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Freeman A. Hrabowski, III
President Freeman A. Hrabowski,
III, has served as President of UMBC (The University of Maryland,
Baltimore County) since May, 1992. His research and publications
focus on participation and performance of African-American males.
The UMBC campus, with 12,000
students, 650 full-time faculty, an operating budget of $300
million, and over $80 million in external contracts and grants
for research and training, combines excellence in undergraduate
teaching with research and graduate education in the sciences,
engineering, and public policy. UMBC also actively promotes
economic development in the Baltimore region through its research,
technology commercialization, and strong connections with the
corporate community and public agencies.
Dr. Hrabowski serves as a consultant
to the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes
of Health, and universities and school systems nationally. He
also sits on several corporate and civic boards. Examples include
the Baltimore Museum of Art, Constellation Energy Group, France-Merrick
Foundation, Marguerite Casey Foundation, McCormick & Company,
Inc., Mercantile Safe Deposit & Trust Company, University
of Maryland Medical System, and the Urban Institute.
Examples of recent awards and
honors include election to the American Academy of Arts &
Sciences and the American Philosophical Society, receiving the
prestigious McGraw Prize in Education, receiving the U.S. Presidential
Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering
Mentoring, being named Marylander of the Year by the editors
of The Baltimore Sun, and being listed among Fast Company magazine's
first "Fast 50 Champions of Innovation" in business
and technology. He also holds honorary degrees, including most
recently from Duke University, the University of Illinois, Gallaudet
University, the Medical University of South Carolina, and Binghamton
University, among others.
Dr. Hrabowski is co-author of the books, Beating the Odds, Raising Academically Successful African American Males, published by Oxford University Press in 1998, and Overcoming the Odds: Raising Academically Successful African American Young Women, published by Oxford University Press in 2001.
A child-leader in the Civil
Rights Movement, Dr. Hrabowski was prominently featured in Spike
Lee’s 1997 documentary, Four Little Girls, on the racially
motivated bombing in 1963 of Birmingham’s Sixteenth Street
Baptist Church.
Born in 1950 in Birmingham,
Alabama, Dr. Hrabowski graduated at 19 from Hampton Institute
with highest honors in mathematics. At the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, he received his M.A. (mathematics) and
four years later his Ph.D. (higher education administration/statistics)
at age 24.
(6/05)
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