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Skip to content About Arts & SciencesMenu Close Explore AcademicsDepartments & ProgramsMajors & MinorsGraduate Degrees and ProgramsStudent ResourcesGetting StartedAcademic PlanningScholarships, Fellowships & AwardsExperiential LearningGraduation & Post-Graduate AdvisingForms & PoliciesOffice of Graduate Studies in Arts & SciencesThe AmpersandAwards & NotablesCampus LifeHold That Thought podcastThe Ampersand Magazine Our EventsCommencement Performances & ShowsOur PeopleFaculty DirectoryStaff DirectoryFaculty & Staff ResourcesAwards & RecognitionCommittees & CouncilsFaculty Activity ReportingTenure & PromotionGraduate Student ResourcesOffice of Graduate Studies in Arts & SciencesDegrees and ProgramsGraduate AdmissionsArts & Sciences Strategic PlanThere are no boundaries to what you can achieve with a degree from Arts & Sciences.Apply TodayHomeAbout Arts & SciencesOur Alumni NetworkAcademic CalendarHow to giveContact Us Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SWhat is Arts & Sciences?Our ampersand is a great way to understand Arts & Sciences. We know that breakthroughs - scientific or creative, academic or personal - happen when ideas collide. The "and" in Arts & Sciences is what we believe in, and what we aspire to create every day for our students, faculty, and the world we live in. Mission & StructureMeet Our LeadershipHistorical Highlightsat the intersection of it all Arts & Sciences is the heart of Washington University and comprises the core disciplines of the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Our school includes departments ranging from English and Mathematics to Political Science and Anthropology. In addition to departments of international renown, our programs and research centers provide a platform for faculty and student collaboration across the traditional academic subject areas, creating new interdisciplinary studies. our mission: The mission of Arts & Sciences is to advance innovative research that reaches a broad public and fosters new discoveries, and to promote excellence in undergraduate and graduate education, preparing students for civic responsibility, work, and life through impactful collaborations with the St. Louis community and across the world. our history: To learn more about the history of Arts & Sciences and see a listing of our past Deans, please visit this page. our strategic plan: In December 2021, Dean Feng Sheng Hu announced a strategic vision for elevating Arts & Sciences over the next 10 years. Arising from scores of conversations, hundreds of voices, and ideas from across the university, the Arts & Sciences Strategic Plan — A Transformative Decade: Convergence, Creativity, Community — presents a roadmap for advancing our scholarship, educational opportunities, and impact within the university and beyond its bounds.  As we look toward 2030, we envision a transformed school that will rise in prominence to serve as a global model for a school of arts and sciences. We will lead innovative developments, advance foundational knowledge and convergent breakthroughs, create solutions for pressing global challenges, and educate a new generation of leaders to shape the future. In short, the decade of Arts & Sciences has begun.    The Faculty of Arts & SciencesThe Faculty of Arts & Sciences is the administrative body that serves and governs all Arts & Sciences faculty and research, as well as the educational divisions detailed below.Our 24 departments, 8 research centers, and more than 12 programs and special initiatives provide students with an interdisciplinary approach to higher education and support our robust research enterprise.Explore our areas of study The College houses our undergraduate studies and serves the largest undergraduate body at Washington University in St. Louis.learn more about the college The Office of Graduate Studies in Arts & Sciences administers and awards all doctoral degrees in Arts & Sciences. It is responsible for all graduate studies policies and procedures.learn more about the Office of Graduate Studies in Arts & Sciences Meet the Leadership of Arts & Sciences Feng Sheng Hu Richard G. Engelsmann Dean of Arts & Sciences [email protected] 314-935-6820 Dean Feng Sheng Hu oversees all aspects of the operations and programs in Arts & Sciences, including strategic planning and implementation; faculty hiring, tenure, and promotion; the appointments of the deans of the College and the Office of Graduate Studies; research, creative activity, and innovation; budget and resource planning; diversity, inclusion, and equity; communications and marketing; alumni relations and advancement; facilities and capital planning; and information technology services.                   Deanna Barch Vice Dean of Research [email protected] 314-935-8729 Professor Barch studies cognitive and language deficits in disorders such as schizophrenia, and the neurobiological mechanisms that contribute to such deficits. Her research includes behavioral, pharmacological, and neuroimaging studies with typical and clinical populations. J. Andrew Brown Vice Dean of Faculty Affairs [email protected] 314-935-7058 Professor Brown's research and teaching interests focus on issues of technology, science, global popular culture, and Latin American cultural identity. Sophia E. Hayes Vice Dean of Graduate Education and ​Professor of Chemistry [email protected] 314-935-4624 The goal of ​Professor Hayes' research group is a basic understanding of the structure and properties of different types of inorganic systems, including semiconductors and other optically and electronically active materials. Erin McGlothlin Vice Dean of Undergraduate Affairs, College of Arts & Sciences [email protected] 314-935-7747 Erin McGlothlin is responsible for the university’s liberal arts curriculum as well as every phase of student life, from admission through graduation and onward to postgraduate success. She is passionate about the value of a liberal arts education and seeks to create challenging, enriching educational experiences for undergraduates across all areas of study. Adia Harvey Wingfield Vice Dean of Faculty Development and Diversity [email protected] 314-935-8660 ​Professor Wingfield specializes in research that examines the ways intersections of race, gender, and class affect social processes at work. William Acree Associate Vice Dean of Graduate Education [email protected] 314-935-5145 William Acree is a transdisciplinary scholar whose research and teaching explore the cultural history of Latin America, the enduring impacts of everyday experiences, and the ways cultural goods and activities inflect public life, politics, and identities. Gary Patti Dean's Fellow for Advancement and Entrepreneurship [email protected] 314-935-3512 Professor Patti's research is focused on metabolism. His laboratory's work spans three complementary themes.  Brett Wick Dean's Fellow for Digital Transformation [email protected] 314-935-6765 Brett Wick’s research interests are in areas related to analysis. Ebba Segerberg Associate Dean and Chief of Staff [email protected] 314-935-7309

Larry Kuykendall Associate Dean of Finance and Administration [email protected] 314-935-6857 Jonathan Cohen ​Assistant Dean of Academic Policy and Director of Administration ​[email protected] (314) 935-7366 24 Nobel Laureates & 6 Pulitzer PrizesExplore our history and achievements1853Washington University in St. Louis FoundedWashington University was conceived by 17 St. Louis business, political, and religious leaders concerned by the lack of institutions of higher learning in the Midwest. Missouri State Senator Wayman Crow and Unitarian minister William Greenleaf Eliot, grandfather of the poet T.S. Eliot, led the effort.1856College of Arts & Sciences FoundedThe College of Arts and Sciences was founded in 1856 as the Collegiate Department of Washington University; it was renamed the College in 1871. In 1923 the name changed to the College of Liberal Arts, and subsequently to the College of Arts and Sciences in 1965.1946One of the greatsPolitical scientist Merle Kling joins the faculty. Kling went on to hold the position of Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences twice and became provost in 1976. The Merle Kling Professorship of Modern Letters is held today by renowned scholar and writer, Gerald Early in the Department of African and African-American Studies.1969Evolution of a programIn fall 1968, as political turbulence rocked the nation, dozens of members of the Association of Black Students confronted administrators in the corridors of Brookings Hall. Chief among their demands was the call to establish a black studies program. The program was founded the following year. In spring 2017, African and African-American Studies (AFAS) became a full department, with ability to confer PhDs, hire its own faculty, and be a primary major for undergraduates. The AFAS program has grown to include more than 30 core and affiliated faculty. 1974"Learning is not a spectator sport"James E. McLeod is hired as an assistant professor of German. McLeod went on to serve as director of African and African-American Studies as well as the Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences and Vice Chancellor for Students. Recognized as one of the university’s most effective leaders, his promise to undergraduate students to be known “by name and by story” lives on. 1986Nobel laureate Rita Levi-MontalciniRita Levi-Montalcini was a professor of biology in Arts & Sciences who conducted groundbreaking research at Washington University in St. Louis from 1947-1977. In 1986, Levi-Montalcini shared the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine with biochemist Stanley Cohen, formerly of Washington University, for breakthroughs in the study of cell growth and development. In her autobiography, “In Praise of Imperfection: My Life and Work,” Levi-Montalcini described her three decades at Washington University as “the happiest and most productive years of my life.”1993A Nobel Prize in EconomicsDouglass C. North is awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences. He declined media interviews on the morning that he received the phone call informing him he had won the prize until after he taught his regularly scheduled class. He shared the award with his colleague Robert Fogel, then an economist at the University of Chicago. During his academic career, which spanned more than 60 years, North pondered complex variations of a simple question: Why do some countries become rich, while others remain poor? 2021Welcome to the Decade of Arts & SciencesIn December 2021, Dean Feng Sheng Hu announced a strategic vision for elevating Arts & Sciences over the next 10 years. The Arts & Sciences Strategic Plan — A Transformative Decade: Convergence, Creativity, Community — defines foundational areas critical to our continued and accelerating success, identifies strategic pillars for growth, and details signature initiatives that will help bring this vision to life. As we look toward 2030, we envision a transformed school that will rise in prominence to serve as a global model for a school of arts and sciences.There are no boundaries to what you can achieve with a degree from Arts & Sciences. Quick LinksExplore AcademicsStudent ResourcesThe AmpersandEventsOur PeopleAbout A&SContactAcademic CalendarA&S ComputingUniversity DirectoryUniversity LibrariesInside ArtSciArts & Sciences Strategic PlanEmployment OpportunitiesCopyright 2024 by:Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. LouisFollow Arts & SciencesInstagramFacebookTwitterLinkedInYouTubeLet your curiosity lead the way.Find out how to apply and get started todayApply Now1 Brookings Drive / St. Louis, MO 63130 / wustl.edu

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