Lester P. Monts, Ph.D.
Associate Provost for Academic and Multicultural Affairs
Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology)
John Matlock, Ph.D.
Assistant Provost and
Director, Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives
Pamela T. Horne
Assistant to the Associate Provost for Academic and Multicultural
Affairs
Laura E. SanFacon
Senior Executive Secretary
Lester P. Monts
Professor Monts came to the University of Michigan in 1993, continuing his
distinguished career as both a scholar and academic administrator. He
received the B.A. degree in Music from Arkansas Polytechnic College, the
Master of Music from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1972, and the
Ph.D. in Musicology from the University of Minnesota in 1980. He has
served on the faculties of Edinboro University, the University of
Minnesota, Case Western Reserve University, and the University of
California, Santa Barbara. At Santa Barbara, he served as Dean of
Undergraduate Affairs in the College of Letters and Science and directed
the Undergraduate Honors Program.
Professor Monts has focused his scholarly research on the musical and
cultural systems among the Vai people of Liberia, and he is regarded as
one
of the world's leading scholars on the music and culture of the Guinea
coast region of West Africa. He has published in numerous scholarly
journals in the United States, Europe, and Africa, and presented his
research at many national and international conferences. His book,
Vai Musical Language, explores Vai folk etymologies
related to the intersection between music and linguistic phenomena. He is
currently working on a book that will examine the influence of Islam on
the
continuity and change of music in funerary rituals among the Vai.
As Associate Provost, Dr. Monts chairs the Governing Board of the
International Institute,
sponsors a number of
faculty grant and award programs,
supervises several academic affairs units ,
and works with colleagues throughout the university to enhance the
intellectual diversity of research, teaching, and learning.
Dr. Monts holds active memberships in the African
Studies Association, the Society
for Ethnomusicology, the
Liberian
Studies Association, the College
Music Society, the International
Trumpet Guild, and the National Association
of College Wind and
Percussion Instructors. He serves as a consultant to the Association of
American Colleges and Universities, the American Council on Education, the National Endowment for the Humanities,
and Tubman Center of African Culture. He is a member of the Nationa
l Advisory Board for the North Carolina Alliance for Minority
Participation, the Board of Directors of the University Musical Society, the Ann Arbor Summer
Festival Governing Board, the Education Advisory Board of the National
Football League, and the Visiting C
ommittee for the Department of Music at Harvard University.
As Director of the Office of
Academic Multicultural Initiatives (OAMI), Dr. Matlock manages
research programs, multicultural
activities, pre-college initiatives, student leadership training, and
academic enrichment activities. The OAMI involves a large number of
students with its own programs and supports student-initiated academic and
multicultural programming. As Assistant
Vice Provost, he provides leadership in developing and implementing the
multicultural goals of the
University and maintains active relationships with the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti
and Detroit communities.
Prior to returning to the University of Michigan in 1990, Dr. Matlock
served nearly a decade as chief of staff to U.S. Representative John
Conyers of Michigan and U.S. Representative Harold Ford of Tennessee. Dr.
Matlock was also Director of Institutiona
l Research and Planning at
Tennessee State University and Director of the University of Michigan's
Community Relations Office. He received his B.S. from Ferris State
University, and his M.A. in Journalism and Ph.D. in Higher Education both
from the University of Michigan.
Dr. Matlock has traveled extensively, particularly in West Africa and the
Caribbean. He is actively involved in writing and research activities, as
well as political consulting. A strong believer in grassroots politics,
he is particularly interested in
helping communities and social organizations develop strategies to
strengthen their political effectiveness.
Pam Horne plans and directs the administrative and operational activities
of the Office of the Associate Provost. She manages the Faculty Award Programs, coordinates office
public relations and publications, and provides committ
ee, task force, and programmatic assistance to the Associate Provost.
Holding both a B.A. and an M.S.Ed from the University of Kansas, Ms. Horne
has worked in higher education administration for over twenty years. She
worked at the University of Kansas, Mercy College of Detroit, and Eastern
Michigan University before comin
g to Michigan in 1984. Prior to joining the OAPAMA staff, Ms. Horne
directed Orientation and Campus Information
programs and services at the University.
Laura SanFacon is responsible for carrying out the administrative
functions
of the Office of the Associate Provost for Academic and Multicultural
Affairs.
She has a B.B.A. from Eastern Michigan University. Prior to joining the
OVPAMA staff, Ms. SanFacon served as administrative assistant in the
Office
of the Director of Institute of Social Research and as a research
assistant
in the Center for Political Studies.
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