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Derek Bok

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Preceded by
  
Nathan M. Pusey

Profession
  
Lawyer

Succeeded by
  
Neil L. Rudenstine

Height
  
6'0" (1.83m)

Spouse
  
Sissela Bok (m. 1955)

Preceded by
  
Erwin Griswold

Role
  
Lawyer

Preceded by
  
Lawrence Summers

Name
  
Derek Bok


Derek Bok mediawwwharvardeducontentbokjpg

Full Name
  
Derek Curtis Bok

Born
  
March 22, 1930 (age 94) Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania (
1930-03-22
)

Alma mater
  
Stanford University Harvard Law School George Washington University

Children
  
Hilary Bok, Victoria Bok, Tomas Bok

Education
  
George Washington University (1958), Harvard Law School (1954), Stanford University (1951), Harvard University

Books
  
The Shape of the River: Lo, Our Underachieving Colleges, The Politics of Happines, Universities in the Marketplace, Beyond the Ivory Tower

Similar People
  
Sissela Bok, Hilary Bok, Matthew W Finkin, Alva Myrdal, Gunnar Myrdal

Derek bok can undergraduate education meet challenges


Derek Curtis Bok (born March 22, 1930) is an American lawyer and educator and the former president of Harvard University. He is the son of Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice Curtis Bok and Margaret Plummer Bok; the grandson of Ladies' Home Journal editor Edward W. Bok and Mary Louise Curtis Bok Zimbalist, founder of the Curtis Institute of Music; the cousin of prominent Maine folklorist Gordon Bok; and the great-grandson of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, founder of the Curtis Publishing Company, publisher of national magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post.

Contents

Derek bok quotes


Life and career

Bok was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Following his parents' divorce, he, his mother, brother and sister moved to Miquon, Pennsylvania. He attended The Miquon School, a progressive school that his mother co-founded in 1932, and the UCLA Lab School. He graduated from Stanford University (B.A., 1951), Harvard Law School (J.D., 1954), attended IEP Paris, and George Washington University (A.M., 1958).

Bok taught law at Harvard beginning in 1958 and served as dean of the law school there (1968–1971), in succession to Erwin Griswold on Griswold's becoming Solicitor-General of the United States, and then as the university's 25th president (1971–1991), in succession to Nathan M. Pusey. In the mid-1970s Bok negotiated with Radcliffe College president Matina Horner the "non-merger merger" between Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges that was a major step in the final merger of the two institutions. Bok currently serves as the faculty chair at the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations at Harvard and continues to teach at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

Bok's focus on undergraduate education was evident in his initiating the Harvard Assessment Seminar that resulted in Richard J. Light's best-selling book, Making the Most of College: Students Speak Their Minds (Harvard University Press, 2001). This focus has continued in Bok's extensive publications since retiring as President of Harvard. For example, he was the recipient of the 2001 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award in Education for his book, The Shape of the River: Long-Term Consequences of Considering Race in College and University Admissions, co-authored with the former President of Princeton University, William G. Bowen. Bok has been honored with the naming of the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning at Harvard and the Harvard Extension School instituting the Derek Bok Public Service Prizes, an annual Commencement prize for the Harvard extension school students who involve in community service or who have a long-standing records of civic achievement.

After fifteen years away from the Harvard presidency, Bok led the University on an interim basis from Lawrence Summers's resignation on July 1, 2006, until the beginning of the tenure of Drew Gilpin Faust on July 1, 2007.

Bok's wife, the sociologist and philosopher Sissela Bok, née Myrdal (daughter of the Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal and the politician and diplomat Alva Myrdal, both Nobel laureates), is also affiliated with Harvard, where she received her doctorate in 1970. His daughter, Hilary Bok, is a philosophy professor at Johns Hopkins University.

Works

  • The Politics of Happiness: What Government can Learn from the New Research on Well-Being. Princeton University Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-4008-3219-4. 
  • Our Underachieving Colleges: A Candid Look at How Much Students Learn and Why They Should Be Learning More, 2005 / ISBN 0-691-13618-1
  • Universities in the Marketplace, 2003
  • The Trouble with Government, 2001, Harvard University Press
  • The Shape of the River, 1998 (with William G. Bowen)
  • The State of the Nation, 1997, Harvard University Press
  • Universities and the Future of America, 1990
  • Higher Learning, 1986, Harvard University Press
  • Beyond the Ivory Tower, 1984, Harvard University Press
  • Living with Nuclear Weapons, In collaboration with Albert Carnesale, Paul Doty, Stanley Hoffmann, Samuel P. Huntington, Joseph S. Nye, Jr. Scott D. Sagan, 1983, Harvard University Press
  • Labor and the American Community, 1970
  • Cases and Materials on Labor Law, in collaboration with Archibald Cox, 1962, Foundation Press
  • References

    Derek Bok Wikipedia