Rachel Beisser: Good morning. This is Rachel Beisser with Grace Baggett for
VT Stories. We're in Wallace Hall Suite 260 right now with Rosemary Bleiszner.
It is March 19th, a Monday at 10:42 AM. So to start off if you could just state
your full name and where you were born and when.
Rosemary Blieszner: I'm Rosemary Blieszner. I was born in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania in 1948.
Rachel: Okay. So you did not graduate from Virginia Tech. Can you just give a
little bit of your educational background?
Rosemary: I went to Mercyhurst College in Eerie, Pennsylvania. It's now
Mercyhurst University, but it was a small college back then. I then went to Ohio
State and earned a master's degree. Then I went back and
00:01:00taught at Mercyhurstfor five years, and then I went to Penn State and earned a PhD and then came to
Virginia Tech.
Rachel: What did you get your degrees in?
Rosemary: My undergraduate degree was home economics and my master's was family
and child development, and my doctoral degree was in the same kind of
department, but specializing in adult development and aging. The department at
Penn State is called Human Development and Family Studies.
Rachel: Tell us a little bit about growing up, what your family was like, what
it was like growing up in Pittsburgh, that sort of thing.
Rosemary: Well, there were five kids in the family, three sisters first and then
two brothers. We lived in by today what would be a small house for five children
and two
00:02:00parents. There was a bedroom for the girls and a bedroom for the boysand a bedroom for the parents and one bathroom. Nobody thought anything about
it. That's the way everybody's house was and all of our friends were like that
as well. We had a big backyard, but it was the City, so we didn't really roam
around a lot because there was traffic on the street and buses and trucks and
all of that, but we played in the backyard. One of the best memories I think is
that my parents never really went out. We would go to church, spaghetti suppers
and things like that or go to visit our grandparents, but they didn't really go
out on dates. I think what they did was they saved up all their money and we
would go to the beach in the summer.
We would go to Ocean
00:03:00City, New Jersey for two weeks and that was prettyremarkable when I think back on it. I mean this was like a working-class kind of
place and nobody else of my friends went away on a vacation for two weeks. But
they had done that when they were younger and they really liked it, so that was
our tradition and we did that year after year after year. It was quite nice.
Rachel: Yeah, it sounds fun. Which of the five were you? What order?
Rosemary: The second.
Rachel: Second oldest, okay. So was education important in your family? Were
your parents college graduates?
Rosemary: My father was not. He really had to work because of the Depression and
everybody who could work had to work to help families keep going, so my
grandfather had a job and he was able to keep that job.
00:04:00My father went to work.He had an older sister who also worked and then he had a younger sister who was
about eight or ten years younger than he was, and so he actually put her through
college. There was a value on college education, but he didn't have it and he
worked his way through the world of employment on his own with really just high
school. But she went to college and became a high school teacher, and my aunt,
the older sister, I remember as a child she had never completed high school.
When we would go over to my grandfather's house and my aunts were living there,
she would go upstairs, and you could I guess earn a GED by watching classes on
TV and she did that.
00:05:00And so she was working full-time, but then she earned herGED. I guess. I mean I was really little and didn't really know, but there was
something about she was going to study, so I'm sure that was an important
accomplishment, because she had started to work at a very young age, probably in
her teens to help support the family.
My mother, her side of the family was a little bit different. She actually had
college and earned a master's degree, and then she taught high school and taught
college. But she quit working as soon as she got married because that was what
you did back then, and then went on to have five children. But eventually later
on she taught part-time this time in elementary school, but in between that I
would say she was a world-class volunteer.
00:06:00She was the den mother for my brothers. She was involved in Girl Scouts for mysisters and me. She was involved in church volunteer work and many kinds of
community activities.
Rachel: What about your siblings, did they go to college?
Rosemary: Yes, they all went to college. My older sister has a master's degree
and my youngest brother has a law degree, so he had undergraduate and then law
school. And then me and my younger sister and the older of the two brothers we
have PhDs. So education was really valued. They never talked about it like you
must get good grades, you must go to college, you must go to graduate school,
but it was all kind of expected. Somehow you knew it was expected that you would
do well.
Rachel: What led you to human development? What made you interested in that?
Rosemary:
00:07:00Well, when I was very young that aunt who was a high school teacher, Iwas close to her and she basically said to me, "Well, you could be a teacher or
a nurse and nursing is yucky so you will be a teacher." I mean that was like my
career guidance. That was about it. And I thought that, I think I didn't know a
lot about what I was doing, but so I'm making more sense of it retrospectively
than I probably did at the time. But anyway, I was a home economics major as I
said, and at that time we studied human development and family as well as
nutrition and housing and finance and textiles and clothing. So the program I
was in covered the whole domain of
00:08:00what was involved in home economics. And Iwas being prepared to be a high school teacher, but the thing is I never had
home economics in school. So I don't know why this makes sense to anybody, but
that was the story.
Now when students want to be teachers we start them really early in college with
going to schools and getting hands-on kinds of experiences, and we talk a lot
about internships and practicum and things like that, but when I was going to
college it really wasn't like that. So the first time I was in a home economics
classroom was in my senior year when I was supposed to be doing teaching. I had
never really gone to observe or anything else that would give you some
familiarity with it. So it was kind of a strange experience and I was away from
the campus.
I was living in another small town, but the cooperating
00:09:00teacher at the highschool was very kind and helpful and supportive, and so I taught a child
development class and I really enjoyed that, and I think that's how I got
interested in continuing to study in that area. And the college advisor who
would come to observe while you were student teaching said to me one day, "Well
you know Rosemary you could be a college teacher." Well like no, I didn't know
that. Nobody ever said that to me before. But it kind of opened my mind to
something new, because maybe I could be a successful high school teacher now,
but back then I have to say I was clueless, like I just didn't know. And because
I had never been in a foods lab or a clothing lab or any of those. I had done
that as a student in
00:10:00college, but not in the high school setting. I just reallydidn't know what to do. I think that's why I was the most comfortable in that
child development class because I had more of an ability to think about how I
would teach that with high school students.
So, because of that mentor at my college who by the way, I'm still in touch with
all these years later, I really feel like she sent me on the right path. And so
then I started to look around for graduate school options and studied at Ohio
State in this area of child dvelopment, but really covering over the whole life
span. I had an assistantship in the preschool, so it would be like our lab
school here in Wallace Hall and learned a lot in that process about working with
young children, but took a lot of other courses.
00:11:00In the meantime, this samementor was thinking about expanding the program. She was the department head at
the college and she asked me to come back and teach there as a college faculty
member, so it was almost like she had this plan in mind. And when I did that I
had the opportunity to create new courses, and we also started a preschool
program on that campus, and so for half of the day I would work in the preschool
and be teaching the young children, but also supervising the college students
who were learning to do that, and then the other half of the day I was teaching
college classes in all the different areas from childhood to late life family
relations, human sexuality.
And while I was there the other faculty at the college got a grant to start
working with older adults, and so this was a time in our society
00:12:00when peoplewere starting to pay attention to older adults as people who had interesting
lives and interesting needs that society might help with. And they invited
retirees to come to campus, so I had older adults sitting in my classes. And
then also we would go out to community centers and teach mini courses to them or
interact with them in different ways. And so I became really interested in the
idea of working with older adults, and as all of this is going on I was thinking
I wanted to return to graduate school and earn a PhD, because the college at
that time didn't have any graduate students at all, only undergraduates, and I
thought it would be interesting to work with both levels.
So that is what then motivated me to apply to Penn State and specifically in the
area of working with adults and older people. I got a really really
00:13:00 goodeducation there with top scholars. It was a fairly emergent field at that time,
and I had the opportunity to learn something from some really great researchers,
and that's really what I focused on there. I had done teaching so I didn't teach
at all as a doctoral student. I had taught before, so as a doctoral student I
just worked on different research projects with faculty and really tried to hone
those research skills. So then when I came here I could pull all of that
together and most of my time here has been in the department that is now called
Human Development and Human Science.
Rachel: What led you to Virginia Tech?
Rosemary: Well, the availability of academic positions at universities
00:14:00in yourarea ebbs and flows. And the year before I was finished my colleagues in the
Adult Development and Aging Program who were graduating that year all went out
and they had like multiple interviews, multiple job offers. They could choose
where they wanted to go; it was really great for them. The very next year there
were hardly any jobs. I did go on one interview, but it ended up they didn't
hire anyone that year. Maybe they were having financial problems, I don't know,
but a friend of mine knew someone from the Department of Penn State that I
didn't know very well, but that person had come here a couple of years before.
She told my friend there was an opening and my friend told me, and so when I
came it was advertised as
00:15:00a temporary one-year position.And so I thought well, there aren't very many other opportunities around,
especially at a major research university, so maybe if I go there for just a
year I will get my foot in the door and they will advertise the position and I
could apply for it anyway. But as it happened, when I came for the interview, I
think because I already had that teaching experience, they converted that job
from a temporary one-year into a regular tenure track job. So between when I
interviewed and when I started that change was made and I came in as a regular
tenure track faculty. That's kind of how I got here. I wanted to focus on adult
development and aging, and they were looking for someone with that particular focus.
Rachel: So you are now the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences.
Rosemary: Yes.
Rachel: And you have been at Tech for 30-some years?
Rosemary: I think this is my 37th year
00:16:00 here.Rachel: What was the process like to get this position or what all have you done
over 37 years?
Rosemary: Well, I've done a lot of things. I was always the kind of person who
was involved in whatever is going on. In high school I was in student government
and yearbook co-editor, and those kinds of activities you do in high school. In
college I was also involved in the student government there and different
community projects. In my master's program I was only there for a year so there
wasn't so much time or that kind of activity that I was involved in. But at Penn
State I was again, they would have graduate students serve on search committees
when they were interviewing new potential faculty, so I did things like that
and I had some
00:17:00other roles in the department. I guess I brought that interest inknowing what's going on, being involved when I came to Virginia Tech and there
is a faculty senate, and there are a number of other parts of the governance
system, different communities and commissions, and so I was involved in many of
those. And it helped me to learn how the University works, and it helped me to
get to know people all over campus. I went along as a faculty member, assistant
professor, and I became tenured and promoted to associate professor and went
along in that role a while, and then professor.
And I was also involved in my professional organizations, the Gerontological
Society of America and American Psychological Association and some others, so
00:18:00getting to know people in my area of research and expertise, through those. Andin 2009 there was a call for a half-time associate dean of the graduate school.
And I thought that seemed like a good idea because I didn't know that I was
ready to stop being a faculty member, but I was interested in seeing well what
would administration be like. And I had heard Dean DePauw speak when she first
came to be the dean of the graduate school and vice president for graduate
education, and I was really impressed with her as a leader, her ideas, and I
thought I can really learn a lot from her. And so I interviewed for that
00:19:00position and I was selected to do that. So I worked as a half-time associatedean up until I came to the dean's office here in the college about a year ago.
And I had also taken on another responsibility while I was at the graduate
school and part of my work at the graduate school involved helping faculty to
develop new courses, new degrees, new graduate certificates, being involved in
the curriculum area. And there was a need for someone to be the University's
liaison to the State Council for Higher Education for Virginia. And the State
Council approves these new degrees, new graduate certificates, or mergers of two
departments or starting a new college, things like that. And so I was the person
helping the faculty members at Virginia
00:20:00Tech work on those proposals and then beingthe go-between with the SCHEV staff so that we could meet the requirements
and make sure that we were all working together to accomplish those goals. And
so I did that for about a year and a half. It was another kind of administrative
experience working really with the whole University in a different way than in
the graduate school way, and all of that changed when I was asked to become a dean.
Rachel: So what was your first memory of Virginia Tech?
Rosemary: Well, I think that would be coming for my job interview. And what
happened was someone had decided to leave at the last minute, so the faculty
member didn't give very much notice, and that's why at the last minute they were
looking for a new faculty member, because there were courses that needed to be
00:21:00taught starting in the fall.And so I applied and then received the invitation to come and I flew to Roanoke
and the department head met me at the airport and we stopped for lunch along the
way and then we came to campus, but it was summertime, and so there weren't very
many students around. But I thought it was beautiful. I did meet some faculty. I
met the dean, some graduate students, and it seemed like a very beautiful place
and it seemed like a nice campus and a good University. And so that's really my
first memory is feeling welcomed, and what I would now call that Hokie spirit,
the Hokie way, I think it's been with us for a long time, and I think I felt
that. I felt very comfortable.
Rachel:
00:22:00I want to go back to something you mentioned earlier. You said that youhave a mentor that you are still in touch with from your undergraduate days.
Something that VT Stories is interested in is mentorship at Virginia Tech. Have
you had any experiences with that?
Rosemary: Well, yes. I've had of course undergraduate advisees, some of whom I
still hear from, and then graduate student advisees. The graduate students it's
fairly easy to stay in touch with them because we see each other at the
conferences, and/or maybe they will say, "Would you read this article before I
submit it for publication?" So a lot of times with graduate students you have
the opportunity to maintain that really special working relationship, and they
transition to become independent researchers and faculty, but we still are
supportive of each other.
So that's one
00:23:00way. Another way is that right now for example I have twoundergraduate students who are family friends, and so we get together every once
in a while and have lunch or coffee or go to dinner, just hang out for a while.
And I'm not teaching undergraduates right now, so it gives me an opportunity to
stay in touch with what the students are thinking about on campus. One is in our
college. One is in the College of Engineering, so I get different perspectives
that way, and I really enjoy that too, and so that's more informal mentoring I
guess. I had a former student just contacted me for advice. She's been working
in the Peace Corps for a number of years and she's asking about advice choosing.
She got accepted to a number of graduate programs in occupational therapy and
how can she choose from all these. The #1 school, the #2 school, the #6 school,
[chuckles] so that's interesting.
00:24:00And then another type of mentoring I think is as a senior faculty member fornewer faculty, so there are lots of ways to help new faculty learn what do you
need to do to be successful. We have formal systems set-up like faculty get peer
reviews from other faculty for their teaching. So maybe you've been in class
sometime, another person observed. We give feedback on research. And I've always
worked on research teams, so have always been involved with other faculty that
way and we can help each other learn from each other and that's a type of
mentoring too.
Rachel: Did you have anyone like that when you were a new faculty member?
Rosemary: Yes, I did. Actually there were several people. One was a former
student from my department, I hadn't known her well in graduate school, but we
became very good
00:25:00friends here and worked together.Another faculty member in the department helped me to get started, the new
director of the Center for Gerontology when he came in did. A lot of this had to
do with research opportunities, helping with writing a grant application,
publications, but also getting involved in some of those University activities
that I became involved in. And I've had other mentors here at Virginia Tech who
were administrators in different positions that I could talk to. And so I've
always felt very supported and encouraged to do new things, try new things.
Rachel: I want to talk about your research a little bit. So you focus a lot on aging.
Rosemary: Yes.
Rachel: I also noticed that spirituality is something that you research on, so
can you talk about that a little bit?
Rosemary:
00:26:00Well, I started off, of course the field of aging is so broad and Ialways say to the students tell me what your major is, I'll tell you how it's
connected to aging because everything is. But I chose to focus on social
relationships, so I studied friendship for my dissertation research and that's
been a theme in my research, and also different dimensions of family
relationships. The notion of spirituality and resiliency came to me through one
of my graduate students who was interested in pursuing that topic, and so she
did her dissertation research interviewing older women about how their sense of
spirituality contributed to their ability to be resilient in like life from
their perspective.
It was a very
00:27:00well-done study. She interviewed women here as well as in Germanybecause she had a German background, and because we want to promote
cross-cultural perspectives, as well as inter-disciplinary. So because she could
speak German and had an interest in that culture she thought it would be good to
do comparisons. And the people that we interviewed, although they were all
around the same age, the people in Germany had experienced World War II directly
because it was fought there. Whereas the people here only experienced it kind of indirectly.
So, her writing was very good, and I said, "This should be a book. You should
write a book." She said, "Well I never wrote a book but you have, so will you
help me?" So she graduated, and we shifted maybe from mentor
00:28:00mentee tocolleagues and wrote that book from her work. We met the women here and we also
went to Germany to meet the women there so that I could write authentically
about them, so that I had known them a little bit anyway. And then we were
giving talks to different community groups and she got a job teaching at Luther
Seminary in St. Paul Minnesota and I was going back and forth to St. Paul
because we were working on the book. So we were giving talks in different places
and people said, "Well what about the men?" She had studied women intentionally,
because most of the research before that had been done on men, and particularly
in the area of religion and aging. And she thought well are they the same or
not? We should study that. So we decided to repeat the whole
00:29:00study with men, andin that case the interviews were done not in Virginia but in St. Paul because
that's where she was living at the time, and then we went back to Germany and
interviewed men in Germany as well.
And then we prepared a second book that pulled the women's data and the men's
data together, and we asked the same questions, but the answers are of course
different, because the women and the men in Germany didn't have the same kinds
of experiences in their life, particularly around the Second World War which was
so influential on this particular cohort of people.
Rachel: So what did you find through the research? What stood out to you?
Rosemary: Well, I have to explain that this study was not a study of a random
sample of people, it was a study of lifelong Lutherans, who were people
00:30:00 thatwould have grown up learning about a particular religious tradition and worship
practices and that sort of thing. And that again was very intentional, but
having to do with the critique of the past research where people would talk
about religion and spirituality, but not pay attention to denominations as if it
doesn't matter if you are Christian or Jewish or Buddhist or Muslim or anything
else. And of course it matters because if you believe that has an influence on
your life then of course the tradition you come from and how it's played out in
peoples' lives is going to have an influence.
So her argument was that we should study one group at a time, so they were
people who were probably already deeply spiritual. They were because they were
invited to come into the study
00:31:00from that perspective. The reason for doing thatpart of it was so that we could find out kind of like what's the most spiritual
person like and how does that connect with their resiliency? And then down the
road you would do other research with different groups of people so that you
would have a comparison basis, right. Before we started this there was no way to
compare because people would lump everybody together, deeply religious, not
religious very much and everybody in between all in the same study and you can't
really find out at the level of detail we wanted to study.
So one of the things we learned was that for these people they said whatever
they had experienced in life, and we didn't set out to find people with
difficulties, but everybody has difficulties, right, so no matter what it was
they said things like, "I couldn't have done it without the Lord. My faith
carried me through. My church
00:32:00community," sometimes they talked about thepersonal level, sometimes they talked about the church community level and how
meaningful that was to them all through life, and including now in old age, and
they valued that part of their life very highly. People always ask well what's
the difference between the men and women? There were many similarities of
course, but one of the differences because of the women in this cohort were
typically not employed outside of the home and the men always were, the men
talked a lot more about that employment, that work, their vocation. But they
often talked about vocation not just in a narrower sense of what career did I
pursue, but in the broader sense of how they brought their spiritual and
religious beliefs into their work and they conducted themselves with integrity,
and they tried to be helpful to other people and to execute
00:33:00all of the Christianvalues that they had learned in their life growing up in their world of work.
And the women talked a lot more about their relationships, their family,
community volunteer work, things like that. So we have to understand this in the
historic context in which these people were living their adult lives, but we can
also see the value of how regardless of whether it was men or women and what
they were doing, and some of the women did have jobs too, that the value to them
was constant throughout the situations, the joys and the sorrows. Some of the
people in Germany have really quite tragic experiences around the War and so we
00:34:00wrote a lot about that and how they didn't end up bitter and depressed andalienated from God or from other people as a result of the suffering that they
had experienced very directly in the War, loss of one woman's baby died. They
were fleeing the fighting and she couldn't care for this newborn baby very well,
and so it was this horrible tragic thing that happened. But she a joy. The image
of her that we had was this was this butterfly in her community bringing joy to
everyone despite that and a lot of other things that happened to her along the
way. And so to us there were lessons there for anyone. If these people can have
those kinds of experiences and yet still find strength to carry on
00:35:00then otherpeople might find inspiration there too.
Rachel: So as for teaching at Virginia Tech I read that you also do some things
for the Sociology Department and Women and Gender Studies. So how does your work
in human development overlap and kind of play off of your work in sociology?
Rosemary: Well, that was part of the idea that in I would say in the whole
department of Human Development and Family Science were very concerned about
taking a look at peoples' places in society and asking questions about who gets
to do what, who has opportunities, who doesn't have opportunities. And that
perspective is a feminist analysis. It's an analysis that's oriented towards
social justice, and that perspective can be applied in the field of gerontology
00:36:00as well because we can ask questions about why are opportunities different formen and for women in old age.
Why are some people wealthier and some people are poorer. Why do some people
have access to healthcare and some people don't and how can we look at social
policies, how can we look at the community services and practices and many other
parts of society and see about improving the quality of life for people, whether
you are working in aging like I am or whether we're working with children or
teenagers or any group? And that is part of the concern of the people who are
working in the women and gender studies area as well, is trying to promote
equity and social justice and opportunities for everyone to be able to fulfill themselves.
Rachel:
00:37:00Right. So you were a professor then?Rosemary: Well, I was an adjunct, so I was [going] in that Sociology Department
as a faculty member, but a lot of the departments have affiliated faculty, and
so I was affiliated with the department because of the work that I did also
aligns with some work the faculty and sociology do because they have gerontology
experts as well. And then in women and gender studies people, anyone on campus
really can become affiliated with that and there are men and women and graduate
students and undergraduate students and lots of people who have these same kinds
of concerns, although they would focus it someplace else, not necessarily on
older adults' lives.
Rachel: So speaking of women and gender studies, March is Women's Month and so
VT Stories is trying to interview more women this month, so I have some
questions regarding that.
00:38:00What advice for women in academia who want to pursueresearch, what advice for them do you have?
Rosemary: Okay, are we talking about like undergraduate students or graduate
students or faculty?
Rachel: I would say any.
Rosemary: I think to me it's partly developing the research skills whatever they
may be. Some people like to do studies using interview techniques like we're
doing here. Some people like to do studies that involve analyzing large data
sets that have been collected by governments around the world or other groups.
Some people love laboratory work. Some people want to do the kind of scholarship
that involves creativity like creative writing or cinema or working in the theater.
So whatever it is, I think
00:39:00it's really important to be interested in and lovewhat you're doing so that you're motivated to learn how to do it well and then
you want to continue carrying that work along. As I said I've always
collaborated with others and I felt like that old saying two heads are better
than one, and especially if you bring people together from different
perspectives you might have the same focus, but they are bringing new ideas that
you hadn't considered and you are bringing new ideas that they hadn't
considered. And I think in the end you can develop a better project, whatever it
might be. So that idea of preparation, doing what you love and then being
persistent. I think that there are always going to be setbacks and roadblocks,
but I had a friend who would use this expression, so a lot of
00:40:00faculty submitapplications for funding to different external foundations or government
agencies, and you don't always get it funded right away, and so she would always
say 'that was draft one' and then maybe she would have to do draft 2 or even 3
or 4. But she just had this hopeful attitude of sticking with it, and I think
you can't be successful if you give up too soon, so that's very important too.
And getting the mentoring that we talked about before, always being open to
asking for help and receiving advice I think is good.
Rachel: So post undergraduate, when you were going after your grad degree and
then PhD, was women in the world of academia kind of a new thing at that point,
or were you ever the first female professor or
00:41:00 anything?Rosemary: The college I went to was an all-women's college when I was there and
immediately after I graduated it became a co-educational institution, so that
was a trend for a lot of small colleges at that time. Some of them closed, but I
think this particular one was very forward-looking and inviting men in and
adding interesting new majors and things like that has helped it to thrive until
now it's a University with graduate programs and so on. So, I was surrounded by
women doing my undergraduate, and my work at Ohio State I think because of that
feel there were some men, many many women in the field of it was still called
Home Economics at that time, and in the family and child development area.
00:42:00Went back to the college. Of course there were men on the faculty, but therewere plenty of women. An increasing number of male students, but it was really
kind of the reverse situation there because before that the female students had
run the student government and the newspaper and everything else, and now they
had to kind of divide that up across the men and negotiate that in maybe the
reverse direction. When I came to Virginia Tech there were not as many women
faculty as there are now, and I do remember going into a room where I was the
only woman in the room. But I will tell you that still happens today, where I
can be in a group and be the only woman in the room. So, I think we at Virginia
Tech have made a lot of progress in the student body and the staff and on the
faculty with increasing the gender diversity and the racial ethnic diversity.
But we also have probably a long way to go
00:43:00to have parity.Rachel: Any advice for women wanting to go into academia?
Rosemary: Well, find a good mentor. Be well connected. I think being involved in
the field, and even undergraduates can go to conferences, can do undergraduate
research, choose to present here on campus or go with faculty to another
location for a meeting, and certainly graduate students are encouraged to do
that. That gives you a sense of community and a sense of how this all works. How
does the academic world work compared to the corporate sector, the government
sector, whatever, non-profit? There are lots of similarities, but also some
differences, and so learning how the system works and what are the expectations.
I have a
00:44:00doctoral student right now who is going to graduate in May and he had aresearch assistantship with a new faculty member. And my doctoral student told
me one day that he was telling the new faculty member now here's what they are
going to expect for tenure, you know. I thought it was really kind of fun that
the graduate student was helping the new assistant professor about the
importance of his research and the student was helping him with it.
Rachel: So I'm going to kind of focus in on Virginia Tech now. What are some of
your favorite memories and experiences at Virginia Tech?
Rosemary: Oh, so many. I have always felt, so I'm in a different position now,
but when I was a faculty member, a regular faculty member in my department and I
always felt like it was home.
It was comfortable.
00:45:00I had friends there. I loved what I was doing, the students,the staff. And so I have many good memories of all kinds of things, you know,
activities we would do as students, really special classes where you know you're
in a class and everything just clicks and it's such a great group. I have
memories of classes like that. Memories of fun things that we would do like
holiday parties or baby showers for some faculty member and that kind of thing
like that.
And then I think University-wide there have been many very interesting
activities and events and opportunities. Mostly it all revolves around people,
what people are doing. When I was promoted to professor the
00:46:00dean knocked on mydoor to tell me and in the hallway behind her were my faculty colleagues from my
department. I still remember that. It was great.
Rachel: What about any more difficult times at Virginia Tech?
Rosemary: Well, I suppose the most difficult time was when April 16th happened
it's still hard for me. Like this question catches you off guard. You don't know
you're going to be thinking about that. Sometimes when I go somewhere else and
people say Virginia Tech, they see it on your nametag or something, and they
say, "Oh, were you there?" Oh I didn't know I was going to have to talk about
that today, so I think that's still very very difficult to talk about.
One of the positive things about that is the focus on the community coming
together, and I had friends
00:47:00from graduate school who are at other universities whoreally commented on that, that the students who were interviewed and all that
they were hearing about how the community campus and the larger town community
was pulling together was very impressive to them, and I know it was to others in
the outside world. And so being able to showcase like yeah, there's this Hokie
spirit and it's for real, and that's not the only time I've seen it for sure.
But I think that was important to let the world know, and when Nikki Giovanni
said, "We will prevail." I mean that was an anthem, right, that everyone was
like yeah, we sure will because of this sense of community.
Rachel: And that sense of community is something that VT Stories is really
interested in. There's such a high affinity rate from alumni for Virginia Tech
00:48:00toward the school. So you talked a little bit about Hokie spirit and someprevious questions. Why do you think that alumni, faculty, professors, everyone
is so attached to Virginia Tech? Do you have any ideas?
Rosemary: Well let me speak from my new role. One of the things that deans do is
go out and meet with alumni and meet with donors or potential donors. I think
it's a very interesting thing to do, because all I see and all I hear is people
who are appreciative and truly grateful for the experiences that they had at
Virginia Tech. And they talk about that in a lot of different ways, but I met a
person recently who went to law school after Virginia Tech and now is very
successful in his profession. And he said to me, "You
00:49:00know, that logic coursethat I took as an undergraduate, that logic course is what got me through law
school." So whatever happened in that course at that time and the learning to
think critically and to do the analysis and comparing and contrasting and all
the things that you have to do in logic and learning how to build arguments,
right, and defend your position really meant something to that alum.
Other people talk about other courses or faculty members who influenced them, or
how much in retrospect they can see how much they learned in whatever their
major was or in other courses that they took, or other experiences that they had
on campus leadership experiences or internships or
00:50:00whatever it was. Peoplepretty uniformly talk about that the combination I think of the value of the
courses, and even if they are working in a completely different field now, which
I'm a developmentalist, I wouldn't be surprised if that happens, they still find
connections to whatever roots there were at Virginia Tech in their classes and
the faculty and the other things that they did.
So I think that it must be some combination of the size, maybe the geographic
location. People complain about it, but then on the other end maybe it helps you
to kind of focus around the other people who are here, and the residential
community that even the first couple of years, the first year at least that
students experience.
00:51:00I think this institution has been very focused on teaching and the quality ofteaching and maybe some other large research universities don't focus so much on
that, but it sure makes a difference to the students. And often they remember
faculty and the classes. I think that's some of what I hear them talking about
when I speak with them.
Rachel: So you've been at Tech for a while. What changes have you witnessed at
the University? Both at University level and College of Liberal Arts that you
think were significant or that you agree or disagree with?
Rosemary: I think on a general level I've seen a number of different presidents,
right, and they each have had a different focus. But I feel that regardless of
the focus they were bringing us forward in one way or another, and that's a good
thing. I
00:52:00don't feel like there was ever an administration that was problematicor taking us in the wrong direction in ways that would be difficult. You hear
about some of this in the news these days, so that's one observation.
I think of course the campus has changed a lot, and when we came here we didn't
have the bypass and all the overpasses out towards Christiansburg and things
like that. The way that this college is now is different from when I came, and
that's not uncommon that universities change their structures from time to time.
So I was in a college that was called Human Resources that had the human
development. It was called Family and Child Development back then. It had
00:53:00apparel, housing, and resource management, also a different name, hospitalityand tourism, human nutrition foods and exercise. Those were the departments that
were in that college, and then there was a separate College of Education. But
the College of Education was merged into the other one, so now it's called Human
Resources and Education. And there was a separate College of Arts and Sciences.
So the decision was made to divide the College of Arts and Sciences, but you
can't just keep creating new colleges. It's expensive and the State doesn't
authorize it. You can't just do that, so they had to come up with another plan
and it was to take and create the College of Science, and then the Arts was
divided so
00:54:00that performing Arts stayed in this college and visual arts went to architecture.There were other changes. Hospitality and tourism went to business. Interior
design went to architecture and these various changes. This college, liberal
arts and human sciences was then composed of the human development and the
apparel, housing, and resource management, but also other social science areas
came in from the old college -- sociology, community, political science, science
and technology in society. But then we have the humanities and then we have the
performing arts. So the way that we are structured now has those areas plus the
ROTC leadership, military history courses and programs.
00:55:00And we talk about how this all fits together through some common themes that wehave, which is a concern about the individual and how people function in
society, and that covers lots of departments, right. Another one is a concern
about policy, but how policy affects people. Policy doesn't happen in a vacuum
and its implications don't happen in a vacuum, but rather in a context, so we
can talk about policy from lots of departments. We can talk about inclusion and
diversity. We can talk about how we want to think about the environment and how
the environment is ex and addressed from multiple perspectives.
So we have these kinds of themes that aren't for a single department, they are
for the collaboration across departments. And then we want to take that
00:56:00perspective outward to the rest of the University and to show them how thinkingfrom the lenses that we have might enhance their perspective. So if you're in
engineering then maybe you want to consider ethics or maybe you want to consider
human relationships. You know the artificial intelligence is all about the
intersection with human relationships, right. And so we see one of our ways of
contributing to the larger University is by bringing these perspectives as they
intersect with other fields that we have on campus.
Rachel: So playing into that I think they are called destination areas, Dr.
Sands' -- what would you call them?
Rosemary: Destination areas that he created.
Rachel: As a dean are you playing a role in that and can you kind of expand upon them?
Rosemary: Well in fact I was sharing the president's initiatives which we called
00:57:00Beyond Boundaries for the first two years, so I know this very well. And hisview was very long range. We were talking about Virginia Tech in 2047 because
that's the 175th Anniversary of the University, so what do we want to be like?
We should think about that and then take the steps to get there, right? So what
will the students of the future be like? What will they be studying and how,
where? How are we going to fund it? All these questions that the different
committees worked on.
And the research and curriculum part of it is what we call destination areas,
which means making Virginia Tech a destination, so students and faculty want to
come here and be a part of this community. And different themes were identified
based on existing faculty strengths that we wanted to grow, and those groups
have all been working
00:58:00on curriculum. I think they all have a minor underway, andthen working on thinking about what kind of people do we need to hire to build
on this area. And our college has faculty involved in all of them, and we are
also in the process of hiring some specific people, faculty who will be targeted
to one of those areas or another. So we have faculty and one of them is called
Creativity Innovation, and we have faculty in the School of Performing Arts
involved in that, but also STS communication. There are lots of other faculty on
campus who are interested in elements of creativity innovation. That would be
just one example.
Rachel: What is the goal for the destination areas? Are they like majors?
Rosemary: Mostly I would say they are minors. I don't know if they would ever
become majors. That might be
00:59:00true in the future, but the whole point of it is tohave a topic. So one of them is called Integrated Security. So we can think
about security from the point of view of computer science and engineering as
cyber security right, but then we have to think about political security, so we
need political science faculty in there. But we could also think about food
security, so that now we need an agriculture and we need the nutrition folks,
and we could think about financial security. We need economists and people in
business and consumer affairs. And so the idea is that these are very broad
things, but we want to include multi-disciplinary perspectives, because it's by
doing that that we can probably get better answers to the problems we face in
society, especially in forward-thinking. And the president's goal is to make
Virginia Tech a top research university, so we need to think that way if we want
to get
01:00:00 there.Rachel: Along those lines what changes or development do you want to see at the
University within the next few years or within long-term future too?
Rosemary: I think that we have a goal of continuing to build these areas. And it
doesn't mean that all the regular majors would go away or anything like that,
but I think that if students want to get involved in one of these thematic areas
the minors will help them because they will have a introductory course, kind of
a gateway course that will give an overview of that topic in different
dimensions. And then they will have some kind of a capstone course that they
will work on an integrative project probably with students from other majors,
and in between take other courses that will complement whatever their major is.
So the idea of this is you will
01:01:00still have a major and it doesn't matter,anything can be relevant to it, and then that major would be complimented by
this minor. And maybe going on to graduate school or maybe going to work, and I
think the students who graduate with this perspective will be really well
prepared for some creative new jobs that are arising out there that aren't the
traditional jobs. Because a part of it is about getting students to think very
broadly and be able to work with people from different fields, even though you
have the depth of your own major as a basis for your work.
So, the opportunities I think will continue to grow, and there might be other
minors that will be developed in the future. I think this is setting the
University on a track that can
01:02:00give us a reputation I think in some of theseareas if we can be working on some solutions to particular issues. Another one
is data and decisions, and we talk a lot about people needing to use data to
make better informed decisions, but the amount of data available is huge, and so
how do we manage to do all of that. So these are very broad, but I think that
they will continue to develop.
I think one of the goals for the University is to increase the diversity in the
student body and on the faculty and staff and well, so that we have a community
that looks like the rest of the world that people go to work in, because they
will be working in a very diverse world. We want to encourage students to have
lots of experiential learning opportunities, whether it would be study abroad or
research, undergraduate
01:03:00research or internships, co-oping, things like that.Leadership, because those will give them skills that they can use in the world
of work later on. And the president has said he wants every student to have that
kind of experience. A lot of students do. They do study broadly. They do
undergraduate research, those things, internships, but we just want to make sure
everybody has a chance.
Rachel: Have you participated in like interdisciplinary research or working with
other colleges, especially as the dean of the Liberal Arts College? What do you
see as far as departments working each other, colleges working with each other
and how that's changing with the whole new vision with the destination areas and
that sort of thing?
Rosemary: I think so, because when the departments within colleges each year
they are asked to identify their hire rating plan, you know. Who has left, who
has retired,
01:04:00where do we need, what new direction do we want to go in. And sothey are thinking about that within the context of the destination areas, which
doesn't mean everybody has to be doing that, and it's certainly not the only
kind of work that we're doing here, but there is then collaboration in that
hiring across the colleges. Many many faculty are already working on projects
across colleges because it's what they are interested in doing. It gives often
more creative work in the long-run, and so we have lots of examples of that's
already underway, and we will just continue to develop that. The deans are very
collaborative in talking about issues and sharing ideas with each other, always
being informed about what's going on in the different colleges.
So I think that in higher
01:05:00education, not just at Virginia Tech, but everywhere,I think that people realize that big problems aren't going to be solved by
people staying in distinct groups. We need that cross fertilization, and you can
see it if you just look at anything. Like all the Silicon Valley kinds of
developments they weren't done by people in one discipline, or the space program.
Rachel: Right. Have you been able to participate in interdisciplinary research
or work over your years at Virginia Tech?
Rosemary: Yes. The thing about the field of gerontology is that it is inherently
interdisciplinary to begin with. Because even though I might be doing
relationship-based research, I can't really study and understand everything
that's going on in families if I don't understand about biological changes and
aging, cognitive and brain
01:06:00changes with aging, economic factors that affectolder adults, work-related issues.
You know all of these things have to come together, and I can't say I'm an
expert in all of them, but I can understand, and I can work with other people
and I can attend sessions at conferences that inform me about these different
areas. So I think in my whole life I've had a more expansive view because of
that, that acknowledgement that there is so many influences on a person's
development over the course of their life. There's not just one thing that
determines their outcomes.
Rachel: Right. So this is back Virginia Tech. If someone simply says the words
Virginia Tech what comes to mind?
Rosemary: I would say Ut Prosim. That spirit of community and service and giving
01:07:00back, and when we talked before about the alumni, and they talk about that too,you know they are involved because they want to give back. They appreciate the
opportunities and they want to make sure students have those opportunities in
the future. I think there have been people who have said they joined the
administration or the faculty here because of Ut Prosim, because they came here
and detected that people really believe it and take it seriously. It's not just
a sign on the wall someplace, that it kind of permeates the DNA of Virginia
Tech. And so I think that's what comes to mind, and every university has a
motto, but I don't know if everybody at other universities even knows what it
is. But I think everybody here knows what ours is.
Rachel: Any memories or experiences with Ut Prosim moments that really stand out
to you whether students or
01:08:00 faculty?Rosemary: Well we talked about April 16th before, and I think that was a
certainly big big example, and that extended, I mean it was sort of like a whole
town. I don't know, maybe the whole State, or even farther than that became part
of the community. There were so many things, like my brother went to Notre Dame
and he was in the band and he was really hardcore, and he said well you know, in
the whole history of Notre Dame they have never played the alma mater at another
institution. And they learned and played the Virginia Tech alma mater after
that. I mean that was really quite impressive to me, and things like that
happened you know all over the place.
But I think more aside from that, when I see things like students going on
alternate spring
01:09:00break, and that's been going on here for many years, andstudents are saying well okay, maybe instead of going to the beach or something
I'm going to go to a community and help other people. I've had students in class
who say they have had life-changing experiences doing that. There was a student
who went to South America and came back, and it's not that she changed her major
or anything like that, but it was like her sense of herself and her purpose in
life was deeply affected by that. And I think that being open to having those
kinds of experiences is something that is important for peoples' development and
learning. And so I would call that kind of an Ut Prosim moment. She had the
motivation to go, but then the benefit far outweighed. I mean I'm sure she
helped build things or whatever she did there,
01:10:00but what she gained from that shewould probably say far outweighed what she think she gave them.
And then I think there are just lots of little everyday things, like yesterday
somebody held the door for me. And they didn't have to you know. It wasn't like
it was going to really slam in my face. I could have caught it you know, but
just these little things that happen a lot around here. And people don't like
honk their horns, right. There's so many little everyday things that I kind of
view as part of that Ut Prosim Hokie spirit kind of way of being.
Rachel: What does Virginia Tech mean to you?
Rosemary: It means my life. I have given my life to this institution and I have
done that gladly. I have worked here for a long time. I have worked hard, long
hours and long days and all of that,
01:11:00because I believe in it you know, as aninstitution, and so I think it's a place that I can say that I really have
believed in and I'm proud of being a part of it, and I'm proud of what the
institution and the students and the faculty are doing. Because it seems like we
are always on this really positive trajectory. That is not to say bad things
haven't happened. Of course bad things happened. Students mess up and faculty
mess up and administrators do, but we seem to be able to bounce back and be
better for it, and that gets back to my research because that's what resilience
means. It means sort of going through something difficult and coming out better
than you were when you started before that experience. We saw that with the
people in our research and you can see it all around here.
Rachel: So a final question. Is
01:12:00there anything else you would like people toknow about you or that I haven't you that you would like to say?
Rosemary: Oh no, I think you have been very thorough.
Rachel: Okay. Then I think we're done.
Rosemary: Okay, it's a pleasure.
Rachel: Yeah, thank you. Oh, if you could just restate your name.
Rosemary: Rosemary Bleiszner.
Rachel: Thank you.
01:13:00