Katrina Armstrong has been selected to launch the Vagelos Institute for Basic Biomedical Research at Columbia University. In taking on this new responsibility, Dr. Armstrong will transition out of her current roles as the university’s executive vice president for health and biomedical sciences, CEO of the Columbia University Irving Medical Center, and dean of the Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. A physician-scientist, she has dedicated her scholarship to advancing the understanding of cancer, genomics, and health inequities.
Dr. Armstrong received her bachelor’s degree in architecture at Yale University, where she also completed pre-med studies. She earned her medical degree from Johns Hopkins University, followed by a master’s degree in clinical epidemiology from the University of Pennsylvania.
Melissa Schwartzberg is slated to join the Princeton University faculty as a full professor with the department of politics and the University Center for Human Values. Since 2013, Dr. Schwartzberg has taught at New York University. Earlier, she taught at Columbia University and George Washington University. As a scholar, she researches ancient and modern political thought, theory, and institutions with a focus on the historical origins of rules and decision-making in Athenian democracy, as well as constitutionalism and democratic theory.
Dr. Schwartzberg earned her bachelor’s degree in classics and political science from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, and her Ph.D. in politics from New York University.

Kuang holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., a master’s degree in Chinese studies from the University of Cambridge, and a master’s degree in contemporary Chinese studies from the University of Oxford.

Dr. Ali-Coleman is a graduate of the University of Maryland Baltimore County. She holds a master’s degree in mass communication from Towson University in Maryland and an educational doctorate from Morgan State University in Baltimore.

Dr. Saunders-Adams is an alumna of Ohio University, where she majored in social work. She holds a master’s degree from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland and a Ph.D. in social work from Ohio State University.

Dr. Goodyear-Kaʻōpua earned her bachelor’s degree in Hawaiian studies and political science from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and her Ph.D. in the history of consciousness from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

In addition to her doctorate from Penn, Dr. Jones holds bachelor’s degrees in business information systems and psychology and a master’s degree in interdisciplinary telecommunications from the University of Colorado.


