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Presidential Search

The Randolph College community is happy to welcome our 11th president –  Sue Ott Rowlands. 

Introducing Randolph College's 11th President Sue Ott Rowlands

Sue Ott Rowlands announced as Randolph College's eleventh president

March 8, 2022

Randolph College announced the appointment of Sue Ott Rowlands as its 11th president today. 

Ott Rowlands, who brings a wealth of experience and background in teaching and administration, will assume the position July 1. She succeeds Bradley W. Bateman, who announced last summer his June 2022 retirement after nearly a decade of service.

“On behalf of the Board of Trustees of Randolph College, I am extremely pleased that Sue Ott Rowlands has been selected to become our 11th president,” said Hank Hubbard, chair of the Board of Trustees. “In addition to a strong background of administrative and academic success, Sue brings a high energy level, a great sense of humor, and most importantly, a keen focus on, and a successful track record with, student success. We are excited about the opportunity to work with Sue to build on the positive trajectory that Bradley W. Bateman has established for the College over the past nine years. Sue is looking forward to becoming an active member of the Randolph and Lynchburg communities.” 

Ott Rowlands brings a diverse background in higher education and the arts, including experience in private and public, as well as small and large institutions. She served as provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at Northern Kentucky University (NKU) between 2014 and 2021, and she is currently a professor of theatre arts in the School of Arts there. Prior to her tenure at NKU, Ott Rowlands was the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences at Virginia Tech and interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, as well as professor and chair of the Department of Theatre and Film at the University of Toledo in Ohio. She has also served as chair of The Ohio State University’s acting/directing program in the Department of Theatre and head of the acting program at Webster University in St. Louis.  

“It is my great joy to join Randolph College at this particular time when the College is poised for growth and ongoing excellence,” Ott Rowlands said. “I was attracted to Randolph by a number of things, including its rich tradition as a woman’s college, its academic innovation in the TAKE2 curriculum model, its reputation as having a dedicated faculty and staff, the range of sports programs, its location and beautiful campus, and the diversity of its student body.

“I would like to support Randolph College in the growth of new enrollments, fiscal stabilization, and creative solutions to issues confronting liberal arts colleges in today’s higher education landscape,” she added. “In my mind, Randolph College has all of the right pieces to make it a strong, competitive institution. I look forward to helping the College’s aspirations become reality.”

Born in Oklahoma, Ott Rowlands has lived in numerous areas of the United States, including New York, Washington, D.C., and Cleveland, among others. She earned her undergraduate degree in education with a speech/theatre emphasis from Oklahoma Christian College and her terminal degree, an M.F.A. in acting and directing, from the University of Oklahoma. In addition to her extensive career in higher education, Ott Rowlands has acted and directed professionally in New York and Washington, D.C. and is a member of the Actors’ Equity Association.

“Sue Ott Rowlands stood out as the person who will place the concerns of all Randolph constituents at the center of everything she does,” said Jaelyn Evans ’22, a member of the Presidential Search Committee. “I’m confident that she will move Randolph forward in key areas of focus for the College, such as diversity, equity, and inclusion, and improve the overall Randolph experience.”

Ott Rowlands’ appointment comes after a lengthy and competitive presidential search led by the Presidential Search Committee, which was made up of trustees, including several alumnae, faculty, staff, and students, and guided by Isaacson, Miller, a national executive search firm.

“The search for the 11th president of Randolph College has been thorough, rigorous, sometimes grueling, and exciting,” said Karen Campbell ’77, co-chair of the Presidential Search Committee and member of the Board of Trustees, adding that the process included more than 50 hours of virtual conversations, presentations, and interviews, as well as in-person visits to campus. “The efforts of the search committee, the Isaacson, Miller team, and the Randolph College community yielded a stellar and diverse pool of candidates.”

Betsy Crighton ’67, co-chair of the search committee and member of the Board of Trustees, added, “Randolph is fortunate indeed to welcome Sue Ott Rowlands as the next president of the College. In a field of superb candidates, Sue stood out as a gifted and exceptional leader, well prepared to lead the College forward. She has a deep understanding of higher education and a strong record of accomplishments in domains crucial to the College: enrollment, diversity and inclusion, budgetary management, and fundraising. 

“As provost (second in command) at NKU, Sue earned a reputation as a leader with vision, an innovator largely responsible for expanding the University’s vision of what it could be and creating programs to secure its financial future,” Crighton said.  “She is known as a community-builder: collaborative and approachable. A tenured professor of theatre who graduated from a liberal arts college, she is a true believer in the liberal arts and sciences, and in Randolph. In the words of one of her colleagues, ‘Sue and Randolph were made for each other.’”

Randolph College announced the appointment of Sue Ott Rowlands as its 11th president today. 

Ott Rowlands, who brings a wealth of experience and background in teaching and administration, will assume the position July 1. She succeeds Bradley W. Bateman, who announced last summer his June 2022 retirement after nearly a decade of service.

“On behalf of the Board of Trustees of Randolph College, I am extremely pleased that Sue Ott Rowlands has been selected to become our 11th president,” said Hank Hubbard, chair of the Board of Trustees. “In addition to a strong background of administrative and academic success, Sue brings a high energy level, a great sense of humor, and most importantly, a keen focus on, and a successful track record with, student success. We are excited about the opportunity to work with Sue to build on the positive trajectory that Bradley W. Bateman has established for the College over the past nine years. Sue is looking forward to becoming an active member of the Randolph and Lynchburg communities.” 

Ott Rowlands brings a diverse background in higher education and the arts, including experience in private and public, as well as small and large institutions. She served as provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at Northern Kentucky University (NKU) between 2014 and 2021, and she is currently a professor of theatre arts in the School of Arts there. Prior to her tenure at NKU, Ott Rowlands was the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences at Virginia Tech and interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, as well as professor and chair of the Department of Theatre and Film at the University of Toledo in Ohio. She has also served as chair of The Ohio State University’s acting/directing program in the Department of Theatre and head of the acting program at Webster University in St. Louis.  

“It is my great joy to join Randolph College at this particular time when the College is poised for growth and ongoing excellence,” Ott Rowlands said. “I was attracted to Randolph by a number of things, including its rich tradition as a woman’s college, its academic innovation in the TAKE2 curriculum model, its reputation as having a dedicated faculty and staff, the range of sports programs, its location and beautiful campus, and the diversity of its student body.

“I would like to support Randolph College in the growth of new enrollments, fiscal stabilization, and creative solutions to issues confronting liberal arts colleges in today’s higher education landscape,” she added. “In my mind, Randolph College has all of the right pieces to make it a strong, competitive institution. I look forward to helping the College’s aspirations become reality.”

Born in Oklahoma, Ott Rowlands has lived in numerous areas of the United States, including New York, Washington, D.C., and Cleveland, among others. She earned her undergraduate degree in education with a speech/theatre emphasis from Oklahoma Christian College and her terminal degree, an M.F.A. in acting and directing, from the University of Oklahoma. In addition to her extensive career in higher education, Ott Rowlands has acted and directed professionally in New York and Washington, D.C. and is a member of the Actors’ Equity Association.

“Sue Ott Rowlands stood out as the person who will place the concerns of all Randolph constituents at the center of everything she does,” said Jaelyn Evans ’22, a member of the Presidential Search Committee. “I’m confident that she will move Randolph forward in key areas of focus for the College, such as diversity, equity, and inclusion, and improve the overall Randolph experience.”

Ott Rowlands’ appointment comes after a lengthy and competitive presidential search led by the Presidential Search Committee, which was made up of trustees, including several alumnae, faculty, staff, and students, and guided by Isaacson, Miller, a national executive search firm.

“The search for the 11th president of Randolph College has been thorough, rigorous, sometimes grueling, and exciting,” said Karen Campbell ’77, co-chair of the Presidential Search Committee and member of the Board of Trustees, adding that the process included more than 50 hours of virtual conversations, presentations, and interviews, as well as in-person visits to campus. “The efforts of the search committee, the Isaacson, Miller team, and the Randolph College community yielded a stellar and diverse pool of candidates.”

Betsy Crighton ’67, co-chair of the search committee and member of the Board of Trustees, added, “Randolph is fortunate indeed to welcome Sue Ott Rowlands as the next president of the College. In a field of superb candidates, Sue stood out as a gifted and exceptional leader, well prepared to lead the College forward. She has a deep understanding of higher education and a strong record of accomplishments in domains crucial to the College: enrollment, diversity and inclusion, budgetary management, and fundraising. 

“As provost (second in command) at NKU, Sue earned a reputation as a leader with vision, an innovator largely responsible for expanding the University’s vision of what it could be and creating programs to secure its financial future,” Crighton said.  “She is known as a community-builder: collaborative and approachable. A tenured professor of theatre who graduated from a liberal arts college, she is a true believer in the liberal arts and sciences, and in Randolph. In the words of one of her colleagues, ‘Sue and Randolph were made for each other.’”

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Sue Ott Rowlands: More Information

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434.947.8587

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