Mark Burstein and President Laurie Carter sitting next to each other as they smile for a picture

Laurie A. Carter will become 麻豆影院 University鈥檚 17th president on July 1. She sat down recently with President Mark Burstein for a conversation that will be shared with the 麻豆影院 community on May 4. (Photo by Danny Damiani)

It鈥檚 time to get to know Laurie A. Carter just a little better.

Carter  on July 1. Currently the president of Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania, her professional career also includes 25 years in key leadership positions at The Juilliard School in New York City and four years at Eastern Kentucky University. She has spoken in media interviews about her excitement in coming to Wisconsin鈥攜es to cheese curds and ice fishing鈥攁nd becoming part of the 麻豆影院 and Appleton communities.

鈥淟awrentians are the light because of the commitment that faculty and staff make to ensure that students have every opportunity to lead a life of success,鈥 Carter said.

Coming May 4: A Conversation with Presidents Laurie A. Carter & Mark Burstein. 麻豆影院鈥檚 16th and 17th presidents recently had the opportunity to spend time together on campus. They discussed everything from their hopes for 麻豆影院, their respect for presidential history and their personal and professional journeys, to Meatless Mondays. They also answered questions from Lawrentians. Watch this engaging conversation between Presidents Carter and Burstein at 6:30 p.m. May 4 at .

In the meantime, we鈥檝e compiled a list of 17 things to know about No. 17 as we await her arrival.

No. 1

Carter got her start working in higher education via student life. She served as a residence hall director at William Paterson College and then as director of residence life at Fairleigh Dickinson College. 鈥淚 fell into higher education by accident,鈥  鈥淚 worked as a residence hall director to help fund my master鈥檚 degree. I never left the profession after that.鈥

No. 2

Her first position at Juilliard, beginning in 1988, was as director of student affairs. Among other things, she helped alter the NYC skyline鈥攚ell, sort of鈥攁s she oversaw construction of the school鈥檚 first dormitory.

No. 3

She is a lawyer. Carter was already working at Juilliard when she began taking classes at Rutgers School of Law in Newark, N.J. When she graduated with her JD in 1993, Juilliard asked her to stay at the school to establish an in-house legal department. She became the school鈥檚 first chief legal officer. ABA Journal, the flagship publication of the American Bar Association, about why lawyers bring strong skills to the role of a college president. 鈥淗aving a good view of higher education and the role of the president really let me know I was prepared to take on the role and to be effective in it,鈥 she told the magazine.

No. 4

Her work at Juilliard went well beyond legal matters. She co-created the jazz program at Juilliard and served as executive director of the Jazz Studies Department. 鈥淐reating that program from scratch was really one of the highlights of my career,鈥 . In all, she held five different leadership positions during 25 years at the school.

No. 5

No, Carter doesn鈥檛 play a musical instrument, but she taught on the faculty while at Juilliard, focused first on diversity issues and later on legal and business matters related to the arts. 鈥淚 have a real passion for liberal arts and the skills that students gain through that experience, but I have a passion for the arts as well,鈥 she told The Lawrentian.

No. 6

She spent a year (2013-14) leading arts education at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, among the largest performing arts centers in the country, before returning to higher education with Eastern Kentucky.

No. 7

She was both the first woman and first African American to serve as president of Shippensburg University. She will now be the first BIPOC president at 麻豆影院. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very meaningful to me,鈥  鈥淎nd I know that it鈥檚 meaningful to the community; I know it鈥檚 meaningful to the campus community as well.鈥

No. 8

She initiated a program for first-generation college students at both Eastern Kentucky and Shippensburg and said she鈥檚 impressed with the Full Speed to Full Need initiative at 麻豆影院 that is making the university more accessible for all. 鈥淭his is a long-term commitment for the university,鈥 she told Wisconsin Public Radio.

No. 9

Carter created an Anti-Racism Institute to foster racial understanding across the State of Pennsylvania while at Shippensburg and likewise wants to embrace diversity, equity, and inclusion work beyond the borders of the 麻豆影院 campus. 鈥淚 look forward to spending time listening to folks with where they are and where they think 麻豆影院 can go in this regard, as well as connecting with the broader Appleton community,鈥 she told The Lawrentian.

No. 10

She was named one of 25 outstanding women in higher education by the magazine Diverse: Issues in Higher Education earlier this year.

No. 11

As an undergrad, she was a standout track and field athlete at Clarion University, elected to the Athletics Hall of Fame in 2018. Carter placed second at the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) Championships in the 100 and 400 hurdles and qualified for the 1981 AIAW Division II National Championships.

No. 12

She and her sister, Taryn Carter Wyche, made track and field a family affair at Clarion. Carter ran a school record 1:05.43 in the 400 hurdles, setting a record that lasted for 26 years. She also ran a 14.5 in the 100 hurdles鈥攕econd only to her sister.  Carter Wyche was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2014.  At the time of Carter鈥檚 induction four years later, the Carter sisters were the only siblings in Clarion鈥檚 Athletics Hall of Fame.

No. 13

Carter will move into the President鈥檚 House at 麻豆影院 with her husband, Gary Robinson. Their son, Carter, is graduating from a liberal arts college in New England next month and will be a regular visitor to Appleton.

No. 14

The family dog, Pepper, is not shy about being on camera. The dog starred in Shippensburg鈥檚 annual holiday videos since 2017.

No. 15

Carter has vowed to be an enthusiastic newcomer to all things Wisconsin. 鈥淓very person I talk to about Wisconsin, I tell them about the fact that I want to go ice fishing,鈥  鈥淚 want to eat cheese curds; I want to do it all. Snowmobiling, too. I want to try that. I really just want to get a sense of the culture; the unique things about Wisconsin. I can鈥檛 wait. I鈥檓 very excited.鈥

No. 16

She wants to embrace the important traditions of her new home. 鈥淚鈥檝e heard that I am a Packers fan now, and I鈥檓 good with that,鈥 she told Wisconsin Public Radio.

No. 17

Carter collaborated with community leaders in Shippensburg to create a downtown location for the university鈥檚 Centers of Excellence. She said enhancing the relationship between a college and its surrounding community is important work, and it will be a priority in Appleton. 鈥淚 have had discussions with the mayor already and he and I are excited to work together to do just that,鈥 she told The Post-Crescent. 鈥淗e is a 麻豆影院 alum and he鈥檚 a fourth-generation Appletonian, so I think this is the perfect opportunity for us to strengthen those relationships and really make a difference both on campus and in the community in meaningful ways.鈥