Professorships will further enhance academic excellence, retain and recruit top faculty, and inspire students
There are 54 endowed professorships at RIT, which include five new professorships recently announced by President Bill Sanders. Once these positions are named, the professors will receive a medallion like this during an installation ceremony.
The creation of five new endowed professorships, together valued at $15 million, was announced Sept. 26 during the inauguration of the university’s 11th president, Bill Sanders.
“Endowed professorships are important vehicles to retain and recruit our best faculty, formally and publicly acknowledge their excellence, and provide discretionary funds to allow them to take risks in research, enhance their teaching, and inspire students,” said Sanders.
The new endowed professorships are:
The Budington Family Professorship, which will support a faculty member in the College of Engineering Technology, is funded by Board of Trustees member Jonathan Budington ’91 (graphic communications) and his wife, Susannah Budington, to retain and recruit top faculty.
The Jeffrey K. Harris Professorship will support a faculty member who exhibits multidisciplinary strategic thinking to solve important research challenges and advance RIT’s unique approach to multidisciplinary education in ways that are important to the university’s mission. It is funded by Jeffrey Harris ’75 (photographic sciences), past chair of RIT’s Board of Trustees, and his partner, Joyce Pratt, chair of RIT’s College of Liberal Arts National Council.
The Ludwick Family Professorship will support the university’s strategic objective of recruiting and retaining distinguished scholars and teachers. It is funded by Worth Ludwick ’78 (MBA); her husband, Andy Ludwick; and their family, via the Santa Rita Foundation.
The Frank and Ruth Sklarsky Professorship will initially support a faculty member whose research focus is in artificial intelligence, while future appointees will address critical emerging topics in science and technology. It is funded by Frank Sklarsky ’78 (business administration accounting), vice chair of RIT’s Board of Trustees, and his wife, Ruth Sklarsky.
The Leo C. and Margaret J. Williams Professorship will support a faculty member in the College of Science. It is funded by Anna Williams, who is the mother of Molly Roesch, a 2023 graduate of RIT’s chemistry program, to honor her parents and Roesch’s grandparents.
“Great universities are built by visionaries—faculty who imagine, create, and innovate—and by donors whose generosity makes that work possible,” said Phil Castleberry, vice president for University Advancement. “Endowed professorships unite these two forces, giving faculty the support to pursue bold ideas and students the chance to learn from world-class scholars. We are deeply grateful to our donors for investing in people, in discovery, and in the future of RIT.”
Over time, these professorships will be awarded to current or new faculty based on their demonstrated academic excellence. Each of the new professorships, once approved by RIT’s Board of Trustees, will be endowed at $3 million, for a total of $15 million. RIT now has 54 endowed professorships.