Dr. Thomas
Linehan is currently the director of the Institute for Interactive Arts and Engineering at UT Dallas. "UTD students are the smartest I've taught," he says. "Most of them write very well, so it gives me great hope that the stories of the future will come out of this generation. They've got good, fresh ideas. This university is a university for this century."
He has a background in both corporate management and educational
administration. He has served as a college president, a corporate
vice president, an associate dean, a research laboratory director,
a professor and a public school teacher.
Most recently, he served
as the president of The Ringling School of Art and Design in Sarasota,
Florida. There he directed successful ventures in: selective enrollment
increases, consensus-based strategic planning, faculty governance
reform, housing and instructional facilities construction, increased
corporate collaboration, improved faculty/staff/student morale and
the directed the best financial performance in the college's history.
As senior vice president of CRSS Architects, a world-wide design
firm (400 architects and 15 offices), he managed a number of major
corporate units and implemented CRSS' early entrance into advanced
computer-based design and computer visualization. Dr. Linehan has
experience in research and educational planning with the arts and
technology.
He has developed several premiere degree programs in
media arts technology. (Ohio State University's Advanced Computing
Center for the Arts and Design, Texas A&M University's Visualization
Laboratory and The Ringling School of Art and Design's Computer
Animation Program.)
Each of these programs provides an advanced
computing environment in support of an industry-relevant education.
Dr. Linehan has served as a consultant in the development of similar
programs in The Netherlands, Germany, New Zealand and Canada.
Education:
| 1981 |
Ph.
D. Art Education (Specialization in Computer Graphics/Animation)
Ohio State University |
| 1972 |
M.A.
Art Education (Educational Technology), Ohio State University |
| 1966 |
B.A.
Fine Art, Webster University |
|