Take it as a sign of support. UC San Diego has named deaf professor and “Genius Grant” recipient Carol Padden as dean of the Division of Social Sciences after an extensive national search.

UCSD Professor Carol Padden. Photo via UCSD News Center
UCSD Professor Carol Padden. Photo via UCSD News Center

“I’m honored and pleased to be asked to be a part of its future,” Padden said. “The division is made up of exciting, highly original and innovative departments, each by itself. Collectively, they comprise among the best of social-science departments in the country.”

An award-winning scholar of sign languages, Padden has been on the faculty of the UCSD Department of Communication since 1983, when she earned her Ph.D. from the university’s Department of Linguistics. She won her MacArthur Fellowship, popularly known as the “genius grant,” in 2010.

Born in Washington, D.C., the second deaf child of deaf parents who were both on the faculty at Gallaudet University, Padden first attended a school for deaf children but transferred to the public school system in third grade.

It was a long adjustment for her and one she describes as being “akin to being educated abroad.” Her interest in linguistics and culture, she writes, “is strongly rooted” in those formative experiences of “moving between different worlds and languages,”

Padden served as associate dean and faculty equity advisor in the Division of Social Sciences from 2008 to 2013. She currently serves as UC San Diego’s interim vice chancellor for equity, diversity and inclusion. Her appointment as dean takes effect Oct. 1.

Padden’s main areas of research are language emergence, sign language structure, and cultural life in deaf communities. She plays a central role in promoting research on sign languages around the world and in shaping policy and practices that promote the full participation of deaf people in society.

“I can think of no better collaborator than Carol Padden to help advance UC San Diego’s vision of being a student-centered, research-focused, service-oriented public university,” said UC San Diego Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla.

“Carol’s distinguished record of achievement – beginning as a student at our campus and continuing to this day as a researcher and as an administrative leader – will serve our university, and also our region and nation, advancing the important work of the social sciences.”

As dean, Padden will lead an academic division with more than 9,000 undergraduates, 600 graduate students, and faculty spanning 10 academic departments and 16 interdisciplinary programs and research centers.

“Carol is a respected and admired scholar who has proven to be an effective leader and consensus builder in her administrative service to the campus,” said Suresh Subramani, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs.

“Her passion for and historical knowledge of UC San Diego will be invaluable as she works with the social sciences faculty and students to further the interdisciplinary and cross-divisional research collaborations envisioned in our strategic plan. She is a great listener, but above all she is very analytic and solution oriented. I am delighted that she has agreed to join the Academic Affairs leadership team as dean of the Division of Social Sciences.”

Holder of the Sanford I. Berman Chair in Language and Human Communication in the Division of Social Sciences, Padden was named a MacArthur Fellow by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in 2010.

She was cited for “illuminating the unique structure and evolution of sign languages and the specific social implications of signed communication.” Other distinctions include being elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Linguistic Society of America. She is also a recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a UC San Diego Faculty Research Lecture award, a UC San Diego Chancellor’s Associates Outstanding Faculty award and a Laurent Clerc Cultural Award for distinguished contributions to the field of deafness.

Her research is funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. She has also received research support from the U.S. Department of Education and the Spencer Foundation.

Padden has published widely in areas relating to language evolution, culture and genes, comparative sign language structure, reading in deaf children and deaf community history.
Together with her husband Tom Humphries, who is also a member of the UC San Diego faculty, Padden has published two textbooks on American Sign Language and two ground-breaking books about the history of the U.S. deaf community.

In 2005, Padden, with colleagues from the University of Haifa and Stony Brook University, published an analysis of the Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language, a language created in a small village in Israel’s Negev Desert.

The PNAS paper was the first linguistic analysis of a language arising naturally with no outside influence, and the findings made headlines in national and international press. In 2008, New York Times reporter Margalit Fox chronicled her travels with the research team in a book titled “Talking Hands: What Sign Language Reveals About the Mind.”

Her interest in linguistics and culture, she writes, “is strongly rooted” in those formative experiences of “moving between different worlds and languages,” between the hearing world and the familiarity of signed language at home.

She and Humphries have a hearing daughter who is bilingual in ASL and spoken English, and currently a doctoral student in biology at UC San Diego.

Padden earned a B.S. from Georgetown University in 1978, at which point she joined UCSD as a graduate student.

Padden will serve as the fourth dean of the Division of Social Sciences. She follows Jeff Elman, distinguished professor in the UC San Diego Department of Cognitive Science, who is returning to his work on campus as an internationally recognized scholar of psycholinguistics and artificial neural networks. Elman has agreed to continue his service as dean through the end of September.

At the UCSD Convocation in fall 2013, Padden said to incoming students: “A university education is not just about courses you will take and the friends you make here, but it’s about becoming a person. … Learn your value system and your own truth, and how to apply this insight in any area of study. Acquire flexibility in your point of view.”

Padden also said of the new job: ““I’ve been associated with the division of social sciences at UC San Diego for a long time, first as a graduate student starting in the late 1970s and then as a faculty member to the present time. I’ve seen many changes over the years, and tremendous growth…. My role is to create opportunities for even more growth and accomplishment in each department and the division as unit.”

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