Recorded: 19 Jan 2024
Elizabeth was born when Tom and I were 40. So, we were late to the parent game and we were both just enormously devoted to our family and to her. But there was a lot of innovating we needed to do because it wasn't so common that women professionals had young children. When I would spend time with her at her nursery school, the other moms were, let's just say, a lot younger than I. And very few of them at the time, surprisingly, had jobs. Their jobs were being at home, taking care of their families, which is an incredibly important job, a consuming job. So, Tom and I did our best to be present for her, and I learned a very important lesson, which was neither Tom nor I is used to spending lots of money. I think partly because our adult lives were not particularly remunerative, but we were passionate about our careers. But I learned that, and someone told me this and it was one of the very, very most important lessons. Buy whatever care you can get. And I learned that I needed to be spending time. Anytime I had was time for Elizabeth. So, I stopped doing laundry, I stopped doing much of the cooking. I stopped the things that I could have someone else take care of.
Susan Hockfield is a neuroscientist whose research focuses on brain development and glioma, pioneering the use of monoclonal antibody technology demonstrating that early experience results in lasting changes in the molecular structure of the brain. She is a Professor of Neuroscience and President Emerita at MIT. She was the first woman and life scientist to serve as MIT’s sixteenth president from 2004-2012.
Hockfield earned her B.A. in biology from the University of Rochester (1973) and a Ph.D. from Georgetown University at the School of Medicine (1979). In 1980, Hockfield completed an NIH postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California at San Francisco. She then joined the scientific staff at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York where she ran her own lab for five years. She also served as director of the Summer Neurobiology Program from 1985 to 1997. In 1985, Hockfield became the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Neurobiology at Yale University. She went on to serve as the Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences from 1998-2002, and Provost from 2003-2004.
In December 2004, Hockfield assumed office as the president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She held this role until June 2012 and continues to hold a faculty appointment as professor of neuroscience and as a member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research.
Hockfield has received numerous awards including the Charles Judson Herrick Award from the American Association of Anatomists, the Wilbur Lucius Cross Award from the Yale University Graduate School, the Meliora Citation from the University of Rochester, the Amelia Earhart Award from the Women’s Union, and the Yale Science and Engineering Association 2021 Award for Distinguished Service to Industry, Commerce or Education.
She also holds honorary degrees from Brown University, Duke University, Georgetown University, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York University, Northeastern University, Tsinghua University (Beijing), Université Pierre et Marie Curie, University of Edinburgh, University of Massachusetts Medical School, University of Rochester, and the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory School of Biological Sciences.