Stuebner has made quite a name for herself since serving as the starting center for the Big Green teams in the early 1990s. Currently in her fourth year as the president and professor of social sciences and education at Colby-Sawyer College in New London, New Hampshire, she has spent more than 25 years in higher education.
Stuebner began her career as an assistant women’s basketball coach at Carleton College in her home state of Minnesota shortly after graduating from Dartmouth in 1993 with a degree in psychology. The following year, she was named the head coach at Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvania, while working as an admissions counselor as well. From there, she earned master’s and doctoral degrees from the Harvard Graduate School of Education while serving as a graduate assistant coach on the Crimson team that knocked off top-seeded Stanford as a 16-seed in the NCAA Tournament. Stuebner then built her career at small, private, tuition-dependent schools, such as Lycoming College for a decade in a variety of senior-level administrative positions. Prior to Colby-Sawyer, she was the executive vice president and chief operating officer at Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvania.
On the court at Dartmouth, Stuebner averaged over 20 minutes, 6.7 points and 5.7 rebounds in 96 career games, captaining the team as a junior and nearly averaging a double-double in Ivy play for the Big Green as a senior. She also helped Dartmouth win the Ivy League title by four games in the standings as a freshman and remains among the top dozen shot blockers in Big Green history.
Stuebner lives in New London with her spouse, Amanda, two children (Tyler and Gabrielle) and two Labradoodles.