Welcome Bryn Mawr College's President-Elect, Wendy Cadge

About President Cadge

Biography

Wendy Cadge is the 10th president of Bryn Mawr College and a nationally renowned expert in contemporary American spirituality and religion. Cadge previously served as the dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Brandeis University. She received her bachelor’s degree with high honors and majors in Sociology and Anthropology, and Religion, from Swarthmore College, and her master’s and Ph.D. from Princeton University.

Research Interests

A sociologist by training, President Cadge is known for her work on religion in public institutions, religious diversity, and pluralism, and as a highly respected educator, scholar, and administrator.

Wendy Cadge Convocation

A public intellectual, she has written more than one hundred scholarly and general interest articles, many in collaboration with students and colleagues across disciplines, and three books on issues related to spiritual care across settings, religion in hospitals, and Buddhism in the United States. Cadge launched the Chaplaincy Innovation Lab in 2018 to advance the work of chaplains in providing innovative spiritual care and frequently works with the media and community partners.

Her research and teaching have been supported by numerous foundations and trusts, including the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, Fetzer Institute, Henry Luce Foundation, John Templeton Foundation, Lovell Foundation, Radcliffe Institute, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in Health Policy Research Program, Ruderman Family Foundation, Russell Berrie Foundation, Templeton Religion Trust, and The Charles H. Revson Foundation.

Additional Information About President Cadge

Cadge is a member of the American Sociological Association (ASA), the American Academy of Religion (AAR), and the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion (SSSR). She is a founder and past chair of the Innovations in Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care Program Unit of the AAR. She is a previous chair of the Religion Section and the Committee on Professional Ethics of the ASA. Her published books include Spiritual Care: The Everyday Work of Chaplains, Paging God: Religion in the Halls of Medicine, and Heartwood: The First Generation of Theravada Buddhism in America. She is co-editor of Introduction to Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care and Religion on the Edge: De-Centering and Re-centering the Sociology of Religion.

At Brandeis, her achievements included centering the graduate student experience by rebuilding and expanding student professional development, collaborating to extend degree programs into new modalities, advancing the graduate school’s anti-racism plan, and reconnecting current students and alumni to celebrate the school’s 70th anniversary. She received the Thomas A. King Faculty Award from the Gender & Sexuality Center, the Dean of Art and Sciences Mentoring Award for Outstanding Teaching of Students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and the Michael Walzer '56 Award for Excellence in Teaching. She also served as the Senior Associate Dean for Strategic Initiatives, led the Division of Social Sciences, and chaired the Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Program. She served on the faculty at Bowdoin College from 2003-2006.

From President Cadge

In my first year as Bryn Mawr’s president, my highest priority is to get to know the community as broadly and deeply as possible, to understand how the ways that we teach, learn, grow, and collaborate make the College such a distinctive and multilayered place.

At heart and by preparation, I am an ethnographer; I am trained to listen, watch, enter into dialogue and – most importantly – learn alongside. At the core of my academic work and leadership is a quest to understand the ways in which communities form around meaning and purpose, and the ways in which individuals engage authentically with others in the world.

In that spirit of active inquiry, I am meeting the community in myriad and wonderful ways – in small group lunches, in departmental and program gatherings, at Student Government Association and Staff Association meetings, at athletics games and matches, at alumnae/i gatherings, and at ice cream parties. Whether via conversations, emails, or surveys, I am inviting staff, faculty, and students to share their broad hopes for the College as well as the more specific things they would like to see Bryn Mawr start to do, stop doing, and continue to do. There is deep knowledge in our community; I am eager to share in it.

Concurrently, in the spirit of collaborative learning and shared experience, I have been convening opportunities for disparate parts of the College to hear from one another and to collectively understand Bryn Mawr’s relationship to the world beyond the campus. Since the fall, we have gathered as a community at a town hall, at programmed events at Coffee Hour, and at monthly lunchtime talks on current topics in higher education. Participants have brought deep interest and insightful questions, helping all of us imagine an even more vibrant Bryn Mawr experience.

In early 2025, I will share reflections on what I have learned and observed, and the opportunities for the College to shine its distinctive light even more brightly in its next chapter. I am grateful for the community’s partnership in the first year of my presidency, as we honor all that Bryn Mawr has been and begin to envision what it can become.

All Bryn Mawr community members are welcome to participate in this thought-provoking series of conversations.

Learn more about our Current Topics in Higher Education event series.

All are welcome to join the President's Office for coffee and donuts on Thursdays from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in the Great Hall! Each first of the month Coffee Hour will include programming.

Learn more about our Coffee Hour event series.

President Cadge's Website

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