Alexis Abramson Named Dean of Thayer School of Engineering

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The mechanical engineer will be the second woman to lead Thayer in 150 years.

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Alexis Abramson
Alexis Abramson will be the second woman to lead the engineering school. (Photo by Hilary Bovay)
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Alexis Abramson, a mechanical engineer and a leader in sustainable energy technology, has been named dean of Thayer School of Engineering. She will begin work on June 17.

Currently the Milton and Tamar Maltz Professor of Energy Innovation at Case Western Reserve University and co-director of the university’s Great Lakes Energy Institute, Abramson will be the second woman to serve as Thayer’s dean. The first, Elsa Garmire, the Sydney E. Junkins 1887 Professor of Engineering Emerita, led the engineering school from 1995 to 1997.

“Alexis Abramson brings deep expertise in sustainable energy and in building partnerships that connect academic research with public and private efforts to find solutions to urgent challenges,” says President Philip J. Hanlon ’77. “I am delighted that she will be Thayer’s next leader.”

Abramson says she is “honored and enthusiastic about joining the Thayer community and embarking on this exciting journey together.”

“Thayer School of Engineering delivers a model of education, research, and entrepreneurship unlike any other in higher education. With the growth planned ahead, we will become even better positioned to tackle society’s challenges and ensure that our students achieve their full potential,” she says.

Provost Joseph Helble, who served as dean of Thayer for nearly 13 years before being appointed provost in 2018, calls the selection “an inspired choice.”

“She is an accomplished engineering scholar who understands not only how to develop technology, but to connect that technology to sound public policy, and to deploy that technology through commercialization. Her experience as a teacher and scholar, a leader of a major energy research institute, and someone who has worked on policy in the federal government make her the right leader to grow Thayer’s impact in the world,” he says.

Abramson takes the helm at Thayer during a time of expansion. In December 2018, Dartmouth broke ground on a $200 million building on the west end of campus to be shared by the engineering school, the Department of Computer Science, and the Magnuson Center for Entrepreneurship—a facility that will allow Thayer to double its faculty. At the same time, the College plans to build a new home nearby for the Arthur L. Irving Institute of Energy and Society, with which Thayer is an integral partner.

Helble says Abramson brings a commitment to equity and inclusivity that will help Thayer continue to draw women and other underrepresented students to engineering. During Helble’s term as dean, Thayer became, in 2016, the first comprehensive research institution to award more bachelor’s degrees in engineering to women than to men. Since then, about 40 percent of graduating engineering majors have been women—twice the national average.

Abramson has been a member of the faculty at Case Western Reserve University since 2003. Her primary research centers on developing techniques for thermal characterization of nanostructures, the design and synthesis of unique nanomaterials for use in alternative energy applications, and virtual energy audits for building energy efficiency. She served as interim chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from 2017 to 2018.

Since 2013, she has been director and then co-director of the university’s Great Lakes Energy Institute (GLEI), whose mission is to promote technological advances in sustainable energy. Working with the northeast Ohio community, she has also been a leader in developing strategies to accelerate technology commercialization at universities and research institutions. Since 2018, she has served as technical adviser for Breakthrough Energy Ventures, the $1 billion energy innovation fund launched by Bill Gates to combat human-driven climate change.

During the Obama administration, she served as chief scientist and manager of the Emerging Technologies Team at the Department of Energy’s Building Technologies Office, which invests in the research, development, and commercialization of energy-efficient and cost-effective building technologies.

A graduate of Tufts University, where she majored in mechanical engineering, earning both a bachelor’s and a master’s of science, Abramson received her PhD in mechanical engineering from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2002.

Abramson will be taking over for Professor of Engineering Laura Ray, who has served as interim dean of Thayer since Helble began serving as provost in fall 2018. “I’m grateful to Laura for her adept leadership, which has kept Thayer moving forward through this transition,” Helble says. “I’m also grateful to the search committee for their hard work.”

The committee was chaired by Eric Fossum, the John H. Krehbiel Sr. Professor for Emerging Technologies, who serves as associate provost for entrepreneurship and technology transfer and director of Thayer’s PhD Innovation Program.

“Our search attracted wonderfully strong and diverse talent,” says Fossum. “Alexis stood out as a well-cited scholar experienced in entrepreneurial activity, like many of our faculty, and as a seasoned leader who knows how to build bridges across disciplines.”

In addition to Fossum, the search committee included Margie Ackerman, an associate professor of engineering; Duane Compton, dean of the Geisel School of Medicine; Christine Cook, chief financial and administrative officer at Thayer; Anne Gelb, the John G. Kemeny Parents Professor of Mathematics; Ashifi Gogo, Thayer ’10, the first graduate of Thayer’s PhD Innovation Program and founder and CEO of Sproxil, Inc., a product-verification tech company; Liz Lempres ’83, Thayer ’84, a member of the Thayer Board of Advisors and the Dartmouth Board of Trustees; Lee Lynd, the Paul E. and Joan H. Queneau Distinguished Professor in Environmental Engineering Design; Terrance McGuire, Thayer ’82, chair of the Thayer Board of Advisors; Petra Bonfert-Taylor, a professor of engineering; Kristen Virkler ’18, Thayer ’19, president of Dartmouth’s chapter of the National Society of Black Engineers; and John Zhang, a professor of engineering. The search firm Isaacson Miller assisted the committee in the search.

Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.

Hannah Silverstein