Transitions
- Ceci Toro, a neurobiologist at Sarah Lawrence College, has been named associate dean.
- Terry Roberson, an emeritus professor of education and former provost at the University of Montevallo, has returned to the institution as interim president. The previous president, John W. Stewart III, retired in May after serving 15 years.
- The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has named two new deans. Ginger Gummelt, a former chair of sociology, social work, criminal justice, and anthropology at Lamar University, will become dean of the College of Business, Health, and Human Services. Tansel Karabacak, director of Little Rock’s physical-sciences school, will become dean of the Donaghey College of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.
To submit a new-hire announcement, email people@chronicle.com. You can also find Transitions online here.
Footnote
Last July, the EA Sports College Football video game returned after NIL payments freed it from legal considerations that kept it off of shelves for 11 years. It went on to become the best-selling sports game in U.S. history, finishing 2025 as the second best-selling title among all video games in the domestic market, as Sports Business Journal reported.
The most obvious way to follow up on such a hit is by touting new rosters and features in an updated version that will go on sale in just a few days. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, as they say.
The second most obvious way to follow up is to resurrect another college sport that was in NIL-induced video-game purgatory: basketball.
EA Sports is teasing a new version of its long-dormant basketball franchise. Rival publisher 2K also showed interest in taking to the digital hardwood.
The return won’t be a fast break. EA is targeting 2028, according to Extra Points. It takes time to sew up the intellectual-property rights and code stadiums’ digital doppelgängers, The Athletic reported.
EA is reportedly planning to include men’s and women’s teams from all Division I institutions that opt in. And why, amid the current mad scramble for new revenue in the pay-for-play era, wouldn’t colleges opt in? As with the football game, colleges are set to be allocated royalties based on how frequently players use their basketball teams.