List of Stanford University faculty and staff

This page lists faculty and staff members of Stanford University.

Stanford office

Presidents

Acting presidents were temporary appointments. Swain served while Wilbur was United States Secretary of the Interior under Herbert Hoover; Eurich and Faust after the unexpected death of Tresidder.[1][2]

No.NameTerm
1.David Starr Jordan1891–1913
2.John Casper Branner1913 – December 31, 1915
3.Ray Lyman WilburJanuary 22, 1916 – June 30, 1943
*Robert Eccles SwainMarch 5, 1929 – March 4, 1933
4.Donald Bertrand TresidderOctober 14, 1943 – January 28, 1948
*Alvin C. EurichJanuary 28, 1948 – December 31, 1948
*Clarence H. Faust[3]January 1, 1949 – April 1, 1949
5.J. E. Wallace SterlingApril 1, 1949 – September 1, 1968
*Robert J. Glaser[4]September 1, 1968 – December 1, 1968
6.Kenneth PitzerDecember 1, 1968 – June 25, 1970
7.Richard Wall LymanSeptember 24, 1970 – August 1, 1980
8.Donald KennedyAugust 1, 1980 – September 1, 1992
9.Gerhard CasperSeptember 1, 1992 – August 31, 2000
10.John L. HennessySeptember 1, 2000 – August 31, 2016
*John EtchemendyFebruary 14, 2012 – June 8, 2012
11.Marc Tessier-LavigneSeptember 1, 2016 – August 31, 2023
*Richard SallerSeptember 1, 2023 – present
DesignateJonathan LevinAugust 1, 2024
Color key
  Acting University president (*)

Provosts

The position was created in 1952.[5]

S. No.NameTerm
1.Douglas M. Whitaker1952–1955
2.Frederick Terman1955–1965
3.Richard Wall Lyman1967–1970
4.William F. Miller1971–1978
5.Gerald J. Lieberman[6]1979
6.Donald Kennedy1979–1980
7.Albert M. Hastorf[7]1980–1984
8.James N. Rosse[8]1984–1992
9.Gerald J. Lieberman[6]1992–1993
10.Condoleezza Rice1993–1999
11.John L. Hennessy1999–2000
12.John Etchemendy2000–2017
13.Persis Drell2017–2023
14.Jenny Martínez2023–present

Chancellors

This position is often empty and has always been held by a former president.[9]

S. No.NameTerm
1David Starr Jordan[10]1913–1916
2Ray Lyman Wilbur1943–1949
3J. E. Wallace Sterling[11]1968–1985

School Deans

Though Stanford did not originally have schools, over the years the departments have all been collected into schools.

Color key
  Acting Dean (*)
Graduate School of Business[12]
Name Years Notes
1 Willard E. Hotchkiss[13] 1926–1930
2 J. Hugh Jackson[14] 1931–1956
Carlton A. Pederson 1956–1958 acting dean
3 Ernest C. Arbuckle[15] 1958–1968
Samuel "Pete" Pond 1968–1969 acting dean
4 Arjay Miller[16][17] 1969–1979 The top 10% of graduating MBAs are named Arjay Miller Scholars.[18]
Robert Jaedicke 1979–1980 acting dean
5 Rene C. McPherson[19] 1980–1982
6 Robert Jaedicke[20] 1983–1990
7 Michael Spence[21] 1990–1999
8 Robert L. Joss[22] 1999–2009 Stanford Ph.D. 1970
9 Garth Saloner[23] 2009–2015
10 Jonathan Levin 2016–present
Doerr School of Sustainability[24]
Name Years Notes
1 Arun Majumdar[25] 2022–present
School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences[26]
Name Years Notes
1 A. I. Levorsen 1947–1950 Petroleum geologist
2 Charles Park[27] 1950–1965
3 Richard Jahns[28] 1965–1979
4 Allan V. Cox 1979–1987
5 George A. Thompson 1987–1989
6 W. G. Ernst 1989–1994
7 Lynn Orr 1994–2002
8 Pamela Matson 2002–2017
9 Stephan Graham 2017–2022[29]
Graduate School of Education[30]
Name Years Note
1 Ellwood Patterson Cubberley 1917–1933
2 Grayson N. Kefauver[31] 1933–1946
* Lucien Blair Kinney[32] 1943–1946 acting
3 A. John Bartky[33] 1946–1953
4 I. James Quillen[34] 1954–1966
5 H. Thomas James[35] 1966–1970
6 Arthur Coladarci[36] 1970–1979
7 Myron Atkin[37] 1979–1986
8 Marshall S. Smith[38] 1986–1993
9 Richard Shavelson 1993–2001
10 Deborah Stipek 2000–2011
11 Claude Steele 2011–2014
* Deborah Stipek 2014–2015 acting
12 Daniel L. Schwartz[39] 2015–present
School of Engineering[40]
NameYears DepartmentNotes
1 Theodore J. Hoover[41]1925–1936 Mining and MetallurgyStanford AB 1901
2 Samuel B. Morris[42]1936–1944 Civil EngineeringStanford AB 1911
3 Frederick E. Terman1944–1958 Electrical Engineering
4 Joseph M. Pettit1958–1972 Electrical EngineeringStanford Ph.D. 1942
5 William M. Kays[43]1972–1984 Mechanical EngineeringStanford Ph.D. 1951
6 James F. Gibbons[44]1984–1996 Electrical EngineeringStanford Ph.D. 1956
7 John L. Hennessy1996–1999 Computer Science
8 James Plummer[45]1999–2014 Electrical Engineering
9 Persis Drell2014–2016 SLAC/Physics
10 Jennifer Widom[46] 2017–present Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
School of Humanities and Sciences[47]
Name Years Department Notes
1 Clarence H. Faust[3] 1948–1951 English
2 Douglas Merritt Whitaker 1951–1952 Biology
3 Ray N. Faulkner[48] 1952–1956 Art and Architecture
4 Philip H. Rhinelander 1956–1961 Philosophy
5 Robert Richardson Sears 1961–1970 Psychology
6 Albert H. Hastorf III[49] 1970–1973 Psychology
7 Halsey L. Royden[50] 1973–1981 Mathematics
8 Norman K. Wessells[51] 1981–1988 Biology
9 Ewart A.C. Thomas 1988–1993 Psychology
10 John B. Shoven 1993–1998 Economics
11 Malcolm R. Beasley 1998–2001 Applied Physics
12 Sharon R. Long 2001–2007 Biological Sciences
13 Richard Saller[52] 2007–2018 Classics and History
14 Debra Satz[53] 2018–present Philosophy
Law School[54][55]
# Name Years Notes
1 Nathan Abbott 1893–1907 Executive Head
* Charles H. Huberich 1906 acting
2 Frederic Campbell Woodward 1908–1916 first to be called dean
3 Charles A. Huston 1916–1922
* Arthur M. Cathcart 1917–1919 acting
4 Marion R. Kirkwood 1922–1945
* Arthur M. Cathcart 1930–1931 acting
* Lowell Turrentine 1945–1946
5 Carl B. Spaeth 1946–1962
* Samuel D. Thurman 1952–1953 acting
* John R. McDonough 1959–1960 acting
* John R. McDonough 1962–1964 acting
6 Bayless Manning 1964–1971
7 Thomas Ehrlich 1971–1976
* J. Keith Mann 1976 acting
8 Charles J. Meyers 1976–1981 acting
* J. Keith Mann 1981–1982 acting
9 John Hart Ely 1982–1987
10 Paul Brest 1987–1999
11 Kathleen Sullivan 1999–2004
12 Larry Kramer 2004–2012
13 M. Elizabeth Magill 2012–2019
14 Jennifer Martínez 2019–present
School of Medicine[56]
# Name Years Notes
1 Ray Lyman Wilbur 1911–1916
2 William Ophüls 1916–1933
3 Loren R. Chandler[57] 1933–1953
4 Windsor C. Cutting 1953–1957
5 Robert H. Always 1957–1965
6 Robert J. Glaser[4] 1965–1971
7 Clayton Rich[58] 1971–1982
8 Dominick P. Purpura 1982–1984 went on to be dean of Albert Einstein College of Medicine[59]
9 David Korn[60] 1984–1995
10 Eugene A. Bauer 1995–2001
11 Philip Pizzo 2001–2012
12 Lloyd B. Minor 2012–present

Stanford faculty and affiliates

Aeronautics and astronautics

  • Sigrid Close, Associate Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics; Electrical Engineering
  • William F. Durand, Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics; Mechanical Engineering; Electrical Engineering (1859–1958)
  • Charbel Farhat, Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics; Mechanical Engineering
  • G. Scott Hubbard, Adjunct Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Antony Jameson, emeritus Faculty, Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Sanjay Lall, Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics; Electrical Engineering
  • Bradford Parkinson, professor emeritus, Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Stephen Rock, Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Debbie Senesky, Assistant Professor, Aeronautics and Astronautics; Electrical Engineering
  • George Springer, emeritus Faculty, Aeronautics and Astronautics

Biology/biochemistry/medicine

  • George W. Beadle, professor of biology, co-winner of 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (at Caltech at time of award)
  • Paul Berg, emeritus (active) professor of biochemistry, co-winner of 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, pioneer in recombinant DNA technology
  • David Botstein, former professor of genetics, pioneer in Human Genome Project
  • Patrick O. Brown, professor of biochemistry, inventor of DNA microarray technology
  • Eugene C. Butcher, professor of pathology, 2004 Crafoord Prize winner
  • Stanley Norman Cohen, professor of genetics and medicine, accomplished the first transplantation of genes between cells; winner of National Medal of Science, National Medal of Technology, inducted into National Inventors Hall of Fame
  • Carl Degler, professor of history, Pulitzer Prize for History (1972)
  • William C. Dement, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, pioneer in sleep research
  • Christian Guilleminault, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, pioneer in sleep research
  • Paul R. Ehrlich, professor of biology, 1990 Crafoord Prize winner
  • James Ferrell, systems biologist and the first chair of the Dept. of Chemical and Systems Biology from its establishment until 2011
  • Andrew Z. Fire, professor of genetics and pathology, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Thomas J. Fogarty, clinical professor of surgery; member of National Inventors Hall of Fame; owner of more than 100 surgical patents, including the Fogarty balloon catheter
  • Toby Freedman Space Medicine
  • Jessica Hellmann, professor of ecology at the University of Minnesota, director of the Institute on the Environment
  • Daniel Herschlag, senior associate dean at Stanford University School of Medicine, graduate education and postdoctoral affairs and professor of biochemistry and, by courtesy, of chemistry
  • Leonard Herzenberg, professor of genetics, winner of Kyoto Prize for development of fluorescent-activated cell sorting
  • Andrew D. Huberman, professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology, known for discoveries of brain function, plasticity and regeneration
  • David Katzenstein, virologist and AIDS researcher and associate medical director of the AIDS Clinical Trial Unit at Stanford
  • Robert Kerlan Sports Medicine pioneer
  • Peter S. Kim, professor of biochemistry, former president of Merck Research Laboratories (MRL), 2003–2013
  • Brian Kobilka, professor in medical school, 2012 Nobel Prize winner in chemistry
  • Arthur Kornberg, professor of biochemistry, winner of 1959 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Roger D. Kornberg, professor of structural biology, winner of 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • William Langston, neurologist; founder, CEO, and scientific director of the Parkinson's Institute
  • Joshua Lederberg, founder of the Stanford Department of Genetics, co-recipient of 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Michael Levitt, professor in medical school, 2013 Nobel prize winner in chemistry
  • Kate Lorig, chronic disease self-management, patient education, director of the Stanford Patient Education Center
  • Nicole Martinez-Martin, assistant professor of biomedical ethics, ethics of AI and digital health, STS[61]
  • José Gilberto Montoya, professor in medical school, founder of the Immunocompromised Host Service
  • Peter Raven, professor of botany; coauthor with Paul Ehrlich in 1964 of the seminal work Butterflies and Plants: A Study in Coevolution; Missouri Botanical Garden, 1971–2010; board of trustees of National Geographic; International Prize for Biology, 1986; Pontifical Science Academy; Time Magazine "Hero for the Planet" 1999
  • Robert Sapolsky, John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor in Biological Sciences, Neurology & Neurological Sciences, and Neurosurgery; author and recipient of awards including MacArthur Fellowship genius grant, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, and the Klingenstein Fellowship in Neuroscience
  • Matthew P. Scott, professor of developmental biology, discoverer of homeobox genes
  • Oscar Elton Sette, lecturer and Chief of Ocean Research, pioneer of fisheries oceanography and modern fisheries science
  • Norman Shumway, professor at Stanford Medical School, father of the heart transplantation technique
  • Lubert Stryer, professor of biology, 2006 National Medal of Science winner, known for micro-array gene chip
  • Thomas Sudhof, professor at Stanford Medical School, winner of 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Edward L. Tatum, co-winner of 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (at Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research at time of award)
  • Jared Tinklenberg, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
  • Donald Redelmeier, internist, Professor of Medicine at University of Toronto, noted expert in medical decision making

Chemistry

Graduate School of Business

Communication

Computer science

Donald Knuth in 2005
  • Vinton Cerf, former faculty, Turing Award-winning computer scientist
  • Douglas Engelbart, Turing award-winning computer scientist, inventor of the computer mouse, former researcher, inducted into National Inventors Hall of Fame
  • Edward Feigenbaum, Turing award-winning computer scientist, father of expert system, coinventor of Dendral
  • Robert Floyd, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Alexandra Illmer Forsythe, wrote the first series of introductory computer science textbooks
  • George Forsythe, founder of the Department of Computer Science and president of the Association for Computing Machinery
  • Gene Golub, former faculty, a leading authority in numerical matrix analysis, inventor of the algorithm for Singular Value Decomposition (SVD)
  • David Gries, former faculty. First text on compilers, winner of four national education awards
  • Leonidas J. Guibas, Allan Newell award-winning pioneer in data structures and geometric algorithms
  • John L. Hennessy, pioneer in RISC, president of Stanford
  • Sir Antony Hoare, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • John Hopcroft, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Alan Kay, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Donald Knuth, professor emeritus, computer science pioneer, creator of TeX, author of The Art of Computer Programming, Turing award winner
  • Daphne Koller, professor in CS
  • John Koza, pioneer in genetic programming
  • Barbara Liskov, first woman to earn a Ph.D. in CS from Stanford, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • John McCarthy, responsible for the coining of the term Artificial Intelligence, and inventor of the Lisp programming language and time sharing, Turing award winner
  • Edward McCluskey, professor in EE, IEEE John Von Neumann Prize winner
  • Robert Metcalfe, former faculty, co-inventor of Ethernet, inducted into National Inventors Hall of Fame
  • Robin Milner former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Allen Newell Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Andrew Ng, faculty in CS, winner of 2010 IJCAI Computers and Thought Award
  • John Ousterhout, faculty in CS, winner of Grace Murray Hopper Award
  • Amir Pnueli postdoc, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Raj Reddy, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Ronald Rivest former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Tim Roughgarden, faculty in CS, winner of Grace Murray Hopper Award
  • Arthur Samuel, former faculty; pioneer in the field of computer gaming and artificial intelligence; his checkers-playing program appears to be the world's first self-learning program, and an early demonstration of the fundamental concept of artificial intelligence (AI)
  • Dana Scott, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Robert Tarjan, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • Sebastian Thrun, director of Stanford AI LAB; team leader of Stanford driverless car racing team, whose entry Stanley won the 2005 DARPA grand challenge
  • Jeff Ullman, professor in CS, IEEE John Von Neumann prize winner
  • Terry Winograd, faculty in CS, winner of 2010 IJCAI Computers and Thought Award
  • Keith Winstein, faculty in CS, author of Mosh
  • Niklaus Wirth former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist, inventor of PASCAL
  • Andrew Yao, former faculty, Turing award-winning computer scientist
  • William Yeager, inventor of multi-protocol internet router

Economics

Education

Engineering

  • Andreas Acrivos, former professor, National Medal of Science winner
  • Stephen Barley, organizational theorist and developer of adaptive structuration, co-director of the Center for Work, Technology, and Organization
  • Sally Benson, professor of engineering
  • Arthur E. Bryson, Jr., professor emeritus in Aeronautics and Astronautics, father of modern optimal control theory
  • Roland Doré, former president of the Canadian Space Agency
  • William F. Durand, professor and head of Mechanical Engineering (1904–24), aerodynamics pioneer and chair of NASA forerunner NACA
  • Irmgard Flügge-Lotz, pioneer of discontinuous automatic control theory
  • Kenneth E. Goodson, mechanical engineer and endowed professor in the School of Engineering
  • William Webster Hansen, former professor, contributed to the development of microwave technology[63]
  • Siegfried Hecker, professor, former director of Los Alamos National Lab
  • Ronald A. Howard, professor, father of decision analysis, founding director and former chairman of Strategic Decision Group
  • Mark Z. Jacobson, professor of engineering
  • Elizabeth Jens, NASA engineer
  • Rudolf Kálmán, former professor in EE, the father of modern control theory, noted for Kalman filter, National Medal of Science winner
  • Rudolf Kompfner, former professor, National Medal of Science winner
  • Bruce Lusignan, emeritus professor of electrical engineering, made contributions to communication satellites and reusable launch vehicles
  • Bridgette Meinhold, artist and author with a focus on sustainability
  • Dwight Nishimura, Addie and Al Macovski professor in the School of Engineering, who leads the Magnetic Resonance Systems Research Laboratory
  • William Perry (A.M. 1950), engineer, entrepreneur, diplomat, and 19th Secretary of Defense of the United States
  • Calvin Quate, professor, National Medal of Science winner
  • Paul V. Roberts, pioneer of environmental engineering
  • Stephen Timoshenko, pioneer of modern engineering mechanics
  • Powtawche Valerino, NASA JPL space navigation engineer
  • Giovanni De Micheli, former professor of Electrical Engineering
  • Teresa Meng, Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of Electrical Engineering

History

International relations

  • Stephen D. Krasner, former director of policy planning (2005–2007) for the United States Department of State

Law

Linguistics

  • Jared Bernstein, Adjunct Professor
  • Eve V. Clark, Richard Lyman Professor in the Humanities, emerita
  • Michael C. Frank, associate professor of psychology and, by courtesy, of linguistics
  • Miyako Inoue, associate professor of anthropology and, by courtesy, of linguistics
  • Dan Jurafsky, professor of linguistics and of computer science, and chair, Department of Linguistics
  • Ronald M. Kaplan, Adjunct Professor
  • Lauri Karttunen, Adjunct Professor
  • Martin Kay, professor of linguistics
  • Paul Kay, Adjunct Professor
  • Paul V. Kiparsky, Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences
  • Beth Levin, William H. Bonsall Professor in the Humanities
  • Jay McClelland, Lucie Stern Professor in the Social Sciences and Professor, by courtesy, of Linguistics
  • John R. Rickford, J. E. Wallace Sterling Professor in the Humanities, emeritus (recalled to active duty 2017–2019)
  • Elizabeth Traugott, professor of linguistics and of English, emerita
  • Tom Wasow, Clarence Irving Lewis Professor in Philosophy and professor of linguistics, emeritus and academic secretary to the university
  • Annie Zaenen, Adjunct Professor
  • Arnold M. Zwicky, Adjunct Professor

Literature and arts

Bahram Beyzai, Persian playwright and filmmaker, taught at Stanford from 2010.
  • Gerald M. Ackerman, Assistant Professor of Art History (1965–1971)
  • Judith Bettina, soprano
  • Bahram Beyzai, Persian playwright and filmmaker
  • Eavan Boland, Irish poet, professor
  • George Hardin Brown, medieval literature
  • Scott Bukatman, film and media professor
  • Albert Elsen, Walter A. Haas Professor in the Humanities (1968–1995)
  • Lowell Gallagher, literary theorist and associate professor, earned Ph.D. in 1989
  • Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, literary theorist
  • D. R. MacDonald, creative writing
  • Alexander Nemerov, professor of art and art history[64]
  • Juan Bautista Rael, linguist and folklorist
  • Jack Rakove, professor in history, 1997 Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Wallace Stegner, 1972 winner of Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
  • Yvor Winters, poet and critic

Mathematics and statistics

Political science

  • Coit D. Blacker, political science professor, special assistant to the President for National Security Affairs; and senior director for Russian, Ukrainian and Eurasian affairs, National Security Council; Executive Office of the President
  • Larry Diamond, professor, mentor, senior fellow at the Hoover Institute
  • Morris P. Fiorina, political scientist and author
  • Francis Fukuyama, senior fellow at the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law since 2010
  • Terry Karl, professor of Latin American studies
  • Alexander Kerensky (1881–1970), Russian revolutionary leader, Hoover Institute fellow
  • Condoleezza Rice, political science professor, Secretary of State
  • Douglas Rivers, political science professor, chief scientist of YouGov

Philosophy

  • Joshua Cohen, professor emeritus of philosophy
  • Lala Hardayal, lecturer, Indian freedom fighter
  • Patrick Suppes, National Medal of Science recipient, professor

Physics

Psychology

  • Richard Atkinson, professor of psychology 1956–1980, former president, University of California
  • Albert Bandura, professor of psychology since 1964, David Starr Jordan Professor of Social Science in Psychology since 1973, known for his work on social learning theory and, more recently, on social cognitive theory and self efficacy
  • Gordon H. Bower, professor of psychology, 2005 National Medal of Science winner
  • Carol Dweck, professor of psychology, known for her work on the mindset psychological trait
  • Jennifer Eberhardt, professor of psychology, 2014 MacArthur Fellow
  • Kalanit Grill-Spector, professor of psychology[66]
  • Roger Shepard, professor of psychology, National Medal of Science winner
  • Edward Kellog Strong, Jr. (1884–1963), professor of psychology at Stanford University 1923–1963
  • Lewis Terman, former professor, pioneer in I.Q. testing
  • Leanne M. Williams, professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences since 2013
  • Philip Zimbardo, former professor of psychology, former president of the APA, researcher
  • Amado M. Padilla, professor of psychology

Hoover Fellows

  • Jim Mattis, U.S. Secretary of Defense (2017–2019)[67]
  • Abbas Milani, political scientist and historian
  • George Shultz, U.S. Secretary of State (1982–1989), U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1972–1974), U.S. Secretary of Labor (1969–1970), also lectured at the Graduate School of Business
  • Amy Zegart, political scientist and intelligence reform expert

Coaches

  • Dick Gould, greatest tennis coach in history; from 1966 to 2004 he won 17 NCAA Team titles with 50 All-American players
  • Payton Jordan, track coach 1957–1979; head coach of the 1968 US Olympic track team
  • Bill Walsh, twice head coach of the football team; also served as interim athletic director; coach of the three-time Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers; inventor of the West Coast Offense
  • Glenn Scobey Warner, College Football Hall of Fame coach known as "Pop" Warner, brought the following mechanics to football: the screen pass, spiral punt, single- and double-wing formations, the use of shoulder and thigh pads, designed helmets red for backs and white for ends

Other


References

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