Barbara Schneider named University Distinguished Professor

November 18, 2011

Barbara Schneider, a nationally regarded scholar on education, youth and families, hasĀ beenĀ selected as one ofĀ 11 Michigan State University professors to beĀ named a University Distinguished Professor in 2011.

She was recognized for the honor, which is one of the highest that can be bestowed on a faculty member by the university, during an evening reception on Nov. 17, 2011.

University Distinguished Professors have been recognized nationally and internationally for the importance of their teaching, research and outreach achievements. They are recommended by President Lou Anna K. Simon and approved by the MSU Board of Trustees.

College of Education colleague Deborah Feltz also received the title this year.

Visit WKAR.org to watch videos about this year’s recipients.

Barbara Schneider talks about her work as she becomes a University Distinguished Professor.

Schneider is the John A. Hannah ChairĀ  in the College of Education and the Department of Sociology at MSU. The author of 15 books and more than 100 articles, her research has focused on how the social contexts of schools and families influence the academic and social well being of adolescents as they move into adulthood. One of her current studies, the College Ambition Program (CAP), tests a model for promoting a college-going culture in high schools that encourages adolescents to pursue STEM (science, technology, engineering or mathematics) college majors and occupations.

In the award video, Schneider talks about her experiences being very sick as a child and the hardships she saw other young patients endure.

“It made me realize that the opportunity structure for some families was very different than the opportunities than I had had and I thought I would like to do something to change people’s lives,” she said of her decision to go into education.

Beyond her work at MSU, Schneider also is a senior fellow of the National Opinion Research Center (NORC), where she is the principal investigator of the Center for Advancing Research and Communication in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.

More than 120 MSU faculty members have received the University Distinguished Professor title since 1990. That now includes at least 12 current and former College of Education professors.

Individuals holding the professorship receive, in addition to their salary, a stipend of $5,000 per year for five years to support professional activities.