Bob Mong

President

University of North Texas

Robert Mong has served as the President of the University of North Texas at Dallas and its College of Law since 2015. Under his leadership, the university has undergone transformational growth in retention, the number of degrees awarded and enrollment, becoming the fastest-growing public university in Texas.

During his tenure, UNT Dallas has expanded its facilities at the southern Dallas main campus and the downtown Dallas law school. Through UNT Dallas' numerous community service initiatives in urban Dallas County, the university also has greatly increased its visibility and influence.

The university operates with a compelling vision to provide its students with a pathway to upward socioeconomic mobility. UNT Dallas works diligently to keep tuition affordable and minimize student debt. A recent national study ranked UNT Dallas as having the lowest debt upon graduation among all public universities in Texas, and third-lowest in the nation. In January 2020, the university was named by the nonprofit ScholarShot as the most effective university in the state for serving first-generation and low-income students

UNT Dallas also has built strong partnerships with area school districts and with Dallas College. The university has partnered with the Dallas Independent School District to offer Early College High School to students at Sunset, Lincoln and Seagoville campuses. UNT Dallas also was the founding four-year partner in the creation of the Dallas County Promise, an effort to provide free tuition to all seniors at more than 50 high schools in 11 area school districts.

During Mong's tenure, UNT Dallas introduced its first residence hall in 2017, and the $63 million Student Center, the campus’ largest building, in Fall 2019. The 136,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility, with its one-stop shop for student services, expansive study spaces, citywide views and a full-service Starbucks, instantly has become the hub of student activity and the university’s most identifiable building. Mong also ushered in the UNT Dallas Rail Station on the Dallas Area Rapid Transit's Blue Line. The campus also enjoys a robust DART bus service.

In Spring 2020, students overwhelmingly passed an athletics fee to bring intercollegiate athletics to UNT Dallas. Men’s and women’s basketball, cross country and track teams will begin competing in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics in Fall 2020.

UNT Dallas earned reaffirmation of its accreditation from the SACSCOC in 2018. The College of Law received provisional accreditation from the American Bar Association in June 2017, and moved into the UNT Dallas Law Center, the former Dallas City Hall, in the summer of 2019 after a $71 million restoration was completed on the historical building.

In the last four years, UNT Dallas has received an unprecedented number of grants from federal and state government, corporations such as Toyota, Wipro, Texas Instruments and Kellogg's, foundations and individual philanthropic donors. UNT Dallas also sent its first graduates to medical school and to an Ivy League graduate school.

Mong has actively recruited dynamic talent to the campus to complement existing staff. Among those brought to UNT Dallas include Dr. Betty Stewart, Provost and Executive Vice President; Dr. Monica Williams, Vice President for University Advancement and President & CEO, UNT Dallas Foundation; Michael Williams, Distinguished Leader-In-Residence; Felecia Epps, Dean of the College of Law; Dr. Orlando Pérez, Dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Nakia Douglas, Executive Director of TRIO and Pre-Collegiate Programs; Cynthia Perez, Director of External Affairs; Tim Willette, Chief Compliance Officer; and Yolanda Franklin, Associate Vice President of Marketing and Communications. Each has brought a unique set of skills and talents to propel the university's strategic mission and vision.

Before joining UNT Dallas, Mong worked as a journalist for more than 40 years, most of it at The Dallas Morning News, where he served as managing editor and later as editor-in-chief. He also gained considerable business experience as the paper's general manager, and as CEO of the Messenger-Inquirer, a daily newspaper in Owensboro, Ky. Throughout his business and journalism career, higher education was Mong's principal outlet for volunteer activities. He became a national leader by creating joint appointments between universities and The Dallas Morning News. These included arrangements with SMU, the University of Texas at Austin, UT-Arlington and UT Dallas. He also has chaired the national board of visitors at the Manship School at Louisiana State University since 2000.

Mong served as a Pulitzer Prize juror multiple times, including once as chair of the Gold Medal Public Service Committee, and once as chair of the Photography committee. During his time managing The Dallas Morning News, the paper won nine Pulitzer Prizes and was named finalist 16 other times. In 1999, the Columbia Journalism Review named The Dallas Morning News one of the five best newspapers in America based on a survey of peers.

From 1998 until 2015, Mong chaired The Dallas Morning News Charities that raised millions of dollars for the homeless and hungry in North Texas. He also was the prime mover in winning a grant from the Knight Foundation creating the Hispanic Families Network that trains Hispanic parents to use their social networks to promote the importance of early childhood education.

His awards include the National Empathy Award, given by the Volunteers of America annually to a journalist who has made their community a better place to live. Mong also helped create the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference at the University of North Texas, and served on the committee that started the Dallas Festival of Ideas.

Mong currently co-chairs the Southern Dallas Task Force of the Dallas Regional Chamber, a committee that raises visibility of business and entrepreneurial efforts in southern Dallas County.

He graduated from Haverford College in 1971, where he attended school on a Scott Paper Company Scholarship. He received the Archibald MacIntosh Award for Scholarship, Integrity and Academic Achievement; was captain of the varsity football team both junior and senior seasons; and captain of the varsity baseball team his senior season (and he holds the 10th all-time highest career batting average of .357).

He also attended Stanford University's Executive Program in the Graduate School of Business.

Mong is married to former Los Angeles Times reporter Diane Reischel. They have two adult children – Eric is a neurosurgery resident; and Elizabeth received a master's degree from Brite School of Theology and is a middle school special education teacher.