MORRISVILLE, NY—Hamilton resident Michael Cappeto will serve as Morrisville State College’s interim provost and vice president for academic affairs while the college searches for a permanent provost.
Cappeto has an extensive career in higher education that spans 40 years. During that time, he has assumed administrative roles across a broad spectrum including student affairs, enrollment management, institutional research, college teaching, and academic affairs.
Most recently, Cappeto was the interim president at SUNY Maritime College, where he served as provost and vice president for academic affairs, and director of institutional research and assessment.
From 1992-2003, he served as dean of the college at Colgate University before joining the College Board as vice president for higher education assessment programs, where he oversaw the SAT. He also held various administrative and faculty positions at Harvey Mudd College, and Washington and Lee University.
“Mike’s breadth of experience will be a great asset to the college,” said Dr. David Rogers, MSC president. “I am confident that he will provide seamless leadership for students, faculty, and staff while the search for a permanent provost is conducted.”
The provost position became vacant when Rogers, former provost and chief operating officer, was appointed the eighth president of Morrisville State College.
Cappeto and his wife, Beverlee, live in the Hamlet of Poolville in the Town of Hamilton and met in college. Beverlee Cappeto had a successful higher education career as a chief financial officer at a think tank in Los Angeles, and in advancement services at Colgate, the Columbia Business School, and Fordham University.
Cappeto earned his doctorate from Virginia Polytechnic Institute, as well as master’s and bachelor’s degrees from James Madison University. He was named by James Madison University as one of the 150 “professors, students, alumni, and friends who have been changing the world since the college was founded in 1908.”
Cappeto served on the US Department of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Education from 2005-2010 where he helped re-write the Montgomery GI Bill. Locally, he served on the Poolville Community Center Board of Directors, and on the Earlville Opera House Board of Directors.
Morrisville State’s curricula are enriched with applied learning and pave the way for opportunity at both the Morrisville and Norwich campuses. An action-oriented, interactive learning lab, the college is a national leader in technology and has been lauded for its exemplary, innovative and effective community service programs.
In addition to being named to the 2014 President’s Higher Community Education Service Honor Roll, the college was recognized by U.S. News and World Report as an institution in the top tier of the Best Regional Colleges list and ranked second among regional colleges nationwide for outperforming its anticipated graduation rate.