President Dr. Carriuolo Who Led RIC's Resurgence is Resigning

GoLocalProv News Team

President Dr. Carriuolo Who Led RIC's Resurgence is Resigning

The President of Rhode Island College is resigning. Dr. Nancy Carriuolo who helped turn the college around, bring in private donations and usher in the creation of the state's new nursing school in Providence will be leaving her post. According to high level sources within the College her departure is tied to an on going dispute within the school that carried over to the Governor’s Office.

On Thursday, Carriuolo sent a letter to the RIC community stating that she will leave after the Spring graduation.

In November, a group of faculty and former staff raised questions about her leadership.

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Carriuolo's Tenure

Carriuolo has been the President of RIC since July 2008, after being named the ninth head of the college by the Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education.  

On November 19, fourteen individuals associated with RIC sent a letter to Council Chairman William Foulkes stating “collectively, over the past seven and one-half years, we have observed the College we care so much about deteriorate to such an extent that it barely resembles the spirited, student-focused, highly productive institution to which we always enjoyed coming to work – and to which members of the College community gave freely of their time and treasure.”

The following statement was issued by the Office of the Postsecondary Commissioner today:

“Rhode Island College has a long and proud tradition of serving the community and the state as Rhode Island’s oldest public institution and a leading regional college,” Carriuolo said. “It has been a pleasure and a privilege to serve as President for the past eight years. RIC serves thousands of Rhode Island students each year, and I am honored to have been a part of their educational journey.”

Bill Foulkes, Chair of the Council on Postsecondary Education, commented: “The Council is grateful for the work President Carriuolo has done to expand diversity and grow the infrastructure at the institution,” adding, “RIC has a strong reputation for academic excellence, especially in the fields of Education, Nursing, and Social Work, and the Council is eager to find a leader who can build on President Carriuolo’s work and advance the college’s mission.”

Foulkes went on to say: “Dr. Carriuolo has overseen dramatic improvements to the RIC campus, including the renovation of the new arts center known as Alex and Ani Hall and the launch of the Langevin Center for Design, Innovation and Advanced Manufacturing. Under her leadership, RIC has expanded both the curriculum and the physical footprint of the School of Nursing and boosted outreach to the Rhode Island community, most notably through its innovative partnership with the Central Falls School District.”

In January of 2015, GoLocal recognized Carriuolo as the Woman of the Year for her leadership at the college and in Rhode Island.

Read the write up below -- from December 2014

In a year that saw Rhode Island College break ground on both a new nursing school, and a new state-of-the-art arts facility, among other ground-breaking achievements, GoLocal has named RIC President Dr. Nancy Carriuolo Woman of the Year for 2014.  

In December, Dr. Carriuolo joined with the presidents from Brown and URI to break ground on South Street Landing, a public/private redevelopment project at the corner of Providence’s South and Eddy Streets that will include the shared R.I. Nursing Education Center.  

The multi-million dollar project will be a shared facility between the RIC and URI nursing programs, as well as Brown University offices, graduate student housing and a parking garage. The nursing education center will feature 133,000 square feet of shared simulation labs, clinical teaching labs, mock hospital areas and classrooms, as well as offices that represent a significant upgrade in teaching technology and learning environments.

“Rhode Island College is proud to collaborate on this historic collaboration between the public and private sectors," said Dr. Carriuolo.  "South Street Landing, and in particular the Rhode Island Nursing Education Center, will help our state grow the educated workforce it needs to meet the changing needs of its number-one industry sector: health care."

Having served at the helm of RIC since 2008, Dr. Carriuolo oversaw another big advancement for the College in 2014 -- the grand opening of $17 million Alex and Ani Hall this past September

The 52,600-square-foot art hall represents a significant renovation of the college's original building, which was constructed in 1958. The spacious, light-filled rehab included state-of-the art studios, classrooms, computer labs, presentation areas and outdoor work courts, topped with a copper-wrapped second story.

“RIC has always been a hub for art-making in Rhode Island, but now we have a space that celebrates that role," said Dr.Carriuolo at the opening, noting that RIC art program graduates have gone on to work at such notable companies as Boeing, National Geographic and Walt Disney Animation.

Big RIC Year Under Carriuolo

Under Carriuolo's direction, RIC oversaw a number of diverse educational and community offerings in 2014.

On the political front, the visit by President Barack Obama in the fall-- which saw lines wrapped around the block to get tickets -- was one of the many highlights of Dr. Carriuolo's year.  

The college hosted an impressive schedule of forums in 2014 as part of its American Democracy Project, headed up by the equally impressive RIC professors Dr. Kay Israel and Valerie Endress -- which included former President Clinton advisor Ira Magaziner, now Vice Chairman and Chief Executive, Office of the Clinton Health Access Initiative, serving as keynote speaker at RIC for “Putting Health Care Reform in Context: A Civil Discussion,” in November.

From politics to environmental policy, Dr. Carriuolo oversaw the unveiling of RICs new outdoor Bee Education Center in October, which will serve as a hub for programming to promote the honeybee’s crucial role in crop production and solutions to the alarming decline of the U.S. honeybee population.  The center will be part of RIC Assistant Professor of Biology Geoffrey Stilwell’s federally funded Honeybee Study, which will develop strategies to increase the state’s honeybee population.

To kick off the new year in 2015, the Rhode Island-Israel College Consortium (Project RIICC), an inter-institutional partnership with RIC and two higher education institutions in Israel – Beit Berl Academic College (BBC) and Oranim Academic College of Education (OAC) – will see an international conference held in Israel in early January entitled “Not in My Backyard: Inter-cultural Inclusion in Educational Systems and in Society,” featuring presentations by RIC faculty.

Project RIICC was initiated in 2011 by Dr. Carriuolo when she traveled to Israel on a group trade mission led by Governor Chafee. “During my visits, I talked with Israeli faculty and administrators about the ways in which RIC and their own institutions might collaborate for the benefit of both,” said Carriuolo. “The trip unearthed numerous possibilities.”

While Dr. Carriuolo might be GoLocal's Woman of the Year for 2014, we expect to see much more from the RIC president -- and RIC -- in the years to come. 


New England College Super Rankings 2014

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