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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
May
New
chief information officer at Illinois held similar job at Arizona
Sharita
Forrest, News Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Sally
Jackson has been named the new chief information
officier and is expected to begin work May 21. |
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Released
5/11/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Sally Jackson, the chief information officer at the University of Arizona
and an alumna of the University of Illinois, has been named the new
chief information officer of the Urbana campus. Jackson, who will hold
a joint appointment as a professor of speech
communication in the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences, is expected to begin work at Illinois
on May 21, pending approval of the U. of I. Board of Trustees at its
meeting May 17 in Chicago.
At Arizona, Jackson served as vice president for learning and information
technologies and chief information officer (2002-2006) and was a professor
in the department of communication in the College of Social and Behavioral
Sciences (1991-2007).
Jackson’s responsibilities and accomplishments included developing
various distance education projects, a universitywide network master
plan and a technology refresh bank. She also was a founding partner
in the Kuali Community Source Consortium, an initiative involving Arizona,
Indiana University, Michigan State, Cornell University and other institutions,
aimed at creating open source financial software and research administration
software for higher education. She also established the Office of Student
Computing Research and held a National Science Foundation grant for
“institutional transformation” aimed at improving conditions
for women in science and technology fields.
Prior to joining the faculty at Arizona, Jackson held faculty appointments
at the University of Oklahoma (1985-1990), Michigan State University
(1982-1985) and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (1979-1982).
“Sally Jackson is an extremely intelligent individual with strong
leadership qualities,” said Linda Katehi, provost at Urbana.
“She is focused on all aspects of technology, and is particularly
passionate about how technology relates to issues of gender and the
under-represented,” Katehi said. “She will be an important
member of the campus leadership team at a critical time in the history
of our campus as we embark on the implementation of our strategic plan.”
Jackson earned bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees
in speech communication at Illinois in 1974, 1976 and 1980, respectively.
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