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Karen Webber

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Professor Emerita of Higher Education

Karen Webber is a professor emerita in the Institute of Higher Education at the University of Georgia. She holds her Ph.D. from The University of Maryland College Park. Prior to joining the IHE faculty on a full-time basis, she served as director of institutional research and interim associate provost for institutional effectiveness at the University of Georgia. Webber came to UGA in 2003, following a 15-year tenure in the Office of Institutional Research & Planning at the University of Delaware.

She has published research on a number of issues related to institutional effectiveness in higher education including faculty roles and work productivity, graduate education, gender equity in higher education, undergraduate research, and capacity building in institutional research. Her primary research interests remain centered on the assessment of academic, cognitive, and psychosocial growth of college students, with additional interests in gender studies, and higher education data management.

Webber is the recipient of the 2018 Sidney Suslow Scholar award, which is the highest honor the Association for Institutional Research (AIR) bestows on an individual. AIR recognizes a member who has made extraordinary contributions through scholarly work to the field of institutional research and advanced understanding of the profession in a meaningful way. Webber was nominated and selected for this honor by her AIR peers.

Webber is currently president of AIR (2022-2023). She remains active in other national and regional professional organizations including ASHE and SCUP.  Webber was president of the North East Association for Institutional Research (1998-99) and received the NEAIR Distinguished Service Award in November 2004. Through 2009, she served as chair of AIR’s Professional Development Services Committee, has previously served on the Membership and Nomination Committees, and is a faculty member in the annual AIR Foundations Institute. In 2016 Webber received the Distinguished Service Award from SCUP.

She collaborates with colleagues around the world on IR, decision support, and academic planning in higher education. Webber travels to other countries to assist with improvements in higher education, with recent stops in Croatia, South Africa, and the UK.

Projects

Students’ access to work-related experiential activities (WREAs) (funded by NSF)
Faculty Satisfaction in Today’s Colleges and Universities (partially funded via TIAA Research Institute)
Graduate Student Debt (partially funded by AccessLex/AIR grant)
Measuring Business Engagement in STEM activities (funded by UGA Interdisciplinary Seed Grant)
Building Capacity in Institutional Research and Decision Support
The Uses and Misuses of Data
The Role of Institutional Research in a High Profile Study of Undergraduate Research
Measuring Faculty Productivity
Research Productivity of Foreign- and US-born Faculty: Differences by Time on Task
The Use of Learner-Centered Assessment in US Colleges and Universities
Curriculum Vitae:
Email:
kwebber@uga.edu
Education:
  • Ph.D., Counseling & Personnel Services, The University of Maryland, College Park  
  • M.A., Clinical & Community Psychology, The University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • B.S., Psychology, East Tennessee State University, summa cum laude
Research Interests:

Dr. Webber has published research on a number of issues related to institutional effectiveness in higher education including faculty roles and work productivity, graduate education, gender equity in higher education, undergraduate research, and capacity building in institutional research. Her primary research interests remain centered on the assessment of academic, cognitive, and psychosocial growth of college students, with additional interests in gender studies, and higher education data management.

Grants:

Work-related experiential activities that contribute to successful employment acquisition. National Science Foundation, $630,027.

Mote, T., PI, Barbour, S., Hornak, L., Webber, K., Crain, A. co-PIs (2019, proposal submitted). Student success through the STEM accelerated career track (STEM-ACT). Research proposal submitted to the National Science Foundation, March, $998,000.



Tanner, D., Webber, K., & Burg, T. (2017). How business engagement in high schools and college impacts student persistence in STEM education and STEM careers. President’s Interdisciplinary Seed Grant Program, UGA, $104,000. 

Webber, K.L. (2016). The rising tide of graduate student debt: examining change from 2008 to 2012. Access/AIR Grants Program, $49,508.

Webber, K.L. (2016). Faculty member satisfaction: Are there differences by Institutional level? TIAA Research Grants program, $33,500. 

Webber, K.L. & González Canché. (2015). A multistate analysis of the career path of STEM faculty members. AIR/NCES/NSF Research Grants Program, $39,925. 



Webber, K. (2012). Doctorate degree completion: Equal benefits for all? AIR/NCES/NSF Research Grants Program, $39,624. 



Simpson, E.G., PI, with Bauer, K. (2005). Croatian partnership for higher education reform. Georgia Congressional Funds, $74,400. 

Pagano, N., PI, with Bauer, K., Buckley, L., Lindsey, C., Nunmedal, C., Porter, D., & Suskie, L. (2002). Communities of practice: An Inter-institutional general education assessment project. Multi-institution grant from FIPSE, $171,000. 

Bennett, J.B. & Bauer, K.W., co-PIs. (1999). Outcomes assessment of undergraduate curricular innovations: Developing a model of evaluation. National Science Foundation, $219,000. 

Cavanaugh, J.C., PI, with Duch, B., & Bauer, K.W. (1998). Problem-based learning. The Pew Charitable Trusts, $219,000. 

Roselle, D.P., Bennett, J., co-PIs, with Bauer, K.W. (1997). Recognition award for the integration of research & education. The National Science Foundation, $500,000. 

Watson, G., Shipman, H., Duch, B. Allen, D., White, H., Groh, S., co-PIs, with Bauer, K., Scott, T., & Ketcham, R. (1997). Catalysts for change: Model courses for lifelong learning. The National Science Foundation, $200,000. 

Kitto, S., Griffiths, L., co-PIs, with Pesek, J., Mackenzie, E., Bauer, K., & Eiker, E. (1996). Biotechnology in agriculture: A multimedia approach to PBL and distance learning. US Dept of Agriculture, $80,000.

Webber, K.L., & Zheng, H.Y. (2020, in press). Analytics and the imperatives for data-informed decision making in higher education. In K.L Webber & H.Y. Zheng (Eds.) Data analytics in higher education. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.(author's manuscript version)

Webber, K.L. & Morn, J. (2020, in press). Limitations in data analytics: considerations related to ethics, security, and possible misrepresentation in data reports and visualizations. In K.L Webber & H.Y. Zheng (Eds.) Data analytics in higher education. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. (author's manuscript version)

Webber, K.L. (2019, accepted). Can you trust your eyes?: Learn how to minimize misinterpretation of data reports and visualizations. Planning for Higher Education.

Burns, R. & Webber, K. (2019). Achieving the promise of educational opportunity: graduate student debt for STEM vs. Non-STEM students, 2012, Journal of Student Financial Aid, 48(3), 1-29. Retrieved from: https://ir.library.louisville.edu/jsfa/vol48/iss3/5/

Webber, K.L. (2018). The use and potential misuse of data in higher education: a compilation of examples. (author's manuscript version)

Webber, K.L. (2018). Does the environment matter? Faculty satisfaction at 4-year colleges and universities in the USA. Higher EducationOnlineFirst. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-018-0345-z

Webber, K.L. (Ed.) (2018). Building capacity in institutional research and decision support in higher education. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Press.

Webber, K.L. (2018, March). Help them pay: graduate student debtNACUBO Business Officer, 18-24. (posted with approval of NACUBO)

Webber, K.L., & Rogers, S.M  (2018). Gender differences in faculty member job satisfaction: equity forestalled? Research in Higher Education59(8), 1105-1132.

Webber, K.L. & González Canché, M. (2016). Is there a gendered path to academic tenure?: a multistate analysis of the academic trajectory of US doctoral recipients. Research in Higher Education.

Xu, Y., & Webber, K. (2016). College student retention on a racially diverse campus: a theoretically guided reality check. Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory and Practice. 20(1), 2-28.

Webber, K.L. & Yang, L. (2015). The career path of the postdoctoral researcher. Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 47(6), 53-58.

Yang, L. & Webber, K.L. (2015). A decade beyond the doctorate: the influence of a U.S. postdoctoral appointment on faculty career, productivity, and salary.  Higher Education, 70(4), 667-687.

Courses Regularly Taught:
News Featuring Karen Webber

Researchers in the UGA Institute of Higher Education were awarded $690,027 by the National Science Foundation to study how students’ access to experiential learning opportunities is affected by their proximity to areas with major economic and workforce activity…

On January 28, Hugh J. Watson, PhD, visited the Institute of Higher Education and gave an open lecture on effective use of analytics, entitled Data Analytics in Higher Education and Elsewhere. Drawing from decades of work in business settings, he…

Karen Webber joins Sherri Newcomb and Lindsay Wayt in presenting the keynote panel session, entitled Data-Informed Decisions in Higher Education, at the NACUBO Planning & Budgeting Forum on Monday, September 16 in Pittsburgh. 

Rachel Burns (PhD 2018) & Karen Webber are published in the Journal of Student Financial Aid (vol. 48, issue 3).

The Institute will be well represented at the Association for Institutional Research Annual Forum in Denver, May 28-31. Faculty, students, and alumni will be presenting and leading discussion groups.  

Wednesday, May 29

10:15 am - Lori…

On Thursday, May 23, Karen Webber will deliver a keynote address at the Austrian Network for Higher Education Research meeting. Her talk, "Building Capacity in Institutional Research and Decision Support in Higher Education," addresses the…

In addition to the large group of IHE faculty and students who presented papers at the AERA conference in Toronto (April 5-8), Noble Jones (PhD 2018) received the 2019 Outstanding Dissertation Award from AERA's Division J, and Associate Professor Tim Cain…

The Association for Institutional Research is pleased to announce Dr. Karen Webber as the recipient of the 2018 Sidney Suslow Scholar Award.

Karen Webber, associate professor in the Institute of Higher Education at the University of Georgia, has edited a new book from Springer Press titled Building Capacity in Institutional…

David Tanner and Karen Webber have been selected to receive an award through the President’s Interdisciplinary Seed Grant Program.

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