Saeid Rahimi, Ph.D.
Dean, School of Science and Technology, and Professor of Physics
Sonoma State University
Dr. Saeid Rahimi received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in physics from
the University of Shiraz in Iran, and later his Ph.D. in solid state
physics from the Pennsylvania State University where he studied semiconductor
materials at Penn State’s Materials Research Laboratory. He
then joined the Oregon Graduate Institute of Science and Technology
as a research associate working on impurities in semi-insulating and
semiconducting materials. Dr. Rahimi joined the faculty of Sonoma
State University in 1982 as an assistant professor and was promoted
to full professor in 1990. Dr. Rahimi focused on the field of photonics
when he worked at the Lightwave Division of Hewlett-Packard during
his sabbatical year in 1993. He was instrumental in the planning,
development and adoption of the new Masters program in Computer and
Engineering Science (MSCES), and served as the program’s interim
director in 1999. The self-supporting MSCES graduate program has become
a good example of a successful public-private partnership within the
California State University system (CSU). Dr. Rahimi has raised over
$8 million in cash and gift-in-kind for the program. The MSCES program
currently has an endowment exceeding $4 million.
Dr. Rahimi was appointed the interim Dean of the
School of Science and Technology in 2000 and later, the permanent
Dean in 2001. The School of Science and Technology includes nine departments
of biology, chemistry, computer science, engineering science, geology,
kinesiology, mathematics, nursing, and physics and astronomy. In response
to the budget cuts at the California State University system and Sonoma
State University, the School of Science and Technology has experienced
some significant budget cuts during the past four years. In addition
to $6.5 million annual budget, the School of Science and Technology
manages an average of $2.5 million for grants and contracts.
Six departments of biology, chemistry, computer science,
geology, mathematics, and physics and astronomy are housed in Darwin
Hall, the main science building of the school. The Engineering Science
Department is housed in the Cerent Engineering Science complex in
Salazar Hall. Kinesiology is housed in the university’s gymnasium
complex, and the Nursing department is housed in Nichol’s Hall.
Over the past four years Dean Rahimi has led the faculty and staff
of Science and Technology in planning for the $26 million renovation
of Darwin Hall, the main building of the School of Science and Technology.
The school successfully operated in borrowed space for the past two
years and transitioned back to the renovated Darwin Hall in the beginning
of Fall 2006. A $1.2 million equipment budget, the six departments
residing in Darwin Hall were able to acquire new equipment for their
laboratories.
Dr. Rahimi is the co-author of a proposal for establishing an undergraduate
program in engineering science. Following the approval of the proposal
by the CSU Board of Trustees (BOT) in March 2004, Dr. Rahimi obtained
SSU approval to initiate a new department of engineering science.
In their March 2004 meeting the BOT also approved a $9 million gift
consisting of the $8 million Fred B. Galbreath Wildlands Preserve
and $1 million endowment to SSU. This 3,500 acres preserve is one
of the largest preserves in the CSU system and the University of California
system. Dr. Rahimi organized faculty and administration support for
acquisition of the preserve and led the negotiations since May 2003.
The Galbreath Preserve will be used as a living laboratory by faculty
and students of biology, geology, geography, and environmental studies
for research and instruction. The Preserve will provide significant
opportunities for SSU faculty to obtain environmental related grants.
Most recently Dr. Rahimi facilitated $700,000 donation
as seed money for a new observatory to be located on the Galbreath
Preserve and equipped with a 1-meter telescope. The cost of this project
is estimated to be about $2.2 million. Fund-raising efforts are being
planned at this time.
Dr. Rahimi has obtained and secured over $18 million
grants, awards, and donations to the School of Science and Technology
at SSU and has published many articles in the field of semiconductors
and optics. Dr. Rahimi was instrumental in establishing and securing
funding for the Cerent Engineering Science complex at SSU. He received
a major grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation for equipping the Keck
Microanalysis laboratory within the Cerent complex. Recently he has
obtained a Federal grant from the US Department of Education for further
improvement of the photonics, electronics, and Human-Computer Interaction
(HCI) laboratories located at the Cerent Engineering Science Complex.
Dr. Rahimi has developed several courses and laboratories
in optics and electronics at SSU and has taught a wide variety of
experimental and theoretical physics courses. He has received teaching
and excellence in education awards from the Pennsylvania State University,
Sonoma State University, and the Santa Rosa Chamber of Commerce. He
is a member of the International Society of Optical Engineers and
a member of Sonoma County Workforce Investment Board. Dr. Rahimi is
also the director of Sonoma State’s HCI laboratory where he
has supervised graduate and undergraduate design and research projects
in the fields of Human-Computer Interaction and lasers and holography.
Following the university’s strategic planning
efforts, Dean Rahimi initiated Science and Technology’s strategic
planning. Several faculty and staff task forces have been formed to
help implement the desired outcome of this exercise. Dean Rahimi is
also involved in the university’s strategic planning process.
Dr. Rahimi has been quite successful in forging partnerships with
the local community and industry, a point emphasized both by the school
and the university’s strategic planning groups.