Amanda McKendree

Teaching Professor of Management & Organization and Arthur F. and Mary J. O'Neil Director of The Eugene D. Fanning Center for Business Communication, Department of Management & Organization

Dr. Amanda G. McKendree teaches crisis communication, strategic communication, and corporate communication at the University of Notre Dame, where she is a Teaching Professor of Management & Organization in the Eugene D. Fanning Center for Business Communication. She also holds the Arthur F. and Mary J. O’Neil Directorship at the Fanning Center and serves as academic director for undergraduate studies in the Mendoza College of Business. Professor McKendree's research examines crisis communication, conflict communication, and the influence of rhetoric on organizational identity. She is published in the SAGE Encyclopedia of Identity, Business Communication Quarterly, Teaching Ideas for the Basic Communication Course, Journal of the Association for Communication Administration, and Review of Communication. She is a coauthor of Conflict Between Persons: The Origins of Leadership (2018).

She is a member of the Arthur Page Society, Management Communication Association, National Communication Association, Eastern Communication Association, and Pennsylvania Communication Association.  She is a past president of the Eastern Communication Association and Pennsylvania Communication Association, and is a past Chair of the Communication Ethics Division of the National Communication Association.  She is also a member of the executive committee for the Midwest Regional Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Consortium. She is the recipient of the 2018 Carroll Arnold Distinguished Service Award from the Pennsylvania Communication Association and the 2019 Faculty Service Award for the Department of Management & Organization, Mendoza College of Business.

She received her BA in Global Policy Studies from Chatham University and MPA in Nonprofit/Public Management from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. She was awarded a one-year fellowship in public affairs at the Coro Center for Civic Leadership and Carnegie Mellon University, and earned her Ph.D. in Rhetoric at Duquesne University.

When not serving her students and the discipline, she dedicates her time to Strikeout PSP, an awareness and fundraising initiative for progressive supranuclear palsy, a degenerative brain disease. Based in southwestern Pennsylvania, Strikeout PSP was founded by Amanda in 2017.