Get to know Scott Beardsley, 麻豆破解版 10th president

Scott Beardsley鈥檚 resume was filled with a quarter-century of business experience spent crisscrossing the globe to work in 40 countries when he considered a career pivot to education.

Education, after all, 鈥渋s in my blood,鈥 he said.

鈥淚 come from a family of educators,鈥 Beardsley said, ticking off a dozen relatives, including his parents, siblings, aunts and uncles who have served as teachers, professors, principals and college presidents. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the environment I grew up in. I鈥檝e always believed in the power of education to transform people鈥檚 lives.鈥

Scott Beardsley walking his dog Lawnie

Beardsley walks his dog, Lawnie. Beardsley and his family have lived on the Lawn since 2015. (Photo by Stephanie Gross)

After leading learning and leadership development for McKinsey & Company globally, he鈥檇 considered a switch into academia full-time but was told he wasn鈥檛 a 鈥渢raditional鈥 candidate. So, for his doctoral thesis, he researched the experience of academic leaders who came from non-traditional backgrounds, a body of work that later became his book, 鈥淗igher Calling.鈥

Putting his own nontraditional background to the test, he successfully applied to be the dean of the University of Virginia鈥檚 Darden School of Business. He and his family moved into Pavilion I on the Lawn in 2015.

鈥淲hen we moved here from Brussels, Belgium, we didn鈥檛 know a single person,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o, we thought the best way to get to know people would be to live in the heart of the University. I told myself it was the chance of a lifetime to live in a UNESCO World Heritage site that was built by Thomas Jefferson.鈥

Born in rural Maine into a family of educators and dairy farmers, Beardsley was raised in Alaska, where he delivered newspapers in temperatures as low as 30 below zero. He graduated at the top of his Anchorage public high school class. He earned an electrical engineering degree from Tufts University 鈥 not because of a burning interest in the subject, but because that was the scholarship presented to him.

Scott Beardsley speaking with a group of students on the Lawn

Beardsley addresses a group at the steps of the Rotunda. He was serving in his third term as dean of the Darden School of Business when he was encouraged to apply to be president. (Contributed photo)

He then went to work for McKinsey & Company, a consulting firm that helps companies innovate and grow by maximizing the value of their people. Based in Belgium, he traveled more than 5 million miles to serve his clients, a period of time he called 鈥渆xhausting and challenging, but rewarding.鈥 His rise to senior partner was one of the fastest in company history.

Along the way, he earned an MBA from the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a doctorate of education degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

At the Darden School, Beardsley oversaw an effort to boost the school鈥檚 standing to a string of No. 1 rankings in several categories, including overall MBA program, faculty excellence and global experiences, from Princeton Review, U.S. News & World Report, the Economist, Bloomberg Businessweek and others. At the same time, he raised a record $632 million in total financial impact, primarily for faculty excellence and scholarships, and grew the school鈥檚 endowment to more than $1 billion.

He also raised a family on the Lawn with his wife, Claire Dufournet, and most of their children earned UVA degrees, as have a growing roster of nieces and nephews. The family鈥檚 golden retriever, named Lawnie, is a fixture in the Academical Village. As members of the Lawn community, the family has hosted Lawn residents 鈥 or Lawnies 鈥 for meals and gatherings, while Beardsley has also taught seminars in the original Jeffersonian classroom for UVA undergrads and Darden School MBA students.

Scott Beardsley speaking at a Darden School event

Beardsley speaks at a Darden School gathering. In a decade of leadership, he elevated the business school鈥檚 rankings to the top in the nation. (Photo by Susan Wormington)

And as a lifelong competitive tennis player, he volunteered to help coach student-athletes on the UVA men鈥檚 tennis team.

Beardsley was serving in his third term at the Darden School 鈥 making him 麻豆破解版 longest-serving current dean 鈥 when the University鈥檚 special committee began soliciting nominations for 麻豆破解版 next president. Beardsley鈥檚 name came up repeatedly, and committee members suggested he apply. The job profile, he noted, solidly matched his education and experience.

鈥淔irst, I am already at UVA, and I love the institution,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel called to serve something I care about, and I believe in the mission. What UVA does is important. It changes people鈥檚 lives. It serves the community. It advances knowledge. It provides world-class patient care. It develops people鈥檚 capabilities, the capabilities of young students to be leaders, and it does all that with the highest degree of excellence.鈥

When asked about how he鈥檒l shape the University as president, Beardsley said that wouldn鈥檛 be up to him alone.

鈥淢y vision is that UVA achieve the full potential of its mission of education, research, public service and patient care.鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat really matters is how we collectively pursue that mission as the students, faculty, staff, alumni and all the outstanding caregivers at UVA Health. My role as president is to help everyone here achieve their full potential and improve the world. We have an amazing University, and it鈥檚 just a matter of how we take it to the next level in pursuit of that noble mission.

鈥淚 get the opportunity, the incredible honor, to be the 10th president,鈥 Beardsley continued. 鈥淚 just hope to carry the torch forward into the future and help UVA continue striving for its full potential.鈥

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