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COLLEGE
NEWS
DR.
COWARD BECOMES NEW DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
Dr.
Raymond Thomas Coward becomes dean of the college effective July
1. He's currently dean of the School of Health and Human Services
and professor of health management and policy, social work and family
studies at the University of New Hampshire (UNH).
At UNH, Coward oversees the fiscal, academic and administrative
operations of the second largest academic unit on campus. The School
of Health and Human Services includes nine departments with graduate
and undergraduate programs in such fields as communication disorders,
family studies, nursing, recreation management and policy. The school
also operates seven revenue generating clinical practices and two
research centers.
"Raymond Coward is a distinguished scholar with significant
administrative experience and we are very pleased that he will join
Penn State," says Rodney A. Erickson, executive vice president
and provost.
A specialist in gerontology, rural health and community services,
he is the author or co-author of seven books, the latest of which
is Aging in Rural Settings: Life Circumstances and Distinctive Features,
published in 1998. He also is author of more than 100 book chapters
and journal articles. He is currently associate editor of the Journal
of Applied Gerontology and was the founding editor of the Journal
of Rural Health. He has been a consultant to and his research has
been funded by such agencies as the National Institute on Nursing,
the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, and the National
Institute on Aging.
Before becoming dean of the School of Health and Human Services,
Coward was the director of the Institute for Gerontology at the
University of Florida where he was a member of the faculty of the
College of Medicine from 1989 to 1997. He also taught at the University
of Vermont from 1978 to 1989, where he was professor of social work
and director of the Social Work program, among other administrative
posts. Before that, he taught at Purdue University from 1975 to
1978, where he also was director of research for the Child Development
Laboratories, and was a senior research associate at the National
Institute of Education.
His primary research interests are in the development, delivery,
and evaluation of health and human services. He has served as an
expert witness and consultant to state and federal agencies and
legislative bodies with responsibilities in social welfare and health
and human services planning. Currently, he is a member of the New
Hampshire "Kids Cabinet" chaired by Gov. Jean Shaheen.
Coward also is a trustee of Wentworth-Douglas Hospital in Dover,
N.H., and serves on the board of directors of Seacoast Healthnet,
a nonprofit agency providing health care intake and referrals to
a network of 200 physicians who provide free or minimal-cost care
to persons without health insurance.
Among his many honors and awards, Coward has received the Professional
Leadership Award from the National Council on Aging and the Distinguished
Researcher Award from the National Rural Health Association. In
1991, Purdue University named him a Distinguished Alumnus and in
1989, he was the John K. Friesen Lecturer in Gerontology at Simon
Fraser University.
Coward received his bachelor's and master's degrees from the College
of New Jersey in 1968 and 1970, respectively, his Ph.D. from Purdue
University in 1974 and a Master's of Social Work from McGill University
in 1986. He will be joined in State College by his wife of 32 years,
Andrea, a nurse. Their two children are attending college in Florida
and South Carolina.
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