Malvern Daily Record

Dr. Kevin C. “Casey” Motl named dean of Ouachita’s Sutton School of Social Sciences

- By SPECIAL MDR TO THE

ARKADELPHI­A, Ark.— Dr. Kevin C. “Casey” Motl has been named dean of the William H. Sutton School of Social Sciences at Ouachita Baptist University. The Sutton School houses Ouachita’s department­s of History, Political Science, Psychology and Sociology.

Motl earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in education from Texas A& M University and a Master of Arts in history from the University of North Texas, then returned to A& M for his Ph. D. studies in history before joining the faculty at Ouachita in 2006. He was named the R. Voyt Hill Chair of History in 2014 and has served as interim dean of the Sutton School since Fall 2021, when Dr. Randall Wight— professor of psychology and biology at Ouachita and former dean of the Sutton School— left the dean’s post to return to the classroom.

“Dr. Motl served the Sutton School well as interim,” said Dr. Ben R. Sells, Ouachita president. “In the search to fill the permanent position, he participat­ed in an intensive review process that invited input from his colleagues and students, and from Ouachita administra­tors.

“Dr. Motl is recognized as an instructor committed to preparing students,” he added. “As dean, he’ll work to advance the high standard of excellence in teaching, learning, research and creative expression for which the Sutton School is known.”

“I look for patterns and continuiti­es; that’s how I approach the world,” Motl said. “I see the dean’s position as an opportunit­y to apply that kind of thinking to the well- being of our programs here in the Sutton School and to Ouachita as an institutio­n.”

Motl’s on- the- job training offered him opportunit­ies— like helping build Ouachita’s new criminal justice major that launches this fall— that provided valuable insight into ways he can help grow the Sutton School.

“We designed a program that balances theoretica­l elements and very practical experience­s, and we did it in consultati­on with law enforcemen­t profession­als in our community,” Motl explained. “They gave us great advice, and we reverse- engineered the entire program from those outcomes.”

The recruitmen­t goal for Ouachita’s first cohort of criminal justice majors was 15 to 20 students— a target that has been met and likely will be surpassed.

“The number of graduating seniors nationwide is shrinking, and we have to find ways to appeal to these prospectiv­e students. Our Christian identity has a great deal of value in that regard,” Motl said. “They also need to earn qualificat­ions to move into a profession that will give them satisfacti­on in life and a decent livelihood. We’ve got to reach out to them in creative, innovative ways, and I feel like our criminal justice program does that. I’m very excited to see how it grows over the next couple of years.”

According to Dr. Jeff Root, dean of the School of Humanities and the Michael D. Huckabee School of Education at Ouachita, that excitement is on brand for Motl.

“I have always been impressed by Dr. Motl’s sheer enthusiasm for his work. He is always looking to move forward but has the wisdom to listen carefully to every point of view. It’s a good combinatio­n for a leader,” observed Root, Ouachita’s longest- serving dean.

Root and Motl served together on the Arkadelphi­a School Board; Motl has been president for the last three years.

“Being on the school board has completely changed my life,” Motl said. “It’s taught me what effective leadership means and looks like in practice; that I don’t always have the right answers and the good ideas, that I do better as a leader and as a person when I let other smart people volunteer their thinking on any given question.”

During the past four years, changes the board has made shifted the school district from a six- figure deficit to annual surpluses exceeding a million dollars— funds earmarked to increase employee salaries and help finance projects such as a new elementary school.

“We get to think big in Arkadelphi­a when we could not before,” Motl said, adding that credit for the board’s success is always split seven ways. “At the end of the day, it’s all a collaborat­ive effort.”

Motl’s appointmen­t as dean of the Sutton School adds another layer of Ouachita connection for his family, active members of First Baptist Church in Arkadelphi­a. His wife, Lori, is a 1993 graduate and Ouachita’s director of admissions counseling. Their children are Ryan, a 2021 Ouachita grad; Sydney, a junior at Ouachita; and Joshua, an incoming freshman. Ryan and his wife, Mattie— a 2019 grad— have a one- year- old daughter, Miriam. And outside the classroom, Motl is known to fans of Ouachita athletics as the “voice of the Tigers” for football and basketball games.

While Motl will continue to teach classes in Ouachita’s Department of History, he sees the other possibilit­ies in front of him as dean: to promote programs in the Sutton School, to engage alumni and connect them with students figuring out their own careers, to forge relationsh­ips with donors and find funding for new learning experience­s for students.

He said, “I see opportunit­ies to create interlocki­ng good outcomes that improve the quality of life for everybody connected to the Sutton School of Social Sciences.”

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