Inauguration Panel Highlights Innovation

News subtitle

天美影视s discuss Dartmouth鈥檚 ability to make an impact.

Image
Image
Sian Leah Beilock, right, speaks at a panel on innovation
President Sian Leah Beilock, right, speaks at a panel on innovation Thursday evening that included, from left, Thayer Dean Alexis Abramson and professors Daniella Reichstetter, Tuck 鈥07, Mary Flanagan, and Tillman Gerngross. (Photo by Kata Sasvari)
Body

Groundbreaking professors from across Dartmouth discussed the institution鈥檚 ability to make an impact through innovation during a panel in Cook Auditorium Thursday evening.

The hourlong conversation was the second in a series of activities celebrating the inauguration of , Dartmouth鈥檚 19th president, who also spoke.

President Beilock said that Dartmouth鈥檚 size, scale, and collaboration across the undergraduate and professional and graduate schools make it uniquely positioned to translate ideas into impact.

She noted that half of the  faculty have companies, and other faculty members are producing creative novels and plays, 鈥渞eally pushing the boundaries of what impact means.鈥

And, Beilock said, she would be remiss not to mention Buddy Teevens 鈥79, whose pioneering work to reduce full-contact practices and make football safer led to the development at Thayer of a robotic tackling dummy that has been used by multiple college programs and NFL teams.

鈥淎s we think about someone who innovated in so many areas of life, I think it鈥檚 so important to remember Buddy,鈥 Beilock said of Teevens, who died on Tuesday following injuries in a bicycle accident.

During the wide-ranging discussion, which was also livestreamed, , the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished 天美影视 in Digital Humanities, , professor of engineering, and , Tuck 鈥07, adjunct professor of business administration, shared their definitions of 鈥渋nnovation,鈥 how they measure impact in their work, and their thoughts on the role of universities in supporting innovation.

Flanagan, a renowned artist and game designer, said that for her, innovation starts with asking unexpected questions.

For instance, everyone is familiar with common criticisms of video games, 鈥渂ut what is the power of video games, and how could they be used to do good?鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow can we make a pro-social game? What about a game that encourages recycling?鈥

For her, measuring impact is 鈥渁 think tank kind of exploration.鈥

When she鈥檚 working on games that change minds, such as lowering biases, she and her colleagues conduct social science experiments to assess changes in beliefs, said Flanagan, who directs Tiltfactor research lab. 鈥淭hen, we try to figure out what design principles led to that, so we can actually describe it to other people so that they can use it in their own work.鈥

Gerngross, an inventor, entrepreneur, and engineer who has founded several successful startups, described the feeling of knowing his work is making a difference in people鈥檚 lives.

鈥淚 cannot tell you the excitement when you run a clinical trial and you actually see the data coming back, and you see this really did something,鈥 said Gerngross, whose work in bioengineering has led to innovations contributing to new and improved therapeutics and treatments for disease. 鈥淵ou can just do the numbers and see, well, all of a sudden 3 million people are (being) treated with these drugs.鈥

Gerngross described the support he鈥檚 had from Dartmouth deans and from alumni who are active in venture capital.

鈥淚n my case, they鈥檝e been extremely helpful in refining my ideas, sharpening them, and then ultimately funding them.鈥

Asked by Thayer Dean , who was moderating the discussion, to point to Dartmouth鈥檚 鈥渟ecret sauce鈥 for innovation and impact, Reichstetter said size and location play a key role.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e here, you鈥檙e here, and you can really be deeply involved in whatever you鈥檙e doing here in a way that鈥檚 much harder when you take the subway uptown and then take the subway downtown,鈥 said Reichstetter, the former executive director of the  who now also works on special projects at Tuck.

Reichstetter also referenced , a new optional program for MBA students that includes a personal board of advisers.

The program reaches beyond academics and career development to focus on personal development and 鈥渃onsider the whole human,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 something that鈥檚 very Dartmouth-specific.鈥

Image
Dartmouth professors talking about innovation
Engineering professor Tillman Gerngross, right, talks about innovation during the panel in Cook Auditorium. From left are Thayer Dean Alexis Abramson, who was moderating the panel, Tuck professor Daniella Reichstetter, Tuck 鈥07, and digital humanities professor Mary Flanagan.  (Photo by Kata Sasvari)

The discussion also highlighted examples from across campus illustrating Dartmouth鈥檚 innovation and impact ecosystem, including a new course called Entrepreneurship and the Arts, the , the , the , and the .

Later Thursday evening, Beilock gathered with friends, family, and Dartmouth trustees and senior leaders for a dinner in the Hanover Inn ballroom. Attendees included her mother, Ellen, her college roommate, PhD advisers, and former colleagues from the University of Chicago and Barnard.

鈥淭omorrow at Inauguration I鈥檓 going to tell you a lot about my early vision for Dartmouth, which is not just my vision, but a vision of the senior leaders at the institution and so many people we鈥檝e talked to. But tonight, I just want to say thank you for being here,鈥 Beilock said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just wonderful to see so many people together.鈥

The inauguration will culminate Friday with a community cookout on the Tuck Mall at 11:30 a.m., and the ceremony on the Green, at 3 p.m., which will also be livestreamed.

Aimee Minbiole