Whether hauling down rebounds as a man-mountain defender or coaxing
arpeggios from the upper register of the violin, J. Keith Motley
learned early on how months and years of private practice set the stage
for public performance.
As he rounds the final turn
of his first full year at the helm of the University of
Massachusetts-Boston, Motley looks back on a two-year absence from the
harborside campus as essential preparation for the job of chancellor.
“It was a two-year learning experience,” says Motley of going from
interim chancellor to vice president of the sprawling University of
Massachusetts system under Jack Wilson. “I developed a different
perspective on finance, development, investment, endowment, marketing
and branding. I spent the time putting more arrows in my quiver.”
At the time of the transfer, a number of community supporters
criticized the system’s central administration for passing over the
popular Motley in favor of a medical chief executive to run the Boston
campus. The man who seemed the perfect candidate — possessing a Ph.D.
in organizational development, more than 25 years in academia and deep
ties to Boston — had been rejected in his bid to become the first
African American to lead the school.
Last July, Dr. Michael Collins left the campus to head up the
University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, opening the
door to Motley’s return to preside over 13,500 students, 800 faculty,
and a $254 million annual budget.
Since coming back to the peninsula on Dorchester Bay, Motley has
launched an ambitious agenda for improving the school’s facilities,
attracting and retaining world-class faculty, and investing in new
undergraduate and graduate programs.
Sitting at a conference table in his campus office, Motley points out
the window toward students leaning against the chilly spring wind on
the plaza below.
“This university was established to allow the students of this city to
receive an education equal to or better than offered by the private
institutions,” he says.
With record-setting admissions, the school is just 2,000 students shy
of achieving its original goal of enrolling 15,000 students. The most
ethnically diverse public university in New England, the UMass-Boston
campus boasts students from 140 countries who speak over 90 different
languages. Students of color form a third of the student body, and over
half of the undergraduates are the first in their family to attend
college.
Motley understands the dominant demographic of his school — he comes from it.
Raised in Pittsburgh among the extended families from Alabama and
Georgia who traveled north for work in the mills, “I grew up,” he says,
“with a yard full of apple trees and strawberries. You went from house
to house and felt at home. I remember as a little boy being a little
angry because my mother used to cook all this food and come dinnertime,
somebody else would end up sitting down and eating at our table.”
By the time he hit high school, coaches were beginning to notice that
the 5-foot-7 kid hauling the violin through the hallways wore size 13
sneakers. Soon he was mastering both “Rhapsody in Blue” and the
pick-and-roll, and thanks to his mother’s diligent supervision,
completing all his school assignments.
When he showed up on the Northeastern University campus out of Peabody
High in the fall of 1973, Motley had grown to 6-foot-8 — a dominant
presence both on and off the court. While leading Northeastern toward
entry in Division I as a record-setting rebounder and team captain, he
came to see Boston as his new home and made a career of helping
students, as a coach and administrator, after graduation.
Motley spent over 20 years at Northeastern, rising to dean of student
services before making the move to the University of Massachusetts.
“After leaving Northeastern, I thought I could never find a work
environment that was like family again, but as it turns out I’ve
extended that family,” says Motley, who easily fit into the campus
culture. His work on numerous community boards, including the Freedom
House, the Roxbury Preparatory Charter School, the United Way and
Dimock Community Health Center, had already made him a familiar figure
around the city.
Motley, whose grandfather was a minister, speaks at times in Biblical
terms. His inaugural address last November centered on the themes of
“return and renewal,” echoing the travails of Moses in bringing the
Hebrews back to the Promised Land.
But many of his colleagues in the academic community saw little promise
when he went from Northeastern to the University of Massachusetts and
little hope of renewal in his return to the harbor campus.
Motley chuckles, a deep bass rising from his massive frame.
“When I left private education, a lot of my friends said they weren’t
sure whether to offer congratulations or condolences for going over to
the Titanic of public education,” he says. “A few years later, those
same people are calling me for jobs.”