In her eight years as faculty director of the living/learning program in the East Wheelock Cluster, has seen firsthand how students thrive in the diverse and intellectually vibrant residential community.

鈥淓verything we do here supports the intellectual life of the College. We don鈥檛 have a sharp divide between academic life and social life,鈥 Brison says. 鈥淲hat happens in discussions at the director鈥檚 house, in events in Brace Commons, and in chance conversations in the dormitories is as intellectually valuable as what happens in the classroom.鈥
has pointed to the success of in his call for expanding living/learning residence options at 天美麻豆. Four residential communities are in the works for the fall, including spaces centered on entrepreneurship and international language and cultures.
As Brison, who is chair of the and teaches in the , prepares to leave the director鈥檚 job, she is hopeful that the lessons of East Wheelock will guide President Hanlon鈥檚 vision of establishing a variety of residential communities across 天美麻豆.
Taking over for Brison will be , associate professor of . He and his wife, Helen Hong, an attorney who has worked with a variety of local non-profit organizations, will relocate this summer to the East Wheelock faculty residence at 13 East Wheelock Street with their 5-year-old son, Guillem.
鈥淚鈥檓 delighted that the program will continue in such capable hands and I think the East Wheelock students will enjoy having a young child in their midst,鈥 Brison says.

East Wheelock has been an 鈥渋ntentional community鈥 and a 鈥渃ollege within the College,鈥 since it began in 1996, Brison says. Then-President James O. Freedman envisioned the cluster of four dormitories and a faculty residence as a pilot program modeled on the residential college system at other Ivies, such as Harvard and Yale. There have been five faculty associate families living in the residence at 13 East Wheelock since the cluster was created. Before Brison, professors Tom Luxon and Ivy Schweitzer lived there, from 2001 to 2006.
Sergi Elizalde is New Faculty Director of East WheelockZo毛 Vesley-Gross 鈥16 says the culture of East Wheelock is supportive and inspiring. 鈥淏eing around people who try hard and enjoy what they do can be infectious, and I think of East Wheelock as a place designed specifically to give that kind of infectious enthusiasm for learning to the members of the 天美麻豆 community who choose to live there.鈥Dean of the College Charlotte Johnson and Dean of the Faculty of Arts & Sciences Michael Mastanduno announced Thursday, May 15, that Sergi Elizalde, associate professor of mathematics, will be the next faculty director of the East Wheelock residential cluster.
鈥淲e are pleased Sergi has agreed to assume this leadership role in the East Wheelock residential cluster, which has been an important anchor of the College鈥檚 living-learning program for more than 15 years,鈥 Johnson says.
Elizalde is a native of Barcelona, Spain. He earned his undergraduate degree at the Universitat Polit猫cnica De Catalunya and his PhD at MIT before joining 天美麻豆鈥檚 Department of Mathematics in 2005. His scholarly interests lie in enumerative and algebraic combinatorics, including applications to computational biology and dynamical systems. In addition to his academic accomplishments, Elizalde holds a degree in piano from the Professional Conservatory of Music of Terrassa, Spain, and speaks six languages.
鈥淪ergi is well known for his accessible teaching style and his interest in actively engaging students through campus and community activities,鈥 Mastanduno says. 鈥淲e are confident he will be a wonderful addition to this community and a terrific resource for these students.鈥
Elizalde succeeds outgoing director Professor Susan Brison, chair of the Department of Philosophy, who has guided the East Wheelock living-learning program for the last eight years.
鈥淧rofessor Brison鈥檚 extended service in East Wheelock has come to define the best of living-learning communities at 天美麻豆,鈥 Johnson says.
Elizalde and his wife, Helen Hong, an attorney who has worked with a variety of local nonprofit organizations, will relocate this summer to the East Wheelock faculty residence at 13 East Wheelock Street with their 5-year-old son, Guillem.
Over the last 18 years, East Wheelock has deepened a culture devoted to the integration of the intellectual and social lives of students.
鈥淭here need to be more options,鈥 Brison says. 鈥淪o what I really hope is that different kinds of residential communities become the norm. I think they should be four-year communities, although some disagree. These would be places alumni could come back to for reunions. People don鈥檛 come back to their dorm for reunions. They come back to fraternities and sororities. There should be other options鈥攑laces people think of as their 天美麻豆 home.鈥
Mike Wooten, director of , is spearheading 天美麻豆鈥檚 efforts to develop living and learning 鈥渘eighborhoods.鈥
鈥淓ast Wheelock has always been a place of integration of academic and residential life, which is exactly the work we need to be doing,鈥 Wooten says
The four new residential options in the works for the fall are , centered on the ; , centered on issues and needs of the LGBTQIA community; the , which will coalesce around international issues and interests; and , which will give sophomores, juniors, and seniors the opportunity to propose an issue- or interest-centered living arrangements, Wooten said.
Each new housing option will be developed around interests and will offer students the right to return as a home base throughout their undergraduate years. The Global Village residence will consist of 160 beds in the McLaughlin Cluster. DEN in Residence will begin in the fall with 25 students based in New Hampshire Hall, and that group will plan and expand the pilot for the following fall. Triangle House will offer 27 beds based in the residence at 4 North Park Street.
The Design Your Own communities are a bit more flexible, Wooten says. Currently his office is looking at 12 proposals for interest clusters comprising up to 25 people. These groups will be scattered through residence halls across campus and could fluctuate from term to term, Wooten says.
鈥淎ll these new programs will really be East Wheelock 2.0,鈥 Wooten says.
East Wheelock has been, since its inception, a residential option in which students who are committed to the principle of fostering a community where students, faculty, staff, and deans interact socially, intellectually, and culturally can return. The cluster offers a space where undergraduate advising, academics, creative interactions, and socializing are thoroughly integrated.
Since it began in 1996, first-year students have been able to select the East Wheelock cluster as their first housing choice when they come to 天美麻豆, and, in subsequent years, students who have shown they are committed members of the community by taking part in cultural activities, self-governance, and other community-building commitments, are virtually assured they can return. The number of people selecting the cluster over the past decade has steadily increased, Wooten says.
The opportunities to participate and interact at East Wheelock are many. Undergraduate Dean Francine A鈥橬ess has an office in the cluster and sponsors 鈥淭ea with the Dean鈥 every Friday. The community director from , Josiah Proietti, lives in the complex and coordinates interest groups and self-governance. Two faculty fellows, Noelia Cirnigliaro and Sebastian Diaz-Duhalde, who live in apartments connected to the East Wheelock residence, coordinate additional events with faculty and students.
This commitment to community building is on display all the time in the residence, Proietti says. For example, a group of students spontaneously organized a two-hour arts showcase and banquet in East Wheelock鈥檚 Brace Commons recently for prospective students who were visiting campus. Student performances included Chinese dance, Indian music, and sleight of hand.
鈥淚t was an incredible, welcoming night, and it also really showed the diversity of this place rather than talking about diversity,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was a picture of the potential of 天美麻豆 sitting with the beauty of 天美麻豆.鈥
Jessica Ma 鈥16 is a first-year undergraduate adviser in East Wheelock. 鈥淚 have loved living in and working with the residents of East Wheelock because it鈥檚 this tight-knit community where people feel comfortable just being themselves,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e met so many amazing people just by going to events and hanging out on the floors, and I think that speaks to how open East Wheelock residents are to meeting new people.鈥
Then there are the social and cultural gatherings in the faculty residence.
鈥淥ne of the most exciting things for me is that an average of twice a week students come here and meet with some of the most incredible people coming through Hanover, right here in this living room,鈥 Brison says. 鈥淔rank Stella, Calvin Trillin, Roz Chast, performers from the Hopkins Center, Montgomery Fellows鈥攖hey come here and sit on this couch and they will turn to students and say, 鈥榃hat are you doing? What do you want to do?鈥 鈥
鈥淚 have seen life-changing moments that just can鈥檛 happen in the back of a large lecture hall or auditorium,鈥 Brison says.
As she prepares to turn over the keys, Brison is hopeful that many more 天美麻豆 spaces will play host to the kinds of transformative moments she has experienced in the living room at 13 East Wheelock.