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The Carolina Women’s Leadership Council on Thursday (Feb. 26) honored University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professors Cynthia Bulik and Kathleen Rounds for being great mentors. The awards were presented during the council’s annual meeting at the Carolina Inn.

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Bulik (left) and Rounds with their awards
Thursday (Feb. 26)

The Carolina Women’s Leadership Council on Thursday (Feb. 26) honored University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professors Cynthia Bulik and Kathleen Rounds for being great mentors. The awards were presented during the council’s annual meeting at the Carolina Inn.

Bulik, the William R. and Jeanne H. Jordan Distinguished Professor of Eating Disorders in the department of psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine, received the council’s faculty-to-faculty mentoring award. Rounds, a professor in the UNC School of Social Work, received the faculty-to-student award.

The Carolina Women’s Leadership Council, a volunteer committee formed during the Carolina First Campaign – the University’s major fund-raising drive that ended Dec. 31, 2007 – sponsors the awards. The council continues to be engaged with the University, and council members have raised $230,000 to endow the mentoring awards as an effort to bolster faculty support.

The awards, which carry a stipend of $5,000 each, recognize outstanding faculty members who go the extra mile to guide, mentor and lead students or junior faculty members as they make career decisions, embark on research challenges and enrich their lives through public service, teaching and educational opportunities.

“Many thanks to the Women’s Leadership Council for honoring and rewarding our faculty for their efforts in mentoring,” said Carol P. Tresolini, associate provost for academic initiatives. “Congratulations to professors Bulik and Rounds for receiving this recognition, and to the faculty who were honored by their colleagues and students by being nominated for the award.”

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 Cynthia Bulik

Bulik directs the UNC Eating Disorders program, where she mentors more than a dozen junior faculty members, postdoctoral fellows and several advanced graduate students. She also has mentored junior and senior colleagues outside UNC by sponsoring visiting scholars and by spearheading initiatives designed to increase student and junior faculty participation and provide direct educational and mentoring services to attendees of the Academy of Eating Disorders and Eating Disorders Research Society annual conferences.

One of Bulik’s nominators said she “single-handedly debunks the myth that exceptional scientists have neither the time nor the proclivity for being exceptional teachers. On the contrary, she whole-heartedly embraces her role as mentor and relishes every opportunity to help others spread their wings and fly.”  

Another described working with Bulik as “like hooking myself to a star… (she) seems to see the potential in each person and then nurtures that potential in ways that few senior faculty do.”

Another said simply: “If there were more mentors like Cindy Bulik, I think there would be more women in science.”

Along with her post as a professor of social work, Rounds directs the doctoral program at the School of Social Work. The school’s dean, faculty, students and friends nominated her. They described her mentorship as broad, deep, inspiring, steadfast and generous.

Dean Jack Richman said two key programs have had direct benefit of her commitment and service. They are the Master of Social Work and Master of Science in Public Health dual-degree program that she initiated in 1992, and the School of Social Work Ph.D. program, which began in 1993.

Many doctoral students wrote letters in support of Rounds’ nomination. One said this: “Kathleen lets us know that she cares about us, she is constantly available for consultations and she is ever-encouraging. … Kathleen has the ability that not many teachers or bosses have to balance guidance with the provision of freedom to tap into individuals’ own skills. Her love of social work and public health and her depth of experience have truly inspired me, and I hope that someday I can be the woman and faculty member that she is.”

Another said this: “More than anything I appreciate her humor – laughter is powerful medicine for doctoral students! She is incredibly deserving of this award.”

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 Kathleen Rounds

Rounds’ nominators noted that even though this award is for faculty-student mentoring, Kathleen’s mentoring does not stop at graduation. “She helps students consider employment opportunities, reviews their curriculum vitae, conducts mock job interviews and even helps them negotiate job offers,” Richman wrote. “Many of her mentees remain in contact with her and seek ongoing counsel throughout their professional career.”

Sarah Smith Carey, who graduated from Carolina in 1969 and is a member of the council’s executive committee, said the council is pleased to sponsor these awards every year as part of its overall mission to support the University and individual students’ educational experiences.

“We created these awards to honor and recognize exceptional men and women faculty members,” Carey said. “They go above and beyond in their commitment to mentor and nurture students and junior faculty throughout their careers.”

First awarded in 2006, the mentoring awards will be an ongoing recognition program, open to tenured and tenure-track faculty, as well as fixed-term faculty who have taught at UNC for at least three years. Nominations may be submitted by anyone from the UNC community, including current and former faculty, staff and students. A selection committee appointed by the provost and on which Carey serves reviews and recommends the award recipients.

The Carolina Women’s Leadership Council is a nationwide network of women. Along with providing financial support, members volunteer their time and share their expertise, champion UNC in their regions and serve on boards that further the University’s mission.

The council is co-chaired by Mary Anne Dickson, class of 1963; Molly Dewar Froelich, class of 1983; and Drucie French, classes of 1971 and 1978.

Development Communications contact: Scott Ragland, (919) 962-0027, scott_ragland@unc.edu

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