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Sian Beilock is not interested in a comfortable life. The president of Dartmouth College wants students and academics to have difficult conversations and experts to push back against her ideas.
Since taking the helm at the Ivy League institution last summer, Beilock has launched an initiative called Dartmouth Dialogues, aimed at facilitating conversations that ābridge political and personal dividesā. As part of that mission, the university has partnered with national non-profit StoryCorps to bring together two undergraduates with different political beliefs for a conversation ā ānot to debate politics, but simply to interview each other and get to know one another as peopleā, according to the universityās website.
āThe students who have participated in StoryCorps just have rave reviews,ā says Beilock, who was previously president of Barnard College at Columbia University. āFinding common humanity in each other, understanding that differences of opinion are ok [and that] itās ok to be uncomfortable in those spaces is really important.ā
And she isnāt afraid to practise what she preaches. She admits that she makes āmistakes all the timeā in her job as president, and she seeks criticism from āpeople who have expertise in areas Iām working in or trying to understandā.
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āI often go to the people who are going to give me the most negative feedback to try to understand how I can improve,ā she says.
āThatās uncomfortable, and so itās a little bit like what weāre doing with StoryCorps where students are having uncomfortable conversations with people who they donāt see eye to eye with. But I think they come out better for it.ā
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Beilockās approach to leading a university is informed by her own research. A cognitive scientist, she is a leading expert on the brain science behind āchoking under pressureā in business, education and sport, having written a book and delivered a on the topic. Her latest research focuses on success in mathematics and science for women and girls, and on how performance anxiety can either be exacerbated or alleviated by teachers, parents and peers.
Perhaps then, it is no surprise that one of her priorities at Dartmouth, alongside encouraging difficult conversations, is mental health.
THE podcast: an interview with Sian Beilock, president of Dartmouth
āIn order to be able to have these difficult conversations with each other you have to feel OK about yourself. My own research has shown that when people are really anxious they tend to not want to do things that make them more anxious. And we know itās hard to have conversations with people you openly disagree with,ā she says.
She adds that many higher education institutions ātalk about mental health as sitting next to academic excellence, or something you think about as an afterthought, but weāve really taken a different viewpoint that itās central to excellenceā.
To reflect that, Dartmouth recently hired its inaugural chief health and wellness officer ā a member of the senior management team who is responsible for health and wellness across the entire university, from āmaking sure we have enough counselling hoursā to āhelping our students get involved in mindfulnessā and ābeing in the outdoorsā.
āWhat is really important to get acrossā¦is that perfection is not the goalā¦We all make mistakes all the time. Weāre all messing up. The goal is then to learn from that and move forward,ā she says.

Last autumn, the university hosted US surgeon general Vivek Murthy and his seven living predecessors for a panel discussion on the future of mental health and wellness.
āOne of the things that I thought was so exciting about this was that it was across the political spectrum ā whether it was the surgeon general for Bush or Trump or Obama or Clinton, they were all on the stage talking about the importance of mental health,ā says Beilock.
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Another of her priorities is promoting diversity in STEM. Last year, Beilock ā along with the president of Indiana University ā formed a consortium of the six US research universities that had both female presidents and female deans of engineering (the others were Brown, Rochester, Berkeley and the University of Washington).
The so-called Edge consortium aims to leverage the $280 billion (Ā£220 billion)Ā CHIPS and Science Act ā a that aims to boost US competitiveness, innovation and national security in the global semiconductor industry ā to encourage more women and people of colour to go into semiconductor-related careers. A mentorship programme connects students with industry professionals and top academics āthat reflect the diversity of the STEM workforce we seek to createā, while the group is also expanding student access to internships and job opportunities.
Dartmouth was the first comprehensive research university in the US to achieve gender parity in engineering at the undergraduate level, back in 2016, so Beilock says it is well placed to be leading on this work.
A key part of the initiative is explaining what ābeing in the semiconductor field is all aboutā and the āvalue of working in those spacesā. Beilock is also keen to ensure that engineering courses are not āweed-out coursesā ā those that are so intense and rigorous that only the highest-performing students can progress ā as is typical in many STEM majors.
āAt Dartmouth you can go into engineering through design thinking [for example], through classes that get you to think about design rather than just a calculus class. And it turns out that when you go into engineering that way, youāre more likely to attract women and people who havenāt typically been in those fields,ā she says.
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Beilock herself is used to breaking down gender barriers. When she took over at Dartmouth, much was made of the fact that she was the first female president in the institutionās 254-year history.
Are we right to draw attention to those kinds of markers or ā as suggested by former Penn State president Eric Barron when his successor Neeli Bendapudi was appointed ā does this do women a disservice?
āItās an interesting question about whether just drawing attention to it leads to more pressure or not,ā says Beilock.
āI think itās here, itās part of the Dartmouth institution, which was an all-male institution for a long time, and I think it shows that Dartmouth continues to evolve, which is really important. Certainly, thereās research showing that women are often held to a higher standard in leadership roles and I think that doesnāt change whether you draw attention to the fact Iām a woman or not.ā
When Beilock started the job, six of the eight Ivy Leagues were led by women. She is now one of just three female presidents in the group, following the high-profile resignations of the Pennsylvania and Harvard leaders. Elizabeth Magill and Claudine Gay were both criticised by Republican members of Congress and leading institutional donors for being too lenient with students protesting against Israelās killing of Palestinian civilians.
Cornellās president also announced her retirement in May; while Martha Pollack did not give a specific reason for her decision, she said she had been regularly contemplating the move since December, when students criticising Israelās military assault on Gaza occupied a central administration building and staged a mock trial that accused her of complicity because ofĀ Cornellās academic collaborations with Israel.
Like many US campuses, Dartmouth was the site of a pro-Palestinian student protest this year. But, as reported in , the university stood out for its almost instantaneous response to the non-violent protest. Just two hours after students had pitched an encampment on the college green, Beilock authorised police to take action and 89 people, mostly students, were arrested.
By contrast, other universities called in police after several days of protests, sometimes only after they became violent, or they struck agreements with their student protesters.
All approaches have faced criticism, but what was the thought process behind Beilockās decision-making?
āWeāve been very clear about our policies and the fact that we really support free speech and protest is fine but always the safety and security of our campus is whatās most important. And encampments to the extent that they take over shared space for one particular ideology is not free speech,ā she says.
However, Beilock has encouraged discussion on the fraught topic. Starting just two days after the Hamas terrorist attacks last October, Dartmouthās faculty of Jewish studies and Middle Eastern studies came together to āhave a series of open conversations about the Middle Eastā.
āThey were willing to do it publicly, to broadcast it live, and model what it means to talk across divides. We have several classes and speakers that continue to push that,ā she says.
Beilock acknowledges that it is a āreally interesting, exciting and difficult time to be leading in higher educationā. She is only a year into her presidency, but what does she hope to achieve during her tenure?
āWhen I think about what Dartmouth is, our purpose is to train the next generation of leaders and theyāre going to run our democracy,ā she says.
āAnd our goal is to find students from the broadest swath of society who are excelling where they are and bring them in and give them the tools to learn how to think, not what to think, to learn to have dialogue across differences, to learn to get help when they need it and to think about their own mental health. And then go out and lead the world.ā
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ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com
This is part of our āTalking leadershipā series with the people running the worldās top universities about how they solve common strategic issues and implement change.Ā Follow the series here.
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