​Faculty Co-Director, Leaders in Progress & Service Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP)

Chad F. Slieper currently serves as Faculty Co-Director of Georgia Tech's Leaders in Progress and Service Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP) in the Office of Undergraduate Education.  He also retains a partial appointment as an Academic Professional in the School of Public Policy where he serves as Director of the Law, Science, and Technology program overseeing recruitment and retention of the program's part-time attorney faculty. 

Having earned a Bachelor of Science in Public Policy with highest honor from Georgia Tech and a Juris Doctor from Emory University School of Law, he has over a decade of experience in higher education having previously held appointments with The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center where he was Chief, ad interim, of Clinical Ethics and Emory University School of Law where he directed a program in Global Health Law and Policy. 

An attorney and ethicist, he has leadership experience with curriculum development, program administration and development, faculty recruitment and retention, service and experiential learning, professional identity development, and student advising. He teaches in the fields of law and medical ethics, and he has won several teaching awards at Georgia Tech, including a 2022 CIOS Award, recognizing Georgia Tech's top fifty instructors as measured by the course instructor opinion survey, and a Distinguished Teaching Award from the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.  His teaching experience also includes serving on the faculty of Georgia Tech’s study abroad program at Oxford University. In 2021, he was a Georgia Tech "Faces of Inclusive Excellence" honoree for his work as co-founder of the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts Diversity Council, and he also serves as a faculty liaison to Georgia Tech's LGBTQIA Resource Center.  

A member of the State Bar of Georgia and former board member and secretary of the Stonewall Bar Association of Georgia, he previously worked in the area of professional responsibility for two global law firms, and he was honored by the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy in 2013 with its Outstanding Alumni Award.