Timothy Perry Shriver
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Timothy Perry Shriver, Ph.D., (born August 29, 1959) is chairman of the Special Olympics. He is part of the Kennedy family. His father is Sargent Shriver and his mother is Eunice Mary Kennedy who founded the Special Olympics movement in 1968.
He received his bachelor's degree from Yale University, his master's degree in Religion and Religious Education from The Catholic University of America, and his Ph.D. in education from the University of Connecticut.
He served as a high school teacher in the New Haven, Connecticut public school system, and as a counselor and teacher in the University of Connecticut branch of the Upward Bound program for disadvantaged youth. He became a Fellow at the School Development Program at the Yale Child Study Center.
He was instrumental in establishing the Social Development Project at the public schools in New Haven, Connecticut and also established the Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
He was the executive producer on The Ringer, a co-producer on Amistad and the Disney movie The Loretta Claiborne Story, and has served as a producer or co-producer on shows for the American Broadcasting Corporation, the National Broadcasting Corporation, and the TNT cable channel.
[edit] Awards and honors
- honorary degree from Albertus Magnus College
- the Medal of the City of Athens, Greece
- 1995 Connecticut Citizen of the Year.
- honorary degree from Loyola University
- honorary degree from New England College
- the Order de Manuel Amador Guerrera of the Republic of Panama
[edit] Board membership
- American Association on Mental Retardation
- Board of the Education Commission of the States’ Compact for Learning and Citizenship
- the Edison Schools Incorporated
- the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill