Rice University has managed over the past century to become a US research powerhouse despite its small size and location far from the coastal elites.
Now, with its first black and foreign-born leader, the institution founded by a 19th-century slaveholder is looking to break out in several more major directions.
The new Rice president, Reginald DesRoches, is a Haitian-born son of working-class immigrants to New York City whose journey from the hemisphereâs poorest country has reinforced his belief in the power of higher education. âIt is an institution that transforms lives,â Professor DesRoches said.
At Rice, he described an agenda for the 7,500-student campus in downtown Houston that includes expanding enrolment and community acceptance of minority students, bolstering medical innovation and research involving renewable energy, and substantially growing campus operations at home and abroad.
Âé¶č
The university already scores well on racial diversity at the undergraduate level, said Professor DesRoches, a former Georgia Institute of Technology professor appointed dean of engineering at Rice in 2017, its provost in 2020 and president in July.
But thatâs not true at the doctoral level, Professor DesRoches told Times Higher Education. âItâs just not where it should be,â he said. âAnd they are our future faculty.â
Âé¶č
Rice also is lagging on the economic diversity of its student body, Professor DesRoches acknowledged. Rice costs about $70,000 (ÂŁ60,000) a year, and fully covers those costs for all students with family incomes below $75,000. Yet only about 16 per cent of Rice undergraduates are eligible for the Pell grant â the main federal subsidy for low-income students â and Professor DesRoches said he hoped to see that climb to at least 20 per cent.
Professor DesRoches also has big overseas ambitions. The university has a physical presence in Paris and a shared research centre in India, but little elsewhere. Professor DesRoches is especially determined to address that deficiency in South America, with several reconnaissance trips planned for this spring. âWe need to be absolutely strong there, given that weâre just at the foot of the Latin American world,â he said.
That shortfall is especially evident, he said, in Riceâs low rate of study-abroad participation â an experience Professor DesRoches regards as critical to student development. âIt just changes your view of the world, changes your mind,â he said.
Some at the university have long attributed the situation in Houston â the nationâs fourth-largest city and one of its most diverse â to students who âare so happy to be at Rice that they never want to leave to go abroadâ, Professor DesRoches said. The more likely reason, he said, was that âwe havenât really had a strategyâ for expanding global partnerships. âWeâre not as globally visible as Iâd like us to be,â he said.
Rice also is looking to build relations right across the street with one of its most prominent neighbours, the Texas Medical Center, which is the worldâs largest medical complex, and includes the worldâs largest cancer hospital and the worldâs largest childrenâs hospital.
Âé¶č
âShort of getting a medical school, which we have no plans of doing right now,â Professor DesRoches said, âwe need to figure out how we can really be a major player in the biomedical and health space as a university.â
Rice is already a world leader in the material sciences. Based in a city synonymous with the oil industry, it plans a big new push on research into renewable energy. âWe are an energy capital of the world, which will soon be hopefully the energy-transition capital of the world, and we need to be a major player in helping that transition,â he said.
Such ideas are key elements of a $2 billion fundraising campaign now in its early stages at Rice. Its goals include expanding Riceâs 700-person faculty by another 200, increasing the student body from 7,500 to 9,000, and spending $300 million on campus construction.
Âé¶č
Professor DesRoches said he was confident that Rice can manage that campaign while maintaining philanthropic policies that âmake sure that we share values with the donorsâ.
Those values, he said, included a broad commitment to the liberal arts and student acceptance of diversity. A new academic requirement has Rice students taking a five-week class on diversity concepts when they enter the university, and that is soon to be followed by an additional one-semester course from a menu of choices that explore similar themes with field-specific emphases.
It is part of a âcomplete overhaul of our general education curriculumâ, for the first time in 20 years, he said.
That reimagining also applies to the physical campus. The university is keeping its name, despite the growing recognition of William Marsh Rice as a slaveholder whose estate funded the university â originally known as the William Marsh Rice Institute for the Advancement of Letters, Science, and Art â as a place for white students only. The university, however, is well into the process of rearranging and rebuilding its quad so that a statue of Rice is moved from the centre and supplemented by new statues that âspeak to other important people in the history of universityâ, Professor DesRoches said.
Âé¶č
âWeâre hoping that this is a great way to represent the real history,â Professor DesRoches said. âHe was the founder, he gave the resources to start the university â but at the same time, know he was a flawed person.â
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Rice leader sets out expansive ambitions
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?







