USC Football Deal for Grad Students and Recent Alumni!

USC Football Tickets

Hello,

This is Chris with USC athletics. We’ve official gone on sale for our 2019 football season! Both Grad Students and alumni that have graduated within the last 2 years are eligible for a buy one get one off deal!

With an offensive coordinator who ran a top 25 offense and our best schedule in over 5 years, we are primed for an exciting year in our newly renovated home.

I’ve worked with individual students to sit with a friend and also with groups of classmates that can take advantage of the BOGO deal and all sit together as a great source of camaraderie and team building.

If you purchase your tickets with me, I’ll give you personal attention to help you with significant discounts and our best seating inventory that you may not find otherwise.

Season ticket holders get the lowest price per game on the market as well as other benefits such as optional beer garden access, access to away and postseason games, and the ability to resell games you cannot attend.

Best regards,

Professor Pedro Garcia

Dear USC Rossier community,

It is with sadness that I report of the passing this weekend of one of our recent faculty members, Pedro Garcia.

The son of educators, Dr. Garcia immigrated to the United States from Cuba when he was 15, one of 14,000 Cuban children relocated through the Catholic Welfare Bureau’s Operation Peter Pan.

He earned his EdD as a Trojan in 1983, and would go on to lead multiple school districts, including Carpinteria, Corona-Norco and, from 2001-08, Nashville schools, where his efforts to improve equity for the city’s Black students often met fierce resistance. Dr. Garcia joined USC Rossier as a professor of clinical education in 2008.

He was often sought out for additional leadership opportunities. In 2003, then-President George W. Bush appointed him to the Presidential Commission on Service and Community Participation. At USC, he served on the Academic Leadership Development Committee, and he was inducted into the Dean’s Superintendents Advisory Group Hall of Fame in 2015.

Dr. Garcia was a mentor and friend to many, and will be missed. More than a consistent presence at the Coliseum, he was a huge football fan having travelled to Los Angeles from Nashville for every home game during his tenure as superintendent.  A 2012 article noted that he had not missed a home game since 1977, which at the time was a 35-year streak!  Dr. Garcia was fiercely proud of our university and I know he would tell us today to Fight On.

Sincerest regards,

Karen Symms Gallagher, Ph.D.

Emery Stoops and Joyce King Stoops Dean

USC Rossier School of Education

Waite Phillips Hall

Los Angeles, CA  90089-0031

Asst: hardison@usc.edu

213.740.5756 (office)

213.821.2158 (fax)

GRANTS AWARDED

The Center for Enrollment Research, Policy and Practice (CERPP) was recently awarded $65,000 by the Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation for college advising services to be provided in the summer to its Dodgers RBI (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities), a baseball and softball youth development program.

The Latest News from Dean Karen Symms Gallagher

The past year has been unlike any other in the long history of USC. We have been beset by controversies, will soon welcome a new president, Carol Folt, and say goodbye to many of the university’s top administrators. We celebrated 100 years of USC Rossier, shared new insights about our school’s proud record of innovation and commitment to improving public education, and prepared more than 800 new graduates for careers of impact.

To these momentous events, I add one more.

After months of careful consideration, I decided not to seek a fifth term as Dean and will transition back to faculty next June when I complete my 20th year as the Emory Stoops and Joyce King Stoops Dean.

It was a difficult decision, but it’s the right one.

It is customary for a USC dean to signal their intent to continue in the job one year before the end of a five-year term. For me, that moment came in January, when I sat down with USC Provost Michael Quick to discuss my future.

I spent the next several months consulting close friends, colleagues and my family. I weighed my accomplishments and the immense satisfactions of my demanding job.

Ultimately, I decided the time was right to open a new chapter for myself and the school I love. With our university on the cusp of its own transformation and Rossier beginning its second century, I believe it makes sense for USC Rossier to begin a search for new leadership.

My last day as dean will be June 30, 2020. After a leave, I will return as a senior research faculty member and pursue some exciting research opportunities.

Early this fall the university will launch the process to find my successor. A member of the provost’s office and a USC dean will assemble a search advisory committee from Rossier’s faculty. An outside search firm will also assist in the search.

I won’t be part of the process, but I will do all I can to support a smooth transition when the next dean is named.

You have my promise, too, that in my remaining time as dean, and in my future role as a professor, I will continue to drive for excellence and equity as the cornerstones of USC Rossier. I’m not done making a difference in education.

Not Done Making a Difference

Dean Gallagher to rejoin faculty in 2020

The dean of USC Rossier decides not to seek fifth term

Karen Symms Gallagher, Dean

Karen Symms Gallagher, Dean

While leading USC Rossier’s centennial celebrations this year, Karen Symms Gallagher was contemplating her own milestone: the 20th year, in 2020, of a transformative tenure as the Emory Stoops and Joyce King Stoops Dean.And she wrestled with a difficult decision: Did she want to go for 25 years?

As is customary for a USC dean approaching the final year of a five-year term, she sat down with Provost Michael Quick in January to discuss whether she wanted another term. The school’s ninth dean and first woman to hold the position, she could pursue a fifth term, unprecedented in the history of the 100-year-old school.

Over the next months, she consulted close friends and colleagues, including other education deans and higher education leaders.

Last week, at a family reunion at Western Washington University, her alma mater in Bellingham, Washington, where she was among a dozen alumni honored, she also discussed the matter with her husband, Pat Gallagher, son Sean and others she sees infrequently because of the demands of the deanship.

They helped her settle the question.

“It was unanimous,” Gallagher recounted in an interview Monday. “They said, ‘We would love to have you back.’ My son said, ‘Think about having more time to be a grandmother.’”

“Emotionally, it’s been really difficult,” she added. “But my family and colleagues of mine outside USC — other deans and presidents — I talked to all of them and decided this would be a good time to transition to the faculty to have more balance in my life.”

After accepting her decision, Quick praised her as “an innovator in her field” and “strong presence in the education profession nationally.” In a letter to Rossier faculty and staff last week, he listed a number of her achievements as dean, including the redesign of the school’s signature EdL program, the impact of the online MAT program and the launch of the Ednovate network of public charter high schools.

The process of finding her successor will take a year — another reason for announcing her decision now. The provost will appoint a faculty committee in the fall to launch a national search.

Gallagher said that announcing her decision not to seek a fifth term feels right, not only from a personal and professional standpoint, but in the context of the changes taking place at the university level: USC President-elect Carol Folt will take office on July 1.

“it’s the right time to announce [my decision],” Gallagher reflected. “Our new president is coming in, and whatever I can do to support Carol Folt I will do. She is going to be great.”

When Gallagher steps down on June 30, 2020, she will take the sabbatical offered all departing deans, and then will transition to the position of senior research faculty. She hopes to develop a program to examine the obstacles facing women aiming for leadership roles in education. “I want to look at the disconnect between who is in our programs — primarily women — and who are the principals, superintendents and community college chancellors,” she said.

And, when she steps into her new role as a member of Rossier’s faculty, she said she will continue to help the school fulfill its mission of advancing educational equity and diversity through practice, policy and research.

“I’m not done,” she said, “making a difference in education.”