The President-elect
Andrea E. Chapdelaine, a visionary leader and champion of the liberal arts, will serve as Conn’s 12th president.
During her first official visit to campus on April 24, President-elect Andrea E. Chapdelaine was welcomed by hundreds of students, faculty and staff in the College Center at Crozier-Williams. After introductory remarks by Board of Trustee Chair Debo P. Adegbile ’91, who co-chaired the 15-member Presidential Search Committee, Chapdelaine took to the podium to address the Conn community for the first time.
“This is such an exciting day and I’m thrilled to be here,” Chapdelaine said. “I am very much looking forward to coming to an institution that is fully focused on a rich undergraduate experience, fully dedicated to the liberal arts and putting it into action for our students.”
A strategic leader and compassionate community builder, Chapdelaine has more than 30 years of experience in higher education, having served as a professor, dean, provost and, since 2015, president of Hood College in Frederick, Maryland. She was unanimously appointed by the Board of Trustees to serve as a Connecticut College’s 12th president in March after an extensive and inclusive search process. Her tenure will officially begin July 1.
“President-elect Chapdelaine has a track record of success in consensus-building and sound financial stewardship, as well as a clear understanding of both the complexities of and possibilities for liberal arts colleges and their students,” Adegbile wrote in his announcement of Chapdelaine’s selection to the campus community.
“In this pivotal moment for Conn and for higher education broadly, she inspires enthusiasm for what our College can do as we build on our 113-year-old mission and more recent achievements. She has the vision, experience and management capabilities to lead our College community forward.”
At Hood, Chapdelaine led two ambitious strategic planning initiatives and bolstered academic programs, increased enrollment and retention, expanded experiential learning opportunities, established new structures and processes for fostering inclusivity and full participation, improved compensation and benefits for faculty and staff, enabled critical investments in campus facilities and strengthened the institution’s financial position. In 2017, she launched Hood’s first comprehensive campaign in more than 25 years, which met 150% of its original goal, and she secured a $54 million gift, the largest in the institution’s history. During her tenure, Hood’s endowment grew by 103%.