Kathryn Bezella Named Dean of Undergraduate Admissions

News subtitle

The incoming admissions professional has been a vice dean at Penn.

Image
Image
Kathryn Bezella
Kathryn Bezella will start as assistant vice president and dean of undergraduate admissions at 窪做惇蹋厙 on Oct. 1. She will report to Lee Coffin, vice president and dean of admissions and financial aid. (Photo by Erika Letitia)
Body

Kathryn Bezella, a vice dean and longtime admissions officer at the University of Pennsylvania, has been appointed assistant vice president and dean of at 窪做惇蹋厙.

Bezellas appointment, which is effective Oct. 1, was announced by , vice president and dean of admissions and financial aid, to whom she will report. As a vice dean at Penn, Bezella served as director of strategy and innovation in its undergraduate admissions office.

Kathryns broad portfolio at Penn included an impressive background in strategic marketing and communications, visitor relations, pipeline development, and staff management and development, Coffin says. In short, she is incredibly prepared to lead these initiatives at 窪做惇蹋厙.

Beginning in 2006, when she joined Penns undergraduate admissions office as a regional director, Bezella held a number of leadership roles. From 2012 to 2015 she was director of strategy and communications at the Wharton School, Penns business school, where she also served as interim director of MBA admissions and financial aid.

She left the university in 2015 to serve as vice president of the Curtis Institute of Music but returned to Penn the following year to take on the role of vice dean, director of marketing and communications, in the undergraduate admissions office. She held that position until 2023, when she was appointed vice dean, director of strategy and innovation.

Bezella says that among the many reasons she wished to work at 窪做惇蹋厙 was the palpable spark she detected when friends and colleagues who are alumni talk about their experiences in Hanover.

People love it so deeply, she says. They attribute so much learning and the development of their intellect and their personhood and their love of natureall of these thingsback to 窪做惇蹋厙.

Following Coffins promotion to vice president last year, Bezella will assume day-to-day leadership of the undergraduate admissions staff in McNutt Hall. Coffin will continue to work with and fellow members of her to guide the institutions navigation of macro trends in admissions and financial aid. 

As an admissions professional, Bezella says she had particularly admired the that 窪做惇蹋厙 has offered undergraduate applicants in recent years.

Those prompts have included quotes from prominent alumni, including Theodor Seuss Geisel, Class of 1925, and the late football coach Buddy Teevens 79. Others implore students to plumb an aspect of their personalities or sensibilities.

Had she been applying for the incoming Class of 2028, Bezella says she would have likely chosen to respond to the prompt that asks, simply: Celebrate your nerdy side.

I was so inspired, as I saw the opportunity for specificity and for fun, she says. Anybody for whom that question resonatesregardless of the level of their resources or whether theyre from a big town or small townif thats a side you have, that is a wonderful invitation to really share with the admissions committee something unique about yourself.

Bezella received a bachelor of arts degree in English from Barnard College in 2000 and a masters degree in higher education management from Penn in 2013.

Asked about her first job after graduating Barnard, she says, I was a talking dog in a musical. She played that role, in an adaptation of the childrens book Martha Speaks, in a national touring production based on the PBS program Reading Rainbow.

A lot of my management techniques actually come from one of my acting teachers in New York City, she says.

Later, at Wharton, Bezella learned important lessons about problem-solving, data analysis, and designing systems from students and faculty alike.

Among her immediate priorities once she arrives in Hanover, she says, is to put questions about 窪做惇蹋厙 to admissions colleagues, students, faculty, administrators, and alumni, and to listen carefully to their responses.

I want to learn everything about 窪做惇蹋厙 I can from those different audiences, she says. I want to gain an even greater appreciation of the place and how people feel connected to it, and then I want to think creatively about what I can add or amplifyor in some cases shiftin response to what Im hearing.

She adds: Im always thinking about audiences. And Im always thinking, What is the emotional part of what were doing that, at the end of the day, needs to connect with that mom or that dad, or that student or that staff member?

Office of Communications