December 4, 2017 marked the official appointment of Dr. Ruth Stubblefield Simmons as the 8thPresident of Prairie View A&M University. Simmons assumed the presidency of Texas’ second oldest public institution becoming the first woman to lead the university in its 140-year history. She was named interim president of the university on June 19, assumed the position on July 1 and became the lone candidate for the position on October 20, 2017.
On naming Simmons, Texas A&M System Chancellor John Sharp said he was pleased to see such a high-caliber scholar and gifted administrator leading the Prairie View campus. “The System and Prairie View A&M University are lucky to call Dr. Simmons president of Prairie View A&M,” Chancellor Sharp said. “With administrative experience at a top Ivy League university, a women’s university and a historically black college, Dr. Simmons brings a unique perspective to Prairie View A&M University.”
To paraphrase Grammy Award Singer/Songwriter Lionel Richie, “She’s once, twice, three times a president and is considered among the tops in academic leadership. Simmons first served as 9th President of Smith College, a private liberal arts women's college in Northampton, Massachusetts from 1995-2001. Among her many achievements was the establishment of the ABET-accredited engineering program, the first for the 7-sister college. Next, the Houston native became the 8th president of Brown University in Providence Rhode, Island and the first African American to lead an Ivy League institution. From 2001-2012, this gifted academic leader made tremendous contributions to Brown’s institutional diversity, collaborative research and learning initiatives, faculty support and minority faculty recruitment, undergraduate scholarships.
Prior to the appointment, Simmons had turned down offers to lead other institutions of higher education, but Prairie View A&M University appealed to her because of its history, significance, and mission. Additionally her brother Clarence who was a member of the Prairie View’s Championship Basketball team in the 50’s encouraged her to accept the position.
President Simmons states that her plans for Prairie View A&M University is to focus on time-honored strategies to success that apply to universities everywhere: being concerned about the faculty who are recruited here, the campus experience, and whether we are providing the leadership and internship opportunities that students need. Additionally, my concern is about the reputation of the university in this very competitive world today which is greater than when I was a student. However, the underlying work to move the university to a level of achievement that makes students and alumni proud is the same, and I am committed to include others in this process.
Since 2017, Dr. Simmons has made a significant impact on the university with increased outreach to the alumni, increased external funding including a $10 Million Grant to support students impacted by COVID-19, a $1 Million from Charles Butt, chairman of supermarket chain H-E-B, program changes and visibility of the university throughout the country. She has also enhanced the faculty with a faculty development program and the naming of endowed chairs to include Dr. Melanye Price as an endowed professor in Political Science and involving the alumni at the presidential level with the appointment of Dr. W. Gabriel Selassie, I as the first participant in the PVAMU Visiting Alumni Program. One her stated goals, is to improve the representation of African-Americans in STEM fields. In the wake of the George Floyd’s tragedy, Simmons formed the Center for Racial Justice at the university and has been featured in several news mediums discussing the issue at length.
Simmons’ rise to the Brown presidency has been an extraordinary accomplishment. The 12th child born to sharecroppers in the small East Texas town of Grapeland, Simmons moved with her family to Houston when she was of school age. There her father found employment as a factory worker and her mother worked as a maid; Simmons entered public school. She has written thoughtfully about those years in an autobiographical essay, “My Mother’s Daughter: Lessons I Learned in Civility and Authenticity,” published in the Texas Journal of Ideas, History and Culture (fall/winter 1998). She recently wrote an op-ed article for the Washington Post on "I learned early how to survive racism. Now we all need to learn how to fight it."
With strong family and community support, Simmons continued her education, earning her bachelor’s degree summa cum laude at Dillard University in New Orleans (1967) and her master’s and the Ph.d. in Romance languages and literatures at Harvard University (1970 and 1973). Her effort to understand how her own society could countenance racial cruelty and legally enforced segregation led her to a lifelong interest in humanities and other cultures. She studied in Mexico and France and later served as an interpreter for the U.S. State Department.
Simmons began her academic career at the University of New Orleans as an assistant professor of French and later served as assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts. She moved to California State University in Northridge in 1977 as visiting associate professor of pan-African studies and acting director of international programs. From 1979 to 1983, she was assistant and later associate dean of graduate studies at the University of Southern California.
In 1983 she returned to the East Coast, settling at Princeton University, where she directed Afro-American Studies and rose to become associate dean of the faculty. After two years as provost at Spelman College in Atlanta, Simmons returned to Princeton as vice provost, a position she held until her move to Smith in 1995.
Simmons has worked tirelessly toward opening higher education – particularly elite private institutions – to disadvantaged minorities, a mission she has described as “a matter of national salvation.” At Smith, she established the nation’s first engineering program at a women’s college and started Meridians, a journal focusing on the concerns of minority women. Her achievements in higher education have brought her dozens of honors and awards including Danforth and Fulbright fellowships and nine honorary doctorates.
Simmons has also racked up several personal recognitions along the way to include appointment to the Board of Directors of Dallas Federal Reserve - Houston Branch, the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture and the Museum of Fine Arts-Houston, Square, Inc. , African American Studies at Princeton, Chair of the Board of Directors of the Holdsworth Center for educational support of public schools.
Simmons is the recipient of many honors, including a Fulbright Fellowship to France, the 2001 President’s Award from the United Negro College Fund, the 2002 Fulbright Lifetime Achievement Medal, the 2004 Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill Medal, the Foreign Policy Association Medal, the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, and the Centennial Medal from Harvard University, appointed to the Women's Progress Commemoration Commission by President Bill Clinton.
Simmons is a member of the National Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Council on Foreign Relations, and serves on the boards of Texas Instruments, Chrysler, Mondelez, and Square, as well as a number of non-profit boards. Awarded numerous honorary degrees, she received the Brown Faculty’s highest honor: the Susan Colver Rosenberger Medal in 2011. In 2012, she was named a ‘chevalier’ of the French Legion of Honor and the BET Honors Award for Education, Glamour Woman of the Year Award.
To learn more about Prairie View A&M University, visit www.pvamu.edu.
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