Boston College benefactor Peter S. Lynch 65, H95 talks with Lynch School Dean Stanton Wortham, Professor Eric Dearing, Associate Professor Rebecca Lowenhaupt, and Professor Belle Liang at the January symposium. (Photo by Lee Pellegrini)
A symposium focused on the social context of development marked the official launch of the Lynch School of Education and Human Development and Human Development, the new name of Boston College Lynch School of Education and Human Development. The change acknowledges the school strengths in applied psychology and whole-person approaches to human development.
Stanton Wortham
淭he name enhancement reflects our faculty strengths and substantial research and teaching expertise in counseling and developmental psychology攁n academic area not formally recognized in our school name until now, said Stanton E. F. Wortham, the Charles F. Donovan, S.J., Dean of the school.
淭he new designation merges the outstanding work we do in teacher education, educational leadership, higher education, and curriculum and instruction with our distinguished capabilities in human development, thereby better reflecting the school focus and resources, he said.
The first coeducational school built on Boston College Chestnut Hill Campus, the School of Education opened its doors to 176 first-year students in 1952. Its academic reputation burgeoned and was recognized in 1999 when philanthropists Carolyn and Peter Lynch made a landmark $10 million gift to the education school, which was renamed in the Lynches honor in November 2000. Today, more than 1,425 undergraduate and graduate students are enrolled in the Lynch School, which聽U.S. News & World Report recently ranked 21st among graduate schools of education. It placed聽first among Catholic schools of education.
Stanton Wortham, Rebecca Lowenhaupt, Belle Liang, and Eric Dearing
A January 30聽symposium, 淧artnering with Schools and Communities to Foster Human Development, held in the Yawkey Center Murray Family Function Room, featured Lynch School faculty聽Eric Dearing, a professor of applied developmental and educational psychology,聽Belle Liang, a professor of counseling psychology, and Rebecca Lowenhaupt, an associate professor in the Educational Leadership and Higher Education Department. The three discussed the school research on social contexts of development, how that research informs practice, and how the resulting lessons contribute to strengthening community and fostering justice. University Provost and Dean of Faculties David Quigley gave welcoming remarks and Wortham served as moderator for the discussion.聽
Mary Lynch Witkowski and Peter S. Lynch 65
Boston College benefactor Peter S. Lynch 65, H95 described the name enhancement event that officially added 淗uman Development to the Lynch School of Education eponym as 渁 great moment.
淚t not like we檙e changing things; it been going on here for a long time, he pointed out. 淲e檙e actually naming what the school does.
淭wo-thirds of [undergraduate] students major in Applied Psychology and Human Development, and 40 percent of the faculty teach within this discipline, he said. The two elements of the school name攅ducation and human development攔elate to each other every minute of the day.
Lynch characterized his family involvement in the school as the 済reatest thing we檝e ever done among the numerous philanthropic ventures of the聽Lynch Foundation, which he and his his late wife, Carolyn, established in 1988.
淭he most important four years of my life were here at Boston College, said Lynch in closing.
Phil Gloudemans | University Communications | February 2019

