Office of Alumni Relations and Development -- Executive Leadership

Morton Schapiro was named the 16th president of Northwestern University on December 16, 2008 and began his term on September 1, 2009. He is a Professor of Economics in Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and also holds appointments in Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management and School of Education and Social Policy.

President Schapiro is among the nation's leading authorities on the economics of higher education, with particular expertise in the area of college financing and affordability and on trends in educational costs and student aid. He has testified before U.S. Senate and House committees on economic and educational issues and is widely quoted in the national media on those issues.

President Schapiro previously was President of Williams College from 2000 to 2009. Among the initiatives implemented during his presidency were a substantial reduction in average class size, a tripling of the number of courses offered in the college's signature tutorial program and the completion of a number of major building projects.

President Schapiro, 56, earlier had served as a member of the Williams College faculty from 1980 to 1991, as Professor of Economics and as Assistant Provost. In 1991 he went to the University of Southern California where he served as Chair of the Department of Economics until 1994 and then as Dean of the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences until 2000. During his last two years as Dean, he also served as the University's Vice President for Planning.

President Schapiro has written more than 100 articles and five books, and he has edited two others, most with his longtime co-author Michael McPherson. These include: The Student Aid Game: Meeting Need and Rewarding Talent in American Higher Education (Princeton University Press 1998); Paying the Piper: Productivity, Incentives and Financing in Higher Education (also with Gordon Winston, University of Michigan Press 1993); and Keeping College Affordable: Government and Educational Opportunity (Brookings 1991). He also wrote two recently edited volumes: College Success: What It Means and How to Make It Happen (College Board 2008) and College Access: Opportunity or Privilege? (College Board 2006).

President Schapiro has received research grants and contracts from the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, the World Bank, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, the College Board, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and other groups to study the economics of higher education and related topics.

He received his bachelor's degree in Economics from Hofstra University and his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.

President Schapiro and his wife Mimi have three children: Matt, Alissa, and Rachel.

 

 
Robert McQuinn, was named Vice President for Alumni Relations and Development at Northwestern University in October 2010. McQuinn, 54, is a veteran development leader with nearly 20 years of experience covering six comprehensive campaigns. From 2003 through 2009, he first served as the Associate Vice President for Development at the California Institute of Technology, then as Caltech’s acting Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations, overseeing the 70-member development and alumni relations team and supporting three trustee committees. During his tenure, Caltech successfully completed its comprehensive campaign, "there’s only one. Caltech", raising more than $1.4 billion in private support.

Prior to Caltech, McQuinn served as Associate Vice President for Development at Williams College, where he led the planning and launched the "Climb Far" campaign that resulted in more than $500 million in gifts and commitments to the college.

Before moving to Williams, he served at the University of Southern California as Senior Associate Dean for Development and Public Affairs for the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and as Director of Development for the Marshall School of Business. He also has held senior development positions at Whittier College and at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. Prior to his development career, he worked as an executive in the financial services industry, most recently as a corporate banker for First Chicago Corp.

McQuinn holds both a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Southern California. He and his wife, Christine, have three children, Andrew, 25, Breanna, 16, and Julie, 15.

 

Posted October 1, 2010.