MSU Provost Teresa K. Woodruff, Ph.D. is recommending Pero G. Dagbovie as the associate provost for graduate and postdoctoral studies and dean of the Graduate School. The appointment will be effective April 22, pending approval by the Board of Trustees.
Prior to Board approval, he will serve as associate provost for graduate and postdoctoral studies and dean of the Graduate School Designate, beginning on April 11.
Dagbovie is a University Distinguished Professor in the Department of History and an associate dean in the Graduate School. He began his career as an assistant professor in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in the College of Lifelong Learning at Wayne State University in Detroit from 2000 to 2003.
He joined the MSU Department of History, teaching a range of courses in U.S. history, the philosophy of history, African American history and Africana Studies. He was a Lilly Teaching Fellow (2005-2006) and a core faculty member of the African American and African Studies Ph.D. Program. From 2010 to 2015, he served as the graduate director and associate chair in the Department of History.
In 2015, he became an associate dean in the Graduate School and contributed to a broad range of student success initiatives, including fellowship programs, recruitment and retention programs and learning communities such as the Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate Program.
“I am excited by the vision and leadership aptitude that Dr. Dagbovie brings with him as he steps into this new role,” said Woodruff. “He possesses the skills and experience needed to advance the mission of the Graduate School, and to support our graduate, professional and postdoctoral communities here at MSU.”
Dagbovie is a 2018-19 Big Ten Academic Alliance Academic Leadership Program Fellow and served on MSU's Strategic Planning Steering Committee, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Steering Committee, and Task Force on Racial Equity.
His scholarship centers on African American history and twentieth-century U.S. history. He has authored seven books and numerous articles and essays, and he is currently the editor of The Journal of African American History, the leading scholarly journal in its field, founded in 1916.
He has delivered keynote presentations throughout the nation and abroad and is on the editorial boards of several scholarly journals, including The Michigan Historical Review, Modern American History, Journal of Black Studies, and Journal for the Study of Radicalism.
Active in public history, Dagbovie has served as a scholar consultant for the “And Still We Rise” permanent exhibit at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, the Organization of American Historians and the National Park Service (U.S. Department of Interior) National Capital Region History Program, National Capital Parks — East. He is currently serving as the lead historian consultant for the restoration of the Carter G. Woodson Home, National Historic Site in Washington, D.C.
He has also served as a consultant for history and social studies curriculum development with public school systems in Michigan and has led numerous teaching history workshops and summer institutes for secondary school history teachers supported by the U.S. Department of Education, the Michigan Department of Education and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Dagbovie actively mentors diverse groups of students. He has mentored many undergraduate students in the Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program and the Summer Research Opportunity Program and has served as the major advisor of numerous graduate students who have earned doctoral degrees and are now working in academia. He is currently the MSU National Steering Committee representative for the Edward Alexander Bouchet Graduate Honor Society that was founded at Yale University.
The Graduate School offers graduate students assistance in academic matters with the support of University Governance, advice on university-wide degree requirements, information on the availability of financial assistance, fellowships and scholarships, as well as approval for theses and dissertations.
Eric Torng currently serves as responsible administrator of the Graduate School, following the January 2022 departure of former dean Thomas Jeitschko, who assumed the new role of senior associate provost at MSU.
“I am grateful for Dr. Torng’s willingness to step into the role of responsible administrator during this time of transition,” said Woodruff. “His service to the Graduate School and university is much appreciated.”