Henry C. Foley
- Penn State Vice President for Research
- Dean, The Graduate School
- Professor of Information Sciences and Technology
Education
- Ph.D., Physical Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, 1982
- B.S. (Cum Laude), Providence College, 1977
Biography
Dr. Henry C. “Hank” Foley was appointed Vice President for Research and
Dean of the Graduate School at Penn State University on January 1, 2010.
Prior to this he was the dean of the College of Information Sciences
and Technology (IST) at Penn State University from November 20, 2006 to
December 31, 2009 (which remains his tenure home). In his current role
as Penn State's vice president for research and dean of The Graduate
School, Foley is responsible for overseeing a research enterprise with
over $765 million dollars in expenditures and over 9,000 graduate
students in more than 150 graduate degree programs, including 121
doctorate, 110 academic master’s and 73 professional master’s degree
programs.
Foley was appointed as the dean of the College of
Information Sciences and Technology (IST) at Penn State University on
November 20, 2006. In his role as dean, Foley was responsible for
providing leadership in undergraduate and graduate education, research,
and solutions services to a wide array of IT organizations. The dean
also plays an important role in coordinating the educational programming
for IST across all undergraduate campuses of the University. He became
Penn State's Vice President for Research and Dean of the Graduate School
in 2009.
Foley returned to the University in 2000 as the Walter
L. Robb Family Endowed Chair and head of the Department of Chemical
Engineering. Before accepting the position of dean of IST, Foley served
as the University's associate vice president for research and director
of strategic initiatives (beginning in 2004), where he was responsible
for the development of major new research initiatives and worked closely
with state and federal agencies to enhance Penn State's research
opportunities. Foley also provided overall leadership for the
University's Homeland Security Coordination Council, the Office of
Military and Security Programs, the Worldwide Universities Network, the
Center for Space Research, and the Animal Resource Program. One of his
primary responsibilities was to assist with the development of major new
initiatives that bring interested parties together from disparate
colleges and geographic locations.
Prior to coming to Penn State,
he was a professor of chemical engineering at the University of
Delaware. There, he also was director of the University's Center for
Catalytic Science and Technology.
Foley's extensive industrial
experience includes working for American Cyanamid Company and consulting
with Air Products, Monsanto, DuPont, Englehard Corporation, and many
other companies.
Foley holds numerous memberships in professional
and honorary societies including the American Society for Cybernetics,
the Computing Research Association, Sigma Xi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma
Pi Sigma, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American
Chemical Society. He was a founding member of the AIChE's Catalysis and
Reaction Engineering Division and served as its chair.
His awards
and recognition include the New York Metropolitan Catalysis Society's
Excellence in Catalysis Award, the Philadelphia Catalysis Club's Annual
Award, the Leo C. Friend Award from the I&EC Division of the
American Chemical Society, the Research Innovation Recognition Award
from Union Carbide Corporation, the Presidential Young Investigator
Award from the National Science Foundation, and the Thiele Lecture at
the University of Notre Dame. He has authored more than 100 papers,
holds almost 20 patents, and is author of the textbook, Introduction to
Chemical Engineering Analysis Using Mathematica, published in 2003.
