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LSU’s Alexander named new OSU president

F. King Alexander,  Oregon State University president
OSU file
F. King Alexander, Oregon State University president

Salary of $705,000; previously was at Cal State-Long Beach, Murray State

(Update: Adding video, OSU-Cascades involvement)

CORVALLIS, Ore. (KTVZ) -- F. King Alexander, a prominent national advocate for public higher education and the president and chancellor of Louisiana State University, has been appointed Oregon State University’s next president.

Alexander will become OSU’s 15th president on July 1, 2020, replacing Ed Ray, who will step down as president on June 30 after 17 years of leading the university to return to teaching economics.

Oregon State’s Board of Trustees voted unanimously Friday morning to approve Alexander’s appointment and a five-year employment agreement,.

The five-year contract includes a $366,600 base annual salary, $263,400 a year in supplemental compensation from the university foundation, a full benefits package and $75,000 a year in supplemental retirement contributions, vested only if he completes the five years, for a yearly salary of $705,000.

An OSU-Cascades representative said Friday the Bend campus had a student and faculty member on the presidential search committee.

The OSU news release continues below:

“Dr. King Alexander is the right person, educator and higher education leader to carry on the transformative impact that Oregon State University provides throughout our state, nation and world,” said Rani Borkar, chair of OSU’s Board of Trustees. “His leadership will carry forward the university’s significant momentum generated by President Ed Ray.

“Dr. Alexander’s leadership also will continue the university’s commitment to advancing inclusivity, student success, faculty excellence, research discovery, access to higher education for all, and community service throughout Oregon and globally.”

Alexander said he was attracted to OSU because of its record of achievement as a very important land grant university.

“My heart, soul and DNA are as a land grant researcher and educator,” said Alexander, who has experience at a number of nationally prominent land grant universities in addition to LSU, including the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

“Oregon State University’s mission and destiny as an internationally recognized land, sea, space and sun grant university captured me,” Alexander said. “OSU is on the cutting edge of the many critical issues that the world is begging to understand.

“I am honored to be selected as the university’s next president and contribute to the remarkable global impact and momentum within the university that has been propelled by President Ed Ray’s impressive leadership.”

Alexander said he will work to advance OSU’s commitment to inclusive excellence among students, faculty and staff; focus on providing access to an affordable education for all learners; and strive to reduce the burden that students pay to fund their college education.

“As a nation, state and university, we must reduce student debt,” Alexander said. “And we must work together to elevate the value and the opportunity for an excellent public higher education for all learners. To be successful, these efforts will take each of us who care about the future of Oregon. And most certainly, this work has to include greater financial investment in higher education by the Oregon Legislature and nationally by Congress.

“At the same time, it is in our nation’s best interests to advance faculty excellence and support research innovation and growth, and outreach and engagement. Taking on the biggest challenges society faces requires a university with no boundaries and Oregon State’s outstanding record of faculty excellence and cross-disciplinary collaboration.”  

Alexander, 56, was appointed president of LSU in July 2013. Prior to LSU, he served as president of California State University Long Beach from January 2006 to June 2013 and president of Murray State University in Kentucky from September 2001 to December 2005.

While at Long Beach State, Alexander was selected in 2011-12 and 2009-10 as “CSU president of the year” by the more than 440,000 students enrolled in California’s 23 state universities.

Alexander is noted nationally for his strong advocacy of public higher education and has provided Congressional testimony on barriers to equal opportunity for college students, college affordability and the use of federal incentives to help reverse the decline in state support for public higher education.

“While at LSU, I have been fighting for advancing support for public higher education at all of our nation’s public universities, including Oregon State University,” Alexander said. “When I join OSU, I assure you, I will continue that advocacy for all public universities, including Oregon State and LSU.”

Alexander has a Ph.D. in higher education administration from the University of Wisconsin-Madison; a master’s degree in educational studies and comparative education policy from the University of Oxford; and a bachelor’s degree in political science from St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, where he was a member of the men’s basketball team.

He and his wife, Shenette, have three adult daughters, Kylie, Savannah and Madison.

“Shenette and I have greatly enjoyed our time and the friendships and opportunities we have experienced at LSU, in Baton Rouge and throughout Louisiana,” Alexander said. “As we look forward, we are excited for Oregon and Corvallis to be our new home where we can contribute and make a difference.

“We are very excited to become Oregonians and members of Beaver Nation. I look forward to collaborating with OSU students, faculty, staff, donors, stakeholders and community partners to continue to advance this remarkable university.

“I also am committed to work in partnership with Gov. Kate Brown, legislators, Oregon’s federal delegation, business and community leaders, and higher education and K-12 leaders to advance the economy, learning and opportunity for all Oregonians.”

Higher education is changing across the nation and the world, Alexander said.

“In the 21st century, the best public universities will not necessarily be those with the largest enrollments, but the universities and colleges that provide an excellent, affordable, accessible and compelling education for all learners where and when students want to learn. They will be universities that prioritize and excel at research and outreach. And universities that are invested in by appropriate levels of state, federal, donor and stakeholder support.”

Alexander’s appointment concludes a national search that drew more than 60 applicants and involved a community-based process that helped develop a list of presidential attributes that guided a recruitment process and interviews by a 15-person search committee, a 25-person stakeholder group and OSU’s Board of Trustees.

In addition to serving as LSU’s chancellor and president, Alexander’s position oversees the LSU Ag Center; Pennington Biomedical Research Center; LSU Health Sciences Center Shreveport; LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans; LSU Alexandria, LSU Shreveport and LSU Eunice.

Under Alexander’s leadership, the LSU system achieved milestones in reaching $1.1 billion in overall system active research funding and record-setting philanthropic support. During this period, LSU also enrolled more than 50,000 students for the first time and established record graduation numbers of every student category including STEM students.

In August 2019, the LSU campus had 31,761 students in residence and a total of 6,126 freshmen, of which 4,720 were from Louisiana. This year’s incoming class had an overall average high school GPA of 3.55 and an overall average ACT score of 26.

LSU’s 2018-19 graduating class set records for the number of in-state and out-of-state graduates, as well as females, African Americans, Hispanics, first-generation students and Pell Grant recipients, along with graduates who previously served in the U.S. military. These LSU graduates are among the nation’s lowest in terms of student loan indebtedness with more than half graduating with no student loan debt. 

At Oregon State, 46.5% of students who entered OSU as true freshmen in 2015 graduated in 2019 with no debt, compared to a national average of 34%.

At LSU, Alexander has been active in fundraising, including leading the 2016 launch of a multi-year $1.5 billion philanthropy campaign that has raised nearly $850 million to date.

At California State University Long Beach, Alexander led the third largest public university in California. The university grew to 36,000 students during his tenure, and from 2009-12 achieved its highest graduation rates and largest graduation classes.

At Murray State University, Alexander led a university that grew student enrollment to record numbers and was noted nationally for significant increases in graduation rates.

About Oregon State University: As one of only two universities in the nation designated as a land, sea, space and sun grant, Oregon State serves Oregon and the world by working on today’s most pressing issues. Our more than 32,000 students come from across the globe, and our programs operate in every Oregon county. Oregon State receives more research funding than all of the state’s comprehensive public universities combined. At our campuses in Corvallis and Bend, marine research center in Newport and top-ranked Ecampus online degree programs, we excel at shaping today’s students into tomorrow’s leaders.

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