Eileen Abel, PhD, Named Executive Director of the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø at Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø

Vice President of Academic Affairs at College of Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Will Now Lead ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø’s Newest Regional Higher Education Center

Baltimore, Md. (Nov. 5, 2020) – ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø (ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø) Chancellor Jay A. Perman has appointed Eileen Abel, PhD, as executive director of the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø at Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø (ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM). The appointment comes after an extensive, nationwide search chaired by ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs Joann Boughman, and a search committee which also included local business and community leaders.

Abel, the first full-time executive director named at ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM since the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø took over operations at the center in March 2019, will begin her service on December 1.  She replaces ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM Chief Academic Officer Ben O. Latigo, who had been serving as interim executive director.

Abel has served as Vice President of Academic Affairs at the College of Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø (CSM) since June 2015 and has more than 35 years of experience in higher education.  The college remains a top choice for students in Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø seeking a certificate, associate’s degree, and opportunities to earn and transfer credits to four-year institutions.

Key among her CSM accomplishments have been overseeing the college-to-work pathways in engineering and cyber security with local military facilities; developing internship support for students engaged in research with the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory at the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Center for Environmental Science (UMCES), and working with St. Mary’s County Public Schools to create an early college academy at CSM’s Leonardtown campus for fall 2021. In providing leadership for faculty-led academic departments, the library, tutoring center, and other important divisions, she has managed an overall budget of $22.5 Million.

Before joining CSM, Abel was vice president of academic affairs at Raritan Valley Community College, a regional community college in Somerville, N.J. While there, she provided leadership for faculty-led academic departments, academic program review and assessment, academic support services, career advising, and transfer agreements.

Abel holds a doctorate in English from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where she also earned an M.A. in English. She earned her B.A. (international studies) at the College of Wooster in Ohio.

“A few months ago, I had my first opportunity as chancellor to visit ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM and see firsthand how valuable the center is for students in Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø—and how critical to the region’s innovation leadership. I’m delighted that Eileen Abel will be the center’s next director, expanding its influence and impact,” ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Chancellor Jay A. Perman said. “I’m also grateful to Ben Latigo for his service as ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM’s interim director. I know his excellent stewardship will help Eileen more quickly operationalize an ambitious short- and long-term vision.”

“The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø's overarching goal is to build lives and families and educate citizens—a goal to which I have dedicated my entire professional life with community colleges,” Abel said. “The system’s regional higher education centers offer a unique model of access to bachelor completion and graduate programs, and ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM will soon have the added advantage of a third building, currently under construction, that will offer high tech research opportunities. I look forward to partnering with a committed advisory board, CSM, university partners, and local community leaders in making ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM a vibrant hub for education, research, and collaboration to sustain those lives and families.”

Formerly the Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Higher Education Center (SMHEC), the oldest of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø’s regional higher education centers, ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM became the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø’s third regional higher education center on March 1, 2019. ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM offers more than 40 degree and certificate programs from five ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø institutions (Bowie State University, Salisbury University, Towson University, the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, College Park, and the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Global Campus). ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM also offers more than 50 additional degree and certificate programs offered by four non-ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø institutions. Additionally, four educational partners – the Florida Institute of Technology, Johns Hopkins University, Notre Dame of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø University and Webster University – sponsor degree and certificate programs at ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM.

Programs are primarily offered at the graduate level. These include education, management, systems engineering, engineering, flight test engineering, social work, and more.  Undergraduate programs offered include electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, criminal justice, social work, business, and more. 

ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM has broken ground on a new Academic and Innovation Center, an $87 million, 84,000-square foot academic and research facility that will nearly double the educational footprint of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM, create autonomous systems research space, and spur economic activity and job growth. The new building is scheduled to open in the fall 2021.

“The search committee was thoroughly impressed by Eileen Abel’s credentials, and her existing, strong roots in southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø,” said Boughman, who coordinated the search process with University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, College Park Provost Mary Ann Rankin. “She is known as a highly skilled and amicable leader, ideal qualities for the initial, permanent director of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM in these years as ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø’s newest regional center. I would like to express my appreciation to the search committee for its work of the past several months, and the stewardship over ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM by interim director Dr. Ben Latigo since March 2019.”

ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø regional centers are the result of a visionary partnership between ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø and campus leaders, elected officials, and business professionals.

Established more than 20 years ago, the concept of the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø regional centers is unique nationally: These are not “satellite” campuses of a single university, but rather conveniently and strategically located sites where multiple universities deliver some of their most in-demand undergraduate, graduate, professional degree, and certificate programs. They are nimble, full-service extensions of the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø that respond to meet the educational needs of students and workforce needs of employers and that are—above all—an affordable alternative to traditional 4-year pathways.

The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø regional centers offer degree programs through partner universities that allow students the opportunity to live, work, and study close to home. Students at ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø regional centers are taught by the same professors, take the same courses, and have the same curriculum as those enrolled in the same program at the participating universities and receive their degree from the university where they are enrolled.

The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍøSM is an asset to the Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø community, providing residents, businesses, and local governments with both an educational resource and a hub of economic development.

With entrepreneurial support from numerous programs, including potential venture capital funding from the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø's ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Momentum Fund, the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø stands ready to serve as an engaged partner in support of the emerging research and development ecosystem in Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø.

The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø comprises 12 institutions: Bowie State University; Coppin State University; Frostburg State University; Salisbury University; Towson University; the University of Baltimore; the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, Baltimore; the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, Baltimore County; the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Center for Environmental Science; the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, College Park; the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Eastern Shore; and the University of ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø Global Campus. The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø also includes three regional centers—the Universities at Shady Grove, the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø at Hagerstown, and the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø at Southern ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø—at which ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø universities offer upper-division undergraduate and graduate courses.

Systemwide, student enrollment exceeds 172,000. The ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø and its institutions compete successfully nearly $1.5 billion in external grants and contracts annually. ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø institutions and programs are among the nation's best in quality and value according to several national rankings. To learn more about the ϡȱÁÔÆæÍø, visit .

 

Contact: Mike Lurie
Phone: 301.445.2719
Email: mlurie@usmd.edu