
President and
Regent, University of California
Richard
C. Atkinson, seventeenth president of the University of California,
took office on October 1, 1995. Before becoming president
of the UC System, he served as chancellor of UC San Diego;
prior to that he served as director of the National Science
Foundation and was a long-term member of the faculty at Stanford
University.
An internationally
respected scholar and scientist, Atkinson became the fifth
chancellor of UC San Diego in 1980. During his tenure, the
university doubled in size to about 18,000 students while
increasing the distinction and breadth of its programs. The
campus consistently placed among the top five universities
in federal funding for research. In 1995, the quality of its
graduate programs was ranked tenth in the nation by the National
Research Council.
Atkinson was appointed
deputy director of the National Science Foundation by President
Gerald Ford in 1975. Two years later, President Jimmy Carter
promoted him to director. At NSF, he had a wide range of responsibilities
for science policy at a national and international level,
including negotiating the first memorandum of understanding
in history between the People's Republic of China and the
United States, an agreement for the exchange of scientists
and scholars.
Atkinson began his
academic career at Stanford University after military service
in the U.S. Army. He was a member of the Stanford faculty
from 1956 to 1980, except for a three-year period at UCLA.
In addition to serving as professor of psychology at Stanford,
he held appointments in the School of Engineering, School
of Education, Applied Mathematics and Statistics Laboratories,
and Institute for Mathematical Studies in the Social Sciences.
Atkinson's research
dealt with problems of memory and cognition. His theory of
human memory has been influential in shaping research in the
field. It has helped in clarifying the relationship between
brain structures and psychological phenomena, in explaining
the effects of drugs on memory, and in formulating techniques
that optimize the learning process.
Atkinson has also
been interested in the more applied problems of learning in
the classroom. He developed one of the first computer-controlled
systems for instruction, which served as a prototype for the
commercial development of computer-assisted instruction. Reading
instruction under computer control for young school children
has been an important application of his work. He was co-founder
of the Computer Curriculum Corporation.
Atkinson's scientific
contributions have resulted in election to the National Academy
of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, the National Academy
of Education, and the American Philosophical Society. He is
past president of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, former chair of the Association of American Universities,
the recipient of numerous honorary degrees, and a mountain
in Antarctica has been named in his honor.
His wife, Rita Atkinson,
holds a PhD in psychology. Their daughter, Lynn, has an M.D.
degree and is a neurosurgeon.
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