°Ä²Ê¿ª½±

Provost and Dean of the Faculty

The Provost and Dean of the Faculty supports °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s core academic mission.

°Ä²Ê¿ª½± is distinguished by academic excellence, and the Provost and Dean of the Faculty division provides oversight of those areas that directly contribute to °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s academic excellence: curriculum development, faculty recruitment and support, instruction, university libraries, off-campus studies, university museums, registrar, sustainability, information technology services (ITS), entrepreneurship and innovation, university grants and sponsored research, center for learning, teaching and research (CLTR), national fellowships and scholarships.

Resources

Administrative Deadlines

Faculty Governance

Faculty Handbook

Policies and Guidelines

 

 

Contact Information

Phone: 315-228-7222

Office staff

104 McGregory Hall 
13 Oak Drive
Hamilton, NY 13346

 

Portrait of Lesleigh Cushing

Meet °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s Provost and Dean of the Faculty

Lesleigh Cushing, Provost and Dean of the Faculty, Mark S. Siegel University Professor in Religion and Jewish Studies.

Cushing arrived at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± in 2002, after receiving a BA in English literature and religious studies from McGill University, a master of theological studies degree from Harvard Divinity School, and her PhD in religion and literature from Boston University. In 2015, she was named Murray W. and Mildred K. Finard Associate Professor in Jewish studies and associate professor of religion. She was promoted to the rank of full professor at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± in 2018. 

Her scholarly work is focused on the intersection of religion and literature—put Jewishly, literatorah—and she has written on a range of topics, including intertextuality in Genesis, images of the flood in contemporary fiction, the intersection of ritual and memory in Exodus, the book of Ruth in historical-critical and theological perspective, and midrash in Jewish American literature. She is the co-author of The Bible in the American Short Story (2018) and author of Sustaining Fictions: Midrash, Intertextuality, Translation and the Literary Afterlife of the Hebrew Bible (2008). She is the co-editor of both From the Margins: Women of the Hebrew Bible and their Afterlives (2009) and Scrolls of Love: Ruth and the Song of Songs (2006), and she has published numerous articles focusing on the intersection of religion and literature. Her current book project is on Jewish identity and textuality in contemporary Jewish cookbooks.

Her courses include Bible in American Politics, The Literary Afterlife of the Bible, Fasting and Feasting, Gender and Judaism, The Word in the World, and Core 151: Legacies of the Ancient World. In 2015, she was recognized with the °Ä²Ê¿ª½± Alumni Corporation Distinguished Teaching Award.

Immediately prior to becoming Provost/ Dean of the Faculty, Cushing served as senior advisor to the president for arts and innovation initiatives. In this role, she worked collaboratively with colleagues in art, computer science, creative writing, entrepreneurship and innovation, film and media studies, museum studies and the University Museums, music, sociology and anthropology, theater and dance, the University Libraries, as well as with University technology specialists and countless others to realize a vision for the Middle Campus and a plan for its full implementation.

Between 2017 and 2021, Cushing served as Associate Dean of the Faculty, focused on faculty recruitment and development, a role in which she worked with many campus colleagues to develop several of the academic dimensions of the Third-Century Plan. In coordination with the Associate Provost for Equity and Diversity Maura Tumulty, she helped to develop new, more equitable hiring guidelines and processes; offered hiring workshops foregrounding best practices in DEI and implicit bias training; and assisted in the hiring of approximately 30 tenure-stream faculty members. During this time, she also led a team of 32 faculty and staff members in developing a vision for the Initiative in Arts, Creativity, and Innovation in °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s Middle Campus.

Prior leadership roles at the University include directing the Jewish Studies program, being University Professor for CORE 151: Legacies of the Ancient World. In addition, she has served on numerous university committees, including being co-chair of the Strategic Planning Working
Group: Living the Liberal Arts.

°Ä²Ê¿ª½± students taking a class in LaHall
°Ä²Ê¿ª½± students taking a class in LaHall.

Academic Support

The Center for Learning Teaching, and Research (CLTR) supports °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s ongoing commitment to maintaining an exceptional educational environment. The center supports faculty in teaching, innovative pedagogy, and research.Center for Learning, Teaching, and Research