ATLC2023: ATLANTA CONFERENCE ON SCIENCE AND INNOVATION POLICY
Sue Rosser
Affiliation: San Francisco State University
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Program
Program for Wednesday, May 24th
Bio

Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Sue Rosser is Provost Emerita and Professor Emerita at San Francisco State University.  She was Special Advisor for Research Development and External Partnerships for Academic and Student Affairs at the Chancellor’s Office of the CSU. Before coming to California, she was the Dean of the liberal arts college at Georgia Tech, where she held the endowed Ivan Allen dean’s chair of Liberal Arts and Technology.  She is the author of 14 books and over 140 journal articles on theoretical and applied aspects of women, science, health and technology. Her most recent books are Academic Women in STEM Faculty and Breaking into the Lab:  Engineering Progress for Women in Science.  She has held several grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) including a $3.7 million ADVANCE grant, InTEL:  Interactive Toolkit for Engineering Learning, Bridge to the Future for GIs, and a NSF IT Catalyst ADVANCE grant; she currently is a Visiting Virtual Scholar for the NSF ARC’s Network and has served on the external advisory board for more than a dozen ADVANCE grants.  She was the Senior Program Officer for Women’s Programs at NSF, served as a Clayman Fellow at Stanford, and served on the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Executive Board.  Rosser received her B.A., M.S. and Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.