Iowa State University


10-27-97

Contact:
Dan Robinson, Education College, Carver Scholar Selection Committee, (515) 294-9550
Anne Dolan, University Relations, (515) 294-7065

IOWA STATE NAMES MORE CARVER VISITING SCHOLARS

AMES, Iowa -- A former National Science Foundation director and an ISU alumnus who directs a research institute affiliated with the United Negro College Fund will be the fifth and sixth guests of the George Washington Carver Visiting Scholar program at Iowa State University.

Walter Massey, president of Morehouse College, Atlanta, will visit campus April 16-17, 1998. Michael Nettles, professor of education and public policy at the University of Michigan and a 1977 graduate of Iowa State, will be on campus in early fall 1998.

Since 1995, Massey has served as president at Morehouse College, the only historically black, all-male, four-year school in the country. He is a former director of the National Science Foundation, a position to which former president George Bush appointed him. Massey also served as director of Argonne National Laboratory and vice president for research at the University of Chicago.

Massey earned a B.S. degree in physics and math from Morehouse in 1958, and master's and doctorate degrees in physics in 1966 from Washington University, St. Louis. Massey's research has focused on quantum liquids and solids. In his written work, he also has covered science and math education, the role of science in a democratic society, university-industry interactions and technology transfer in the international setting.

In addition to teaching at the University of Michigan, Nettles directs the school's component of the National Center for Postsecondary Improvement, a collaborative venture with Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania; and is executive director of the Frederick Patterson Research Institute, in collaboration with the United Negro College Fund. He directs research projects that look at topics such as equity in testing and assessment; evaluating campus diversity programs; and pay, promotion and tenure equity among college and university faculty.

Previously, he was a senior research scientist in the education policy division of Educational Testing Service, and vice president of assessment for the University of Tennessee system.

Nettles received a B.A. degree in political science from the University of Tennessee in 1976; master's degrees in higher education (1977) and political science (1978) from Iowa State; and a Ph.D. in higher education from ISU in 1980.

The scholars' visits will include at least one public lecture, visits and guest lectures in classes, and informal meetings with students, faculty and administrators. Details of their visits will be announced prior to their arrival on campus.

Iowa State created the Carver visiting scholar program in 1993 to bring professors from under-represented groups to campus. The intent of the program is to broaden students' educational experience and enrich the university environment. The program is funded through a $500,000 endowment.

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Revised 10/28/97