Sari Knopp Biklen, Professor Emerita of Cultural Foundations of Education and Women’s Studies, passed away on September 16, 2014.
“I know that I speak for all of her colleagues in expressing deep sadness over Sari’s passing,” says Eric F. Spina, Syracuse University vice chancellor and provost. “Her enthusiasm and contributions to this University—and to generations of students—in teaching, scholarship, and service, have been so valuable. The impact of her loss will be felt not only by the School of Education, but by this entire academic community and by alumni and friends across the country.”
Biklen, 68, retired from the School of Education in May 2014, after thirty-eight years of service to Syracuse University. During her tenure, she served as department chair of Cultural Foundations of Education; was director of the Institute for Popular Culture, Media Literacy and Education; and held a courtesy appointment in the Sociology Department of the Maxwell School.
“Sari’s passing leaves us with a hole in our hearts but she has gifted us with so much and her influence is deep,” says Barbara Applebaum, professor and department chair of Cultural Foundations of Education. “Under her guidance as department chair, the reputation of Cultural Foundations of Education was enhanced across campus and nationally. She was a caring friend and colleague and a compassionate mentor to both students and faculty.”
Diane Lyden Murphy, dean of the David. B. Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics, was close friends with Biklen for over thirty years. She says, “We have lost a treasured and exceptional colleague, teacher, scholar and friend. Sari creatively engaged and challenged her many and varied communities close and far, and created for all who knew her personally or by her scholarship a mighty footprint. She lived an extraordinary life.”
A revered scholar, teacher, mentor, and adviser; Biklen was recognized with many national and University accolades. She received the Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence in Scholarship (2009), was appointed a Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence (1999), and appointed a University Scholar by the American Association of University Women (1999). She was the recipient of a Syracuse University Outstanding Teacher Award (1996), the Willystine Goodsell Award for scholarship and practice in gender and education from the American Educational Research Association (1988), and was a Rio Tinto-LaTrobe University Distinguished Visiting Fellow, in Melbourne, Australia (1999).
Biklen specialized popular culture, qualitative research methods, youth culture, and women’s studies. Her books include A Practical Guide to the Qualitative Dissertation (with Ronnie Casella, Teachers College Press, 2007), Qualitative Research for Education (with Robert Bogdan; Allyn & Bacon, fifth edition, 2006), School Work: Gender and the Cultural Construction of Teaching (Teachers College Press, 1995), and Gender and Education (with Diane Pollard, National Society for the Study of Education Yearbook, 1993). Her articles have appeared in numerous journals including Teachers College Record, Qualitative Inquiry, Phi Delta Kappan, and History of Education.
“Dr. Sari Knopp Biklen was my mentor, my teacher, and my friend. Her unwavering belief in my ability to succeed laid a solid foundation for my success in the academy,” says Cerri Banks ’00 G’04 G’05 G’06, Dean of the College, Mount Holyoke College. “Sari led and taught by example, challenging injustice through her scholarship and teaching, and her commitment to equity, social justice, and education at the highest levels of excellence was unwavering. This stance and her advice and support gave me the courage to make brave decisions in our profession and in life.”
Prior to her long career at Syracuse University, Biklen was Assistant Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Cazenovia College and director of its Women’s Studies program. She also taught public school at Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School in Syracuse, NY; and taught at Hiroshima Buddhist Women’s College and Motomachi High School in Japan. She earned her Ed.D. and M.A. from the University of Massachusetts School of Education in 1973, and a B.A. in English from Earlham College in 1967.
She is survived by her partner in life, Dean Emeritus Doug Biklen (School of Education), their children Noah (Naomi) and Molly (Jason), and two granddaughters, Anika and Nora. In recent years, she and her growing family enjoyed many cherished occasions at the Biklens’ new home in rural Vermont.