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Gwen gained her PhD from The Australian National University and retired
as a Fellow at the John Curtin School.
Following her retirement, she became involved in UNICEF and found herself
running its Christmas card activities for many years. For that important
community work, she was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in
1997.
Unfortunately, Kathleen Woodroofe passed away a few years ago and Gwen
began thinking about how to realise their shared dream of making an investment
in the future. Gwen's own and her sister's research experience made her
very aware of the importance of encouraging young researchers through
scholarships. She saw in the University's Endowment for Excellence the
opportunity to make a lasting contribution to encourage their academic
successors by endowing postgraduate scholarships for PhD students.
For Dr John Hooper, the Dean of the Graduate School, this generous offer
was doubly welcome. More research scholarships were a major priority for
the Graduate School. Secondly, he had known the late Professor Kathleen
Woodroofe as a social history colleague in Sydney and was delighted to
have this opportunity for the ANU to remember her contribution to scholarship
in this way.
The Vice-Chancellor had no hesitation in agreeing to match the donations.
The University decided to establish the Gwendolyn Woodroofe Postgraduate
Scholarship in the Sciences and the Kathleen Woodroofe Postgraduate Scholarship
in the Humanities or Social Sciences. The first awards are expected to
be made in 2002.
For her great generosity, Gwen Woodroofe was admitted as a Perpetual
Member of the Endowment of Excellence.
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