Thursday, October 21, 2010

Alumni Profile: Tara O'Toole '74, Under Secretary for Science and Technology

When looking at colleges, prospective students want to know about results. What can an education at College ABC prepare me for? What will University XYZ do for my future? Occasionally, this blog will profile just one (of more than 36,000 living) Vassar graduates, so that prospective families can glean the incredible launching power of a Vassar education.

Tara O'Toole, a member of the Vassar class of 1974, is one of many Vassar graduates serving in senior positions in Obama administration. Dr. O'Toole was appointed Under Secretary for Science and Technology of the Department of Homeland Security in November 2009.

Like many Vassar graduates, Dr. O'Toole's academic resume is stellar. Raised in Norwood, Massachusetts, she came to Vassar with a strong interest in medicine, studying biology and chemistry. By 1981, she had earned her M.D. from George Washington University, and by 1988, she had received a Master's in Public Health from Johns Hopkins University. She completed an internal medicine residency at Yale and then a fellowship in occupational medicine at Johns Hopkins. And that isn't even the most impressive part!

Dr. O'Toole came to the Department of Homeland Security from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, where she was Director of the Center for Biosecurity. Throughout her career, she has written extensively on biodefense, response to biological attacks, and containment of contagious disease. She is a Coeditor-in-Chief of the journal Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science. She was a principal author and producer of Dark Winter, an influential exercise conducted in June 2001 to alert national leaders to the dangers of bioterrorist attacks. She was also a principal writer and producer of Atlantic Storm, an international ministerial-level biosecurity exercise held in January 2005.

Dr. O’Toole served as Assistant Secretary of Energy for Environment, Safety and Health from 1993-1997, where she was principal adviser to the Secretary of Energy on environmental protection and oversaw health and safety for approximately 100,000 workers in government laboratories. In this position, Dr. O’Toole developed the first overall management and safety plan for dealing with waste left from nuclear weapons production.

A liberal arts education prepares you to solve incredibly broad, thorny problems. Read about some Vassar innovators, and learn about the kinds of world-changing thinkers, movers and shakers that Vassar produces.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

So important to show that a liberal arts degree is a beginning and not an end goal. Places like Vassar open wide doors while business BA programs and technical degrees just go toward narrow hallways. Ken R., parent 2014.