Logo
facts about susan hockfield.html

14 Facts About Susan Hockfield

facts about susan hockfield.html1.

Susan Hockfield was born on March 24,1951 and is an American neuroscientist who served as the 16th president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 2004 to 2012.

2.

Susan Hockfield is a director of Break Through Cancer, Cajal Neuroscience, Fidelity Non-Profit Management Foundation, Lasker Foundation, Mass General Brigham, Pfizer, Repertoire Immune Medicines, and the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research; a lifetime member of the MIT Corporation; and a board member of the Belfer Center at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.

3.

Susan Hockfield graduated from Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, New York, in 1969.

4.

Susan Hockfield received her bachelor's degree in Biology from the University of Rochester in 1973 and her Ph.

5.

Susan Hockfield was hired by James Watson, who together with Francis Crick had discovered the structure of DNA.

6.

Susan Hockfield received tenure in 1991 and became a full professor of neurobiology in 1994; soon thereafter she began to take on positions of administrative leadership.

7.

MIT raised nearly $3 billion during Susan Hockfield's presidency, making it a more successful period of fundraising than any prior administration.

8.

Susan Hockfield encouraged work that crossed disciplines, departments, and schools within MIT and that fostered collaborations among the Boston region's academic medical centers and educational institutions.

9.

Susan Hockfield announced her intention to develop a multidisciplinary, Institute-wide center focused on energy.

10.

In 2009, US President Barack Obama gave an address on US energy policy at MIT, and Susan Hockfield gave him the first tour of an MIT laboratory by a sitting US president.

11.

Susan Hockfield encouraged concerted faculty research in an area she considered vital to American national interests: manufacturing.

12.

Susan Hockfield guided enhancements to student life and learning, including the construction of a new residence for graduate students and a restoration of MIT's oldest building into an undergraduate residence with expanded space and amenities to foster student collaboration.

13.

Susan Hockfield led a comprehensive strategic planning process for campus development and worked to foster the innovation cluster around Kendall Square, which at the end of her presidency was home to more biotech and life sciences companies per square mile than anywhere in the world.

14.

Susan Hockfield pioneered the use of monoclonal antibody technology in brain research and discovered a gene that plays a critical role in the spread of cancer in the brain.