Pete Wilson had a ready response whenever people asked him about his widely acclaimed success as a teacher. He would say that he鈥檚 a 鈥渧ery good鈥 teacher but that he has a 鈥済reat鈥 class, just as he鈥檚 a 鈥渧ery good鈥 husband with a 鈥済reat鈥 family. It was his way of making the point that nobody succeeds on their own鈥攁nd when you begin to realize this, you鈥檙e on what he called 鈥渢he journey from me to we.鈥

The accounting professor did not hide the fact that he sometimes struggled to live up to his own words. 鈥淵ou have to say it for years before you believe it,鈥 Wilson told a reporter in 2016. 鈥淎nd then you wake up one morning and say, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this without them.鈥欌

Pete Wilson

Pete Wilson in 2017 (Tony Rinaldo)

G. Peter Wilson鈥攐ne of the most beloved professors in the history of the Carroll School and Boston College鈥攄ied on September 12 at his home in Tampa, Florida. He was 73; the cause of death was complications from Parkinson鈥檚 disease, said Mary Ellen Carter, a Carroll School accounting professor and close friend of the Wilson family.

Wilson was the holder of the Joseph L. Sweeney Chair in Accounting at the Carroll School, before retiring in December 2018 and becoming an emeritus professor. He made his name as an academic researcher well before arriving at Boston College in 1997, having taught at Stanford, Harvard, and MIT At a certain point, though, Wilson decided that he had made his most noteworthy contributions to accounting scholarship. He turned his prodigious energy and passion to the art and craft of teaching.

鈥淧ete was the very definition of a master teacher,鈥 said John and Linda Powers Family Dean Andy Boynton, pointing to the plethora of awards and honors that Wilson received for excellence in teaching from major organizations within and beyond the accounting world. 鈥淗e was also a great and generous mentor of teachers at our school and in the accounting discipline.鈥 There was little to deliberate on, when it came time to formally name the Carroll School鈥檚 flagship series of seminars on excellence in teaching: In 2014, it became the Wilson Faculty Teaching Seminar.

鈥淭eaching was Pete鈥檚 signature craft,鈥 Boynton added, 鈥渂ut he also was a superb scholar. He exemplified careful thought and assessment of a wide variety of theoretical and empirical research.鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 a fine line between challenging them and killing them ... You have to know when you鈥檙e wrong. That鈥檚 part of the journey from me to we.鈥
Pete Wilson

He had a chirpy voice and a penchant for audacious neckties. (As to the ties, he would explain that he was 鈥渟hort, bald, and skinny,鈥 thus eager to focus attention elsewhere.) In the halls of Fulton, he was perhaps most legendary for the sheer amounts of work he piled on students鈥攚ho would give him rave reviews on teacher evaluations nonetheless (a familiar refrain being that they never thought accounting could be so interesting). At times, he would push too hard, and Wilson would do something unusual for a professor of his stature: He would apologize to the students.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a fine line between challenging them and killing them,鈥 he acknowledged a few years ago. 鈥淵ou have to know when you鈥檙e wrong. That鈥檚 part of the journey from me to we.鈥

Pete Wilson teaching

Pete and Carolyn Wilson in 2017 (Gary Wayne Gilbert)

Among his peers in the accounting discipline, he was known for his many innovations in teaching, which is why he earned awards too numerous to list in full, among them the American Accounting Association Lifetime Service Award and the first Innovation in Financial Accounting Education Award (along with a raft of honors bestowed upon excellent teachers across all disciplines at institutions where he taught). Some of those new strategies were tech-oriented. He was an early adopter of interactive clickers in class, for example. On this and other teaching initiatives, his indispensable collaborator was his wife, Carolyn, a Carroll School lecturer who had served in senior positions at top accounting firms. Carolyn Wilson鈥檚 role in his classes became even more pivotal some years ago as her husband began struggling with Parkinson鈥檚.

Wilson was an advocate as well as an innovator of the flipping-the-classroom model of teaching. 鈥淲ith the flipped class, students learn lower-level thinking skills on their own prior to class, which frees up class time to cover higher-level critical thinking,鈥 he explained in a March 2015 lecture on teaching to the full Carroll School faculty.

Pete Wilson teaching

Pete Wilson teaching Financial Accounting in 2011 (Gary Wayne Gilbert)

His class was no place for anyone lukewarm on teamwork and collaboration. He would assign students to teams at the start of the semester: 鈥淚 want them to teach each other before they come back to class,鈥 he said in a聽. Entering his classroom was like taking your mark for a road race. In rapid and repeated sequences, Wilson would often lecture for a few minutes, and then abruptly call the students into their groups for quick huddles to continue tackling the subject matter.

The magazine article quoted Michelle Mittelsteadt, M.B.A. 鈥01, who began her studies at the Carroll School not expecting to actually like accounting. She was a Ph.D. chemist, intent on becoming a research-and-development manager. Then, in her first semester, in the fall of 1999, she enrolled in Wilson鈥檚 required class. 鈥淗e made it exciting,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淚t totally changed what I wanted to do.鈥 She became a financial analyst at Ernst & Young in Boston.

Pete would have been a good Jesuit.
Mary Ellen Carter

A popular tradition in Wilson courses was to devote the last class of the semester to reflections. Students would step up to reflect on their priorities in life, along with their experiences of personal, social, and intellectual growth in connection with his courses like Financial Accounting (taken mostly by freshmen and sophomores). Then, the professor would share advice such as 鈥渄on鈥檛 judge yourself too quickly鈥 and 鈥渄on鈥檛 be afraid to fail.鈥

鈥淧ete would have been a good Jesuit. He figured out discernment,鈥 said Carter, alluding to those reflections.

She had known the Wilsons since the mid-1990s when she was a Ph.D. student at MIT and he was still teaching there, just before coming to Boston College. 鈥淎s a friend, he would be the loudest reveler when good things happened to you and empathetic and consoling when bad things happened,鈥 she said.

Carter relates that she last spoke with him on September 4, just about a week before he died. He and Carolyn had called her to get the scoop on the first week of hybrid teaching (lecturing simultaneously to students in class and online). On speakerphone, she shared with them some of the initial glitches and snafus with the technology and other aspects of hybrid teaching. 鈥淚 could hear Pete laughing out loud,鈥 she said. 鈥淢aybe he was finally happy he retired?鈥

When he died of pneumonia related to his Parkinson鈥檚, he was at home with Carolyn as well as with their two children, Jim and Jennifer, who have given the Wilsons seven grandchildren.

Delivering the sad news in an email, Boynton informed Carroll School faculty and staff that plans were underway for a virtual memorial service hosted by the American Accounting Association; and beyond that, a celebration of his life would take place at Boston College sometime next year. In lieu of flowers, the family is聽聽to the Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases at Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital, where Wilson was diagnosed with Parkinson鈥檚.

Cards and condolences can be shared with Carolyn Wilson, c/o Carroll School of Management Accounting Department, Fulton Hall 520, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3809.


William Bole is director of content development at the Carroll School.