1 / 99

Moving Forward with Strength

Moving Forward with Strength. Idaho State University Proposed Campus Reorganization February 12, 2010. Introduction. President Vailas announced on Nov. 4 at a public forum that he would direct the Provost to form at least 3 task forces to examine reorganization of academic colleges.

hung
Download Presentation

Moving Forward with Strength

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Moving Forward with Strength Idaho State University Proposed Campus Reorganization February 12, 2010

  2. Introduction President Vailas announced on Nov. 4 at a public forum that he would direct the Provost to form at least 3 task forces to examine reorganization of academic colleges.

  3. Introduction Three clusters of units: • Pharmacy and Health Professions • Engineering and the disciplines in sciences • Education and Arts and Sciences absent the disciplines in the sciences

  4. Introduction Three objectives: • Increase efficiency and streamline operations • Enable ISU to emerge academically stronger, not weaker • Realize a financial savings

  5. President’s 11 Questions • Does reorganization have the potential to facilitate research and instructional collaborations? • Potential to enhance faculty’s role in shared governance?   • Potential to reduce demands on faculty time for service responsibilities?

  6. President’s 11 Questions • Potential to help distribute workload across disciplines? • Potential to enable streamlining of programming? • Potential to address understaffing in smaller depts? • Potential to enhance patient care in the health professions?

  7. President’s 11 Questions • Potential to increase flow of communication? • Potential to broaden use of available resources across larger units? • Potential to facilitate long-term strategic growth? • Potential to save faculty lines, and salaries?

  8. Timeline President’s deadline: Provost to submit report by March 1

  9. Task Forces • No more than a dozen faculty • At least one open forum • Liaisons to the other task forces • Broad latitude in how they conduct business

  10. Task Forces • Chairs attempted to appoint a balanced range of faculty members to the - including current or former department chairs - current or former Faculty Senate members

  11. Pharmacy and Health • Carol Ashton, Nursing • Paul Cady, College of Pharmacy • Tracy Farnsworth, Health Care Admin • Steve Feit, Kasiska College of Health Prof • Kathleen Hodges, Dental Hygiene • Tim Hunt, Biomed & Pharm Sciences • James Lai, Biomed & Pharm Sciences

  12. Pharmacy and Health • Galen Louis, Public Health • Barb Mason, Pharmacy Practice and Admin Sciences • Catherine Oliphant, Pharmacy Practice and Admin Sciences • Christopher Owens, Pharmacy Practice and Admin Sciences

  13. Pharmacy and Health • Neill Piland, Institute of Rural Health • Tony Seikel, Communication Sciences & Disorders and Education of the Deaf • Linda Hatzenbuehler, Chair

  14. Science and Engineering • Dan Ames, Geosciences • Rich Brey, Physics • Dring Crowell, Biological Sciences • Arya Ebrahimpour, Civil & Environmental Engineering • Nancy Glenn, Geosciences • Robert Holman, Chemistry • Alan Hunt, Physics

  15. Science and Engineering • George Imel, Nuclear Engineering • Hossein Mousavinezhad, Electrical Engineering • Tracy Payne, Mathematics • Ken Rodnick, Biological Sciences • Steve Adkison, co-chair • Pam Crowell, co-chair

  16. Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, Ed • David Adler, Political Science • Karen Appleby, Sport Science and Phys Ed • Sherri Dienstfrey, College of Arts & Sciences • Thom Hasenpflug, Music • Sue Jenkins, Educational Foundations • Nancy Legge, Communication and Rhetorical Studies

  17. Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, Ed • Herb Maschner, Anthropology • Jack Newsome, College of Education • Tom Terry, Mass Communication • Curtis Whitaker, English and Philosophy • Maria Wong, Psychology • Laura Woodworth-Ney, History • Kandi Turley-Ames, chair

  18. Fourth Task Force • On January 7 Provost Olson constituted a fourth task force to consider issues that do not fall within the immediate purview of the three ongoing task forces. • Shifting oversight of graduate education from the Graduate School to Academic Affairs and control over graduate curriculum back to the individual colleges?

  19. Crossover Areas • Steve Adkison, Task Force Chair • Paul Cady, Pharmacy • Lyle Castle, Idaho Falls • Pam Crowell, Task Force Chair • Kay Flowers, Library • Alan Frantz, Faculty Senate

  20. Crossover Areas • Linda Hatzenbuehler, Task Force Chair • Tom Jackson, Graduate School • Bessie Katsilometes, Meridian • Ken Smith, College of Business • Kandi Turley-Ames, Task Force Chair • Barbara Adamcik, Chair

  21. Faculty Time Investment

  22. Faculty Time Investment The 36 faculty on the 4 committees spent an impressive 3,011.28 hours of faculty time

  23. Health Sciences • Eleven official meetings (excluding public forums) • November 2009 = 4 • December 2009 = 2 • January 2010 = 5 • Four public forums • December 2009 = 3 • January 2010 = 1 • Nine sub-committee and constituency meetings • November 2009 = 2 • December 2009 = 3 • January 2010 = 4 • TOTAL MEETINGS: 24

  24. Health Sciences Task Force Hours/Time Committed • 2 hrs average per meeting = 48 hrs per person • 48 x 12 members = 576 hrs • 45 x 1 task force chair = 45 hrs • Total faculty hrs in meetings = 621 hrs • 25 hours per person outside of meetings for research and discussions • 25 x 13 (includes chair) = 325 total hrs of research • 8 meetings of other task forces attended by liaison • 8 x 2.5 hrs = 20 hrs meetings in other task forces • TOTAL FACULTY HRS: 966

  25. Science & Engineering • Seven official mtgs (excluding public forums) • November 2009 = 2 • December 2009 = 3 • January 2010 = 2 • Two public forums • January 2010 = 2 • TOTAL MEETINGS: 9

  26. Science and EngineeringHours/Time Committed • 1.75 hrs average per meeting = 15.75 hrs per person • 15.75 x 10 members = 157.5 hrs • 45 x 2 task force co-chairs = 90 hrs • Total committed faculty hours in meetings = 247.5 hrs • 25 hrs per person outside of meetings for research and discussions • 25 x 12 (includes co-chairs) = 300 total hrs of research • 12 meetings of other task forces attended by liaison • 12 x 2 hours = 24 hrs meetings in other task forces • TOTAL FACULTY HRS: 571.5

  27. Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Education Task Force Meetings • Sixteen official meetings (excluding public forums) • November 2009 = 3 • December 2009 = 6 • January 2010 = 5 • February 2010 = 2 • Two public forums • January 2010 = 2 • TOTAL MEETINGS: 18

  28. Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Education Task Force Hours/Time Committed • 2.5 hrs average per meeting = 45 hrs per person • 45 x 12 members = 540 hrs • 47 x 1 task force chair = 47 hrs • Total faculty hrs in meetings = 587 • 25 hrs per person outside of meetings for research and discussions • 25 x 13 (includes chair) = 325 total hrs of research • 4 meetings of other task forces attended by liaison • 4 x 1.5 hours = 6 hrs meetings in other task forces • TOTAL FACULTY HRS: 918

  29. Crossover Areas • Six official meetings • January 2010 = 3 • February 2010 = 3 • TOTAL MEETINGS: 6 (and ongoing)

  30. Crossover AreasTask Force Hours/Time Committed • 3.33 hrs average per meeting = 19.98 hrs per person • 19.98 hrs x 11 members = 219.78 hrs • 20 hrs x 1 task force chair = 20 hrs • Total faculty hrs in meetings = 239.78 hrs • 25 hrs per person outside of meetings for research and discussions • 25 hrs x 12 members (includes chair) = 300 total hrs of research • 1 hr per person for focus group attendees • 16 attendees x 1 hour = 16 hrs for focus groups • TOTAL FACULTY HRS: 555.78

  31. Total of all ReorganizationTask Force Meetings • 49 official meetings (excluding public forums) • November 2009 = 11 • December 2009 = 14 • January 2010 = 19 • February 2010 = 5 • Eight public forums • December 2009 = 3 • January 2010 = 5 • TOTAL MEETINGS: 57

  32. Reorganization Task Forces Hours/Time Committed • Total faculty hrs in task force meetings (includes liaison hrs) = 1,761.28 hrs • Total hours of research and discussion = 1,250 hrs • TOTAL FACULTY HRS: 3,011.28

  33. The Process • Task forces worked from Nov to Feb • Reports submitted in first week of Feb • Provost devised a balanced and unified campus plan

  34. The Process Joint meeting: - Faculty Senate Executive Committee - Council of Deans - President of student body - Chair of Staff Council - President’s Faculty Advisory Council - Provost’s Faculty Advisory Council

  35. The Process University-wide public forum Video to be available on Reorginization website

  36. The Process Reorganization website - task force reports - other documents - Provost’s plan - video of the open forum - website address: http://www.isu.edu/acadaff/organization/

  37. The Process Dedicated email address so that faculty and staff could provide input provost@isu.edu

  38. Discussion The smaller the aggregate across which workload must be managed, the more difficult it is for units to adjust workload in order to lighten loads for research-productive faculty

  39. Comparison of Colleges by Size ISU’s colleges are too small to operate efficiently .

  40. College of Arts and Sciences Fewer tenured and tenure-track faculty (with exception of North Dakota State U) CAS colleges in several of our peer institutions are substantially larger .

  41. College of Arts and Sciences Idaho State Univ 190 Montana State Univ 290 North Dakota St Univ 185 Northern Arizona Univ 334 Kent State Univ 388

  42. College of Arts and Sciences Univ of Montana 236 Univ of Nevada-Reno 343 Univ of Wyoming 267 Wichita State Univ 251

  43. College of Education No. tenured and tenure-track faculty in the College of Education at peer institutions is significantly greater, with the exception of U of Montana

  44. College of Education Idaho State Univ 34 Montana State Univ 55.7 North Dakota St Univ 53 Northern Arizona Univ 118 Kent State Univ 130

  45. College of Education Univ of Montana 35 Univ of Nevada-Reno 48 Univ of Wyoming 58 Wichita State Univ 42

  46. College of Engineering All of ISU’s peers are more than double the size of ISU’s college. In institutions with similar enrollment, No. of tenured and tenure-track faculty are 2 to 4 times the size of ISU’s engineering faculty

More Related