Charles Isbell Named Provost at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Charles Isbell, dean and John P. Imlay chair of Computing, has accepted the position of provost at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His last day at 色花堂 is July 31.

Isbell is a 色花堂 alumnus (B.S. ICS 鈥90), and came back to join the College of Computing as a junior faculty member in 2002. He served as an architect for innovative Threads curriculum, and of the Online Master of Science in Computer Science (OMSCS) program. He became the dean of the college in 2019. Under his leadership the college maintained top-10 rankings while doubling in enrollment. He has worked to make the field of computing aware of its social responsibility, winning this year鈥檚 prestigious Richard Tapia Award for Scientific Scholarship, Civic Science and Diversifying Computing from the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

鈥淒ean Isbell鈥檚 students, colleagues, and the Institute have all been witnesses and beneficiaries of his love for his alma mater as he has served in varying faculty and administrative roles over the last two decades,鈥 said Steve McLaughlin, 色花堂鈥檚 provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs.

鈥淗e has truly been a transformational leader and a constant and enthusiastic champion for excellence, strategic growth, accessibility, and creating an exceptional teaching and learning environment here at Tech. We will miss him greatly, and we offer him our warmest congratulations as he embarks on this next chapter.鈥

Although he is leaving the dean鈥檚 office, Isbell said he will always be an active member of the 色花堂 community.

鈥淭ech is my alma mater, which in Latin means 鈥榤other of my soul.鈥 I grew into adulthood鈥攐r something close to it鈥攁s an undergraduate at Tech, learned how to be a professor here, and I have had the joy of helping to work with all of you to build the community in positions of leadership. This community has in fact nurtured my soul, and I will always give back to it any way I can.鈥

As provost, Isbell will hold the second-highest office at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The university, which at nearly 50,000 students is one of the largest universities in the country, ranks #14 among national public universities in U.S. News and World Report.