THE FRANK J. GUARINI SCHOOL OF GRADUATE AND ADVANCED STUDIES
Creating a freestanding graduate school was among the first proposals President Hanlon made when assuming the role of president in 2013, supporting recommendations made by others in the years preceding his presidency. In 2016, it came to fruition.
Named in 2018 for Congressman Frank J. Guarini '46, the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies is the first new school to be established at Dartmouth in more than a century.
Up until its creation, graduate studies had been overseen by the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, even though several of the graduate programs and nearly half of the graduate students resided in Dartmouth's professional schools of business, engineering, and medicine.
The establishment of the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies has enabled Dartmouth to:
- Provide a single home for interdisciplinary graduate programs across departments and schools;
- Take responsibility for the professional development and nurturing of its highly valued postdoctoral scholars; and
- Attract unprecedented resources to its graduate programs, fueling what President Hanlon calls the "middle academic generation," a critical link between undergraduate students and tenure/tenure-track faculty.