University of Maryland Welcomes Tania D. Mitchell as First Associate Provost for Community Engagement
Mitchell will lead the university’s new Center for Community Engagement and collaborate with campus partners to expand and support community engaged research, teaching, learning and service activities
Media Relations mediainfo@umd.edu
COLLEGE PARK, Md. - The University of Maryland has announced Tania D. Mitchell as its inaugural Associate Provost for Community Engagement, effective August 1, 2024. In this role, Mitchell will lead the university’s new Center for Community Engagement, guide the development of a vision and mission for the center’s work, and collaborate with campus partners to expand and support community engaged research, teaching, learning and service activities. She will oversee the coordination of campuswide community engagement efforts—elevating existing partnerships and creating new community-engaged programs and initiatives.
“An internationally-recognized scholar committed to diversity and inclusivity, Dr. Mitchell brings decades of experience that is essential to developing collaborative relationships with communities,” said UMD Senior Vice President and Provost Jennifer King Rice. “I am confident that her leadership will cultivate mutually-beneficial community partnerships that support our strategic vision to advance the public good through impactful teaching, research, and service activities. This mission-critical work will help prepare students to be civic leaders that serve communities across our state and nation and around the globe.”
Mitchell joins UMD from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, where she serves as professor and chair of the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy and Development, and the Rodney Wallace Professor for the Advancement of Teaching and Learning. Her scholarship and teaching are focused on supporting student development with an aim to foster students’ leadership capacities for social change and social justice; and the pedagogy, philosophy and practice of service-learning and community engagement in higher education.
“I am excited by the opportunity this position offers to align my education and professional work while also supporting the University of Maryland in building, strengthening and advancing community-engaged teaching, participatory and community-centered research, partnership development, and other community-facing efforts,” said Mitchell.
As associate provost, Mitchell will work to integrate service learning and civic engagement into courses and academic programs, and expand our impact through impactful research partnerships with local, state, national and global stakeholders. To support these goals, the existing Office of Community Engagement will join the center and continue to work with the campus community and surrounding neighborhoods to create mutually collaborative educational, business, government and community partnerships.
With professional experience in admissions, student activities, residential life, and academic affairs, Mitchell is both a scholar and practitioner who has taught undergraduate and graduate students at Stanford University, Mills College, California State University Monterey Bay and the University of Massachusetts. An internationally recognized scholar in service learning and community engagement, Mitchell was recognized with the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Award and the Early Career Research Award by the International Association for Research on Service Learning and Community Engagement and is also an inducted member of the Academy of Community Engagement Scholarship, a highly selective honor recognizing outstanding scholarly contributions to the field of community engagement. In addition, she has served on the National Advisory Committee for the Carnegie Elective Classification for Community Engagement.
Mitchell’s scholarship has been published in numerous books and journals, and she is an editor of four books: “Civic Engagement and Community Service at Research Universities: Engaging Undergraduates for Social Justice, Social Change, and Responsible Citizenship,” “Cambridge Handbook of Service Learning and Community Engagement,” “Educating for Citizenship and Social Justice: Practices for Community Engagement at Research Universities” and “Black Women and Social Justice Education: Legacies and Lessons.”
She holds a B.A. in political science and communications from Baylor University, an M.S. in higher education and student affairs from Indiana University, and a graduate certificate in feminist studies and an Ed.D. in student development from the University of Massachusetts.
About the University of Maryland
The University of Maryland (UMD) is the state's flagship university and a leading public research institution, propelled by a $1.3 billion joint research enterprise. Located four miles from Washington, D.C., the university is dedicated to addressing the grand challenges of our time and is the nation's first Do Good campus. It is driven by a diverse and proudly inclusive community of more than 50,000 fearless Terrapins. UMD is a top producer of Fulbright scholars and offers an unparalleled student experience with more than 300 academic programs, 25 living-learning programs and 400 study abroad programs. Spurred by a culture of innovation and creativity, UMD faculty are global leaders in their field and include Nobel laureates, Pulitzer Prize winners and members of the national academies. For more information about the University of Maryland, visit umd.edu.
Follow @UMDRightNow on Twitter for news, UMD experts and campus updates