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Board of Directors
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Board Chair: 
Joshua
Kaufman • Venable Attorneys at Law
Joshua Kaufman
counsels and litigates in the fields of copyright, e-commerce, licensing,
art, intellectual property, software, on-line issues, trademark,
entertainment, media and literary law. He advises his clients in
structuring and negotiating transactions in which they exploit their
intellectual property rights or in acquiring them from others. He
is the head of the firm's Copyright and Unfair Trade Group.
Mr. Kaufman was one of the nation's first computer and cyber lawyers.
In addition to the law, Mr. Kaufman knows computers. He worked as
a computer consultant and, for 10 years, had a syndicated column
in which he reviewed hardware and software. He is also one of the
country's most well-known art lawyers with clients spanning the
globe. He represents a wide variety of artists, art publishers,
art licensing agents and art licensees. Once again his legal expertise
is augmented by a strong knowledge of the art world as an artist,
gallery owner and importer (he was MC Eschers' first distributor
in the USA).
Mr. Kaufman assists his clients in understanding how to acquire
and obtain the rights necessary for their projects, specifically,
the acquisition of licenses, copyrights, trademarks and trade secret
rights. He assists them in exploiting these rights through licensing
and joint ventures. In the event that his clients' rights are infringed
upon, Mr. Kaufman assists them in securing proper and appropriate
recompense for their losses through mediation, negotiation, arbitration
and litigation. In order to fully protect their rights and insure
they are not infringing on the rights of others, he spearheads the
firm's IP Audit team. In the event that a client has misused the
intellectual property of another, Mr. Kaufman seeks to extricate
them from such circumstances in the most expeditious, cost effective
and confidential manner possible.
Joseph S. Brosnan, Ed.D. • President, Delaware Valley College
Joseph S. Brosnan, Ed.D., is Learning Matters' newest Board member and a renowned administrator who is currently president of Delaware Valley College.
Prior to that, Dr. Brosnan served as vice president for Strategic Planning and External Affairs at Teachers College, Columbia University, for 12 years.
During his tenure as a senior officer at Teachers College (TC), he provided communications guidance to senior college officers, helping to position the former TC president as one of the nation’s top experts on educational issues.
Earlier in his career, he served as senior vice president for University Relations at St. Bonaventure University, Olean, N.Y., and chief advancement officer and executive director of the Potsdam College Foundation for the State University of New York at Potsdam. Brosnan earned his bachelor’s degree from Marist College in Poughkeepsie, NY, and his master’s and doctorate in education from the State University of New York at Albany.
Since 2005, he has served on the Board of Directors of the national “I Have a Dream” Foundation, which serves to motivate and empower children from low-income communities to achieve their educational and career goals.
Virginia
B. Edwards was named president of Editorial Projects in Education
in April 1997. In that role, she oversees the nearly 100-person
nonprofit corporation that publishes Education Week, Teacher Magazine,
edweek.org, and the annual reports Quality Counts and Technology
Counts; raises funding for both new and ongoing projects; and develops
new ventures.
Ms. Edwards was named the editor of Education Week in December 1995
and, for the six years before that, had served as the newspaper's
executive editor. She oversees a staff of more than 55 editors,
reporters, and graphic artists engaged in the weekly production
of Education Week. The newspaper, which covers policy developments
in pre collegiate education and is published 44 times a year, has
a paid circulation of about 53,000, and is read by more than 200,000
others.
Before joining EPE, Ms. Edwards worked for nearly two years for
the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and, for
the nearly 10 years before that, was an editor and reporter for
The Courier-Journal in Louisville, KY.
BJ Fogg, PhD
Stanford University awarded Dr. BJ Fogg the Maccoby Prize in 1998 for four years of experimental research on how computers can change people’s attitudes and behaviors. He then founded the Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab and began teaching at Stanford (Computer Science & School of Education) on his area of expertise.
In addition to teaching and directing research on campus, Dr. Fogg leads innovation projects for Silicon Valley companies. As a psychologist he brings an unusual perspective to working on technology innovations. He holds seven patents, and he has an additional eight patents pending. Dr. Fogg is the author of Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do, a book that explains how computers can motivate and influence people. He is the co-editor of Mobile Persuasion: 20 Perspectives on the Future of Behavior Change.
Dr. Fogg’s life’s work is to shape technology innovation in ways that benefit the world and make people happier. He believes two principles are essential for achieving these goals: designing for simplicity and building relationships of trust. For each principle he has created practical frameworks that help designers create better products.
Bobbi
L. Kamil
Bobbi L. Kamil
holds a doctorate in Instructional Technology from Syracuse University.
She has served as a consultant to: Ovation, The Arts Network; InterVU;
Archipelago; Lightspan Partnerships and the Kyle Foundation, among
others.
Dr. Kamil was also the Founding Executive Director of Cable in the
Classroom, a non-profit community service effort of both cable companies
and cable programmers. During her seven-year tenure, the goal of
Cable in the Classroom was to match the resources of the cable industry
with the needs of K-12 schools.
Prior to that, Bobbi served as Special Assistant for Academic Utilization
to The Annenberg/CPB Project, Washington, DC. The goal of the 150
million dollar grant to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
was to develop telecommunications technologies, including telecourses,
to enhance the quality and availability of higher education. Bobbi
worked with universities to adopt the programming and with all broadcast
and cable outlets to utilize the programs.
Dr. Kamil was invited in 1988 to serve as an Invited Visiting Scholar
to the Ministry of Education in Japan. She also served as a Dean
at Empire State College, the college without walls of the State
University of New York. Dr. Kamil was named Women of the Year by
Women In Cable and Telecommunications and received the Distinguished
Vanguard Award for Leadership from the National Cable Television
Association.
Jerome Murphy • Harold Howe II Professor
of Education, Harvard
Graduate School of Education
After
a brief stint as a math teacher in the Manhasset Public Schools,
Dr. Murphy joined the Johnson Administration to help develop education
legislation, including the groundbreaking Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965. Later he worked on food and drug legislation
in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and then served
as associate director of the White House Fellows program. He also
served as associate staff director of the National Advisory Council
on the Education of Disadvantaged Children. After completing his
doctorate, he founded and directed the Massachusetts Internships
in Education.
Dr. Murphy joined the Harvard faculty in 1974 and became a full
professor in 1982. He served as Associate Dean from 1982 to 1990
and as Dean from 1992 to 2001. He is currently the Harold Howe II
Professor of Education.
Before assuming the deanship, Murphy was instrumental in the creation
of the Urban Superintendents Program, which prepares school leaders
to address the challenges of urban districts, and in the expansion
of the Programs in Professional Education, a series of intensive
professional development programs that includes the Seminar for
New Presidents, which has prepared one of every six U.S. university
presidents. As dean, he led the development of new initiatives in
learning technologies, arts education, neuroscience and education,
and school leadership.
Wendy
Puriefoy • President, Public
Education Network
Wendy D.
Puriefoy is a nationally recognized expert on issues of school
reform and civil society, and is well known for her passionate
advocacy of education equity for poor and disadvantaged children.
Ms. Puriefoy is president of Public Education Network (PEN),
the nation's largest network of community-based school reform
organizations, since PEN was founded in 1991. Under her visionary
leadership, PEN has grown into a national network of local
education funds reaching 11 million children in 1,220 school
districts and 16,700 schools nationwide.
Ms. Puriefoy has been deeply involved in school reform since
the 1970's when she served as a special monitor of the court-ordered
desegregation plan for Boston's public schools. As president
of PEN, Ms. Puriefoy has successfully advocated and implemented
systemic reform initiatives in school finance and governance,
curriculum and assessment, parent involvement, school libraries
and school health. With support from leading national foundations,
PEN launched multi-million dollar initiatives on teacher quality,
standards and accountability, and schools and community services.
Ms. Puriefoy serves on the boards of numerous high-profile
national organizations including DEMOS, Children's Defense
Fund, Learning Matters Inc., and the National Center for Family
Philanthropy.
Sandra H. Welch • President, Welch & Associates
Ms. Welch has provided consulting services to public television stations, non-profit educational organizations and media production companies since 1998. Her services include strategic planning, education market assessment, public and private fundraising and business planning related to digital learning systems. Since 2004 she has also been a Program Officer at the National Science Foundation managing the informal science education media portfolio.
Prior to starting her consulting practice Ms. Welch was Executive Vice President, Learning Services at PBS (1991-1998)where she oversaw the Adult Learning Service, PBS LiteracyLink, PBS Mathline and PBS Ready to Learn. Prior to joining PBS, she spent 20 years at KET, the Kentucky Network, where her accomplishments included developing the national GED ON TV model for adult learners, and Star Channels, a statewide distance learning service.
Ms. Welch has been a keynote speaker at national and international conferences. She has served on the boards of Cable in the Classroom, the U.S. Distance Learning Association, and Literacy Volunteers of America, among others. She currently serves on the Board of the Oklahoma State University Telecommunications Center.
The
Honorable Justice William E. McAnulty, Jr.
Justice
McAnulty was active with Learning Matters, Inc. from
inception. His judicial career spaned thirty years. Born
in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1947, he was a graduate of
Indiana University and earned an M.A.T. and a J.D. from
the University of Louisville.
He began serving in the Jefferson County Juvenile Court in 1975, and from 1978
through 1983, the Jefferson District Court. Justice McAnulty was elected to the
Jefferson Circuit Court in 1984 where he served until January of 1990. Following
a brief tenure in private practice, Justice McAnulty returned to the Circuit
Court Bench by appointment in 1993 until being elected to the Kentucky Court
of Appeals in November of 1998. In July of 2006 he was appointed to the Supreme
Court of Kentucky, and was elected to a full term in November of 2006.
Justice McAnulty was a member of the Kentucky and Louisville
Bar Associations. In 1997 he was voted the Henry V. Pennington
Outstanding Judge of the Year by the Kentucky Trial Attorneys
Association, and given the Thomas C. Simons Distinguished
Leadership Award by the Leadership Louisville Foundation.
He served as Chief Judge of the Jefferson Circuit Court
in 1998.
Justice McAnulty was married to Kristi W. McAnulty, and
was the very proud father of four wonderful and talented
children ranging in age from four to thirty-one.
LEARNING
MATTERS MOURNS THE LOSS OF A GREAT FRIEND.
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