustainability at Southwestern. He signed both the Talloires Declaration
(an international effort to promote environmental sustainability in
higher education) and the College and University Presidents’ Climate
Commitment, which requires campuses to promote sustainability through
teaching and action. On Jan. 12, 2010, President Schrum signed an
agreement with the city of Georgetown that enables Southwestern to get
all of its electricity from wind power for the next 18 years. All the
buildings that have been constructed at Southwestern in the past five
years have earned LEED certification.
Enhancing student life on campus has been another focus of President
Schrum’s administration at Southwestern. Included in this was expanding
Southwestern’s athletic offerings. Four new varsity athletic teams were
started or announced during his tenure – softball, men’s and women’s
lacrosse, and football.
President Schrum has been a national leader in the field of higher
education and has served as national board chair for the Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) as well as for the
Associated Colleges of the South (ACS) and the Independent Colleges and
Universities of Texas (ICUT).
In his final year at Southwestern, President Schrum said he hopes to bring the Thinking Ahead
campaign to a successful conclusion and to have Southwestern’s
accreditation reaffirmed by the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools Commission on Colleges.
After he retires from Southwestern, President Schrum and wife, Jane, plan to continue to have a residence in Georgetown.
For more information on President Schrum, visit http://www.southwestern.edu/about/leadership/