Education
Schaal grew up in Chicago, graduated from the University of Illinois, Chicago with a degree in biology, and received a doctorate from Yale University in 1974.
Schaal grew up in Chicago, graduated from the University of Illinois, Chicago with a degree in biology, and received a doctorate from Yale University in 1974.
She is the first woman to be elected vice president of the Academy. Since April 2009, Schaal has served on the President"s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). She was on the faculty of the University of Houston and Ohio State University before joining Washington University in 1980, where she has served as chair of the biology department.
In 2009, Schaal was named the Mary-Dell Chilton Distinguished Professor in Arts & Sciences at Washington University.
She was formerly the director of Tyson Research Center and has been president of the Botanical Society of America and president of the Society for the Study of Evolution. Schaal is best known for her work on the genetics of plant species.
She is known particularly well for her studies that use molecular genetic data to understand evolutionary processes such as gene flow, geographical differentiation, and the domestication of crop species. Schaal became Washington University’s dean of Arts & Sciences on January 1, 2013.
In 2015 Schaal was elected as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and assumed the position in 2016.
National Academy of Sciences.