Marty Leonard is a familiar face at Dal, but a new one within the Faculty of Graduate Studies.
This September Dr. Leonard, a longstanding member of the Department of Biology, took office as the Facultyâs new dean.
âI came to Dal in 1993 to join the Department of Biology,â she explains. âI came on what was then called a womenâs faculty award. I have been at Dal ever since.â Dr. Leonard has been a professor and researcher in the Department of Biology since her arrival, but she also served as the Dean of Science for a year through 2008 and 2009.
Many Science students might recognize her name from Introductory Biology, where she teaches a section on animal form and function. Others might know her from her third-year behavioural ecology course â a favorite of many Biology students.
Her research interests are primarily in animal communication and bird conservation. She shares a lab with her graduate students and husband, Andy Horn, who also teaches behavioural ecology and a popular field methods course in animal behavior.
âIn my lab we do a mix of basic and applied conservation biology,â she explains. Her graduate students work in a variety of topics, often trying to understand why a species has declined like it has or understanding how animals navigate the world. âMost of my students are doing projects with a focus on birds, but not exclusively,â she says. âIâve had students that have worked on seals and bats, for example.â
Dr. Leonard and Dr. Horn have recently began investigating the effects that human noise are having on bird communication. âHumans make a lot of noise,â she explains. âThat noise is spreading to areas where it didnât previously exist. Andy and I have looked at how this ambient or external noise interferes with communication between parents and young in birds.
Dr. Leonard has also acted as chair and bird specialist for the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.
Meeting diverse campus demands
Beyond being a graduate supervisor herself Dr. Leonard has long been passionate about graduate studies at Dal.
âThere is a lot of variety and diversity in the types of programs that we offer,â she says. âThat means that we can attract students from all over the world who are interested in different things. And we have fantastic faculty, together that creates a great environment for graduate students to flourish.â
âUsually I shy away from administrative jobs,â she explains. But when the call came out early this year for a new dean of Graduate Studies, âI thought it would be a great chance to help facilitate better graduate student training and work to make things better for supervisors.â
âWhat I want to do in this office is find out what the issues are for students.â And for their supervisors: âWhat are the barriers to taking more students? Some people feel that the barrier is funding; some people feel itâs space. For other people, the supervisor might not have enough time. We have to figure this out first, then work to facilitate things so itâs better for supervisors and their students.â
Looking to the future
âIt seems to me that there is a change in the way the we look at graduate training,â she says. âFor doctoral students, there used to be a time when we really thought we were training them to be us, our replacements. What is obvious â and has been for quite some time â is that there just arenât that many academic positions. Only a small percent of people in doctoral programs will end up as university professors, the rest will end up doing something else.â
Dr. Leonard says that supervisors should be encouraged to prepare their students for those âsomething elses.â âAre we actually giving them the skills they need?â she asks. âWhat would it be like for them if we built in a little bit of policy training into their work? Or entrepreneurial skills?â She says that no matter what they end up in their careers, âIâd like to see that weâre making sure all our students get adequate training.â
âIâm looking forward to this job,â she says. âI feel like Iâve barely gotten my feet wet. Iâve been going out to visit and meet people working with graduate students across campus to get a feel for their Faculties. The FGS office and everyone here are professionals and they know what theyâre doing and they do it well. Everyone has been welcoming and supportive of me; itâs fantastic.â