Baruch College President S. David Wu, the first Asian-American appointed as president in The City University of New York system, began his tenure in fall 2020. President Wu is leading key initiatives that affirm the top-ranked college as a national model for creating opportunities, demanding excellence, and delivering outcomes—at a turbulent time when public confidence in higher education is waning. Recently, President Wu unveiled “Baruch 2028: Unstoppable”—the first strategic plan under his leadership.
What inspired you to pursue a career in education?
A mentor once told me, “if you feel yourself no longer growing in the job you’re doing, you should make a change”. A perpetual sense of personal and professional growth, and the reward of engaging students, led me to move from the private sector in systems engineering to academia. Over time, I learned to inspire the same sense of curiosity, discovery, and purpose in others who could then transform their lives and their communities.
What aspects of education do you believe need more support from policymakers?
Nationwide, a vast majority of college students can only afford public institutions in their city and state—that’s a reality. Public institutions that serve a diverse population of students are only receiving a fraction of resources that elite public and private universities enjoy—making an excellent education scarce and inaccessible. Education should be an equalizer, not a divider. Making excellent education accessible regardless of socio-economic backgrounds is fundamental to the opportunity infrastructure in our democracy.