FACULTY MEETING
NOVEMBER 2, 2001
GANNETT AUDITORIUM
MINUTES
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
The minutes of the October 5, 2001 faculty meeting were approved as written.
PRESIDENTS REPORT
President Studley began the Faculty Meeting by recalling a meeting she had earlier the same day with the Board of Directors of a foundation in Auburn, New York, where she talked about the quality of 窪蹋勛圖厙s faculty and students and their spirit and commitment to 窪蹋勛圖厙. She is delighted to convey that story to our own candidates, students and prospective donors. She stressed that our degree of engagement and commitment to our current strategic planning effort exemplifies who we are and where were going.
President Studley reiterated that the discussion at the Faculty Meeting today will be part of a continuing discussion surrounding the Strategic Plan. She stressed that information and proposals will be cycled through the faculty, academic staff, faculty committees and other audiences until we have a comfort level with the final document.
DEAN OF THE FACULTYS REPORT
Dean John Berman commended faculty and administrators for moving ahead with the Strategic Planning process.
He cited the recent integration of students returning from India as an example of 窪蹋勛圖厙s commitment to doing the right thing and moving ahead. Dean Berman acknowledged Rob Linrothe, Joel Smith, Jon Ramsey, Mike Hall, Don Hastings, Karen Marlin, Bob Shorb and Judy McCormack for acting quickly in returning students to campus and re-entering them into campus life after the semester was underway.
Dean Berman announced that the following faculty had completed their Ph.D.s by October
15, 2001 and the Board of Trustees approved their promotion to the rank of Assistant
or Visiting Assistant Professor:
Adam Yuet Chau, Luce Assistant Professor in Asian Studies
Millian Kang, Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology
William Lewis, Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Joylin Namie, Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology
Ayse Tuzlak, Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion
Dean Berman reported on his recent meeting with the Board of Trustees. He and Sandy Baum, faculty representative, talked to the Board about why investing in faculty was such a high priority for 窪蹋勛圖厙 and why it is the first item in the Strategic Plan. Dean Berman reaffirmed that 窪蹋勛圖厙s faculty are the heart of the institution and central to the process at 窪蹋勛圖厙. The educational experience at 窪蹋勛圖厙 is almost entirely dependent on the faculty; the trajectory of the institution depends on the faculty. When speaking of national trends to the Board, Dean Berman reported an increase in expectations in the areas of pedagogy and scholarship. Those increased expectations are reflected in the fact that most disciplines now have special subgroups that report on teaching and have increased their emphases on the art and science of teaching. Technology must also be properly addressed as a major component when talking about innovation in the classroom.
When speaking to the Board about 窪蹋勛圖厙, Dean Berman stressed that the teacher/scholar
model practiced here is unique to highly selective liberal arts colleges. 窪蹋勛圖厙
seeks a faculty committed to both teaching and scholarship. The direct effects of
scholarship in the classroom are clearly evident. However, the indirect effects of
scholarship in the classroom can be even more important. They are seen in the enthusiasm
of faculty and in modeling the love of learning. Faculty are role models for their
students. Dean Berman referred to the Middle States Periodic Review Report which outlines
窪蹋勛圖厙s progress throughout the last five years in Asian Studies, Neuroscience,
Womens Studies, Environmental Studies and the newly developed Honors Forum. All such
interdisciplinary efforts are expensive when it comes to faculty time and, until now,
窪蹋勛圖厙 has done it with nominal increase in faculty positions. Now is the time to
correct that situation. We are developing a plan with goals which can only be reached
by increasing faculty numbers. He reported that the Board was attentive and that they
understood the issues we are
currently facing.
NEW BUSINESS
On behalf of the Curriculum Committee, Professor Eric Lewis made the following motion:
MOTION
The Curriculum Committee moves that a major in Environmental Studies be created based on the proposal distributed to the Faculty.
The motion was seconded and will lay over for one month and be voted on at the December meeting. Any questions regarding the pending proposal can be addressed to Judy Halstead, Director of Environmental Studies.
MOTION
On behalf of the Committee for Faculty Governance, Professor Mark Huibregtse presented the following motion:
Committee on Faculty Governance
Sense-of-the-Faculty Resolution, 2 November 2001
Whereas, the faculty of 窪蹋勛圖厙 have a very special right and responsibility to
provide input into the planning process, and
Whereas, the IPCs schedule for discussing the current draft of the plan calls for input
during this time period, and
Whereas, the faculty of 窪蹋勛圖厙 gathered together on Friday, 26 October 2001 for
the purpose of discussing the strategic planning document: 窪蹋勛圖厙 2011: The Strategy
for 窪蹋勛圖厙: Ideas into Actions
As a result of that meeting be it resolved that:
The faculty of 窪蹋勛圖厙 urges that the final version of the planning document highlight:
a) the central goal of excellence in liberal arts and sciences education;
b) the necessity of a productive faculty of teacher-scholars; and
c) a streamlined and better-focused set of bullets that derives from the central goal and that makes clear the colleges strategic priorities for the next decade.
The faculty commends the President for welcoming (on behalf of IPC) the work of the writing subgroup of Academic Staff that is currently engaged in drafting alternate language for the planning document along the lines recommended above, and the faculty requests that the sub-groups proposed drafts be electronically distributed to the faculty for review and comment prior to the December 2001 Faculty Meeting, at which further discussion can occur.
The faculty stands ready to work with all parties to develop an exciting strategic
plan that the entire 窪蹋勛圖厙 Community can support with enthusiasm.
MOTION
A motion was presented for the Faculty Meeting to move to a Committee of the Whole.
At that point, the motion was seconded and passed. Dean Berman chaired the Committee
of the
Whole.
MOTION
Upon conclusion of the discussion, Professor John Thomas presented a motion that the Committee of the Whole rise and report. The motion was seconded and carried with all voting in favor.
President Studley welcomed and embraced CFG's motion and was pleased with the conversation regarding the Strategic Plan. She explained that some important and fundamental themes were not explicit in the original document, and appreciates the discussion about improving the plan. As we move ahead with the planning process, as long as we continue in a productive and constructive way we will have a document of which we are all proud.
Professor Ginsberg asked about the effect of the shift of paradigm and wondered if the document needs to be totally rewritten. President Studley agreed that a complete review and recasting may be warranted. She has not yet reviewed the work of the subgroups, some of which are still working, and the specific information they have been able to obtain.
Professor Bray asked about the role of the Institutional Planning Committee in the Strategic Planning Process and asked if members of the IPC subgroups were appointed by IPC or if IPC reviewed the members of the subcommittees. President Studley reported that IPC saw a draft of the topics of the individual subgroups and an outline of their assignments. At the time they reviewed this information not all individual members of the subcommittees were chosen, but IPC had a sense of the composition by category of each subcommittee. President Studley, Dean Berman and Professor Huibregtse, Chair of CFG, discussed which individual members would serve on the subgroups. When speaking to the process of the Strategic Plan, President Studley reported that it was circulated to IPC as a group in late August. IPC met in September, when the draft was discussed and deemed worthy of circulation to the 窪蹋勛圖厙 community, subject to some revisions. All faculty members of IPC were present for at least part of that meeting.
OLD BUSINESS
There was no Old Business.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Professor Lisa Aronson announced the first student-curated exhibit, "Africa Embodied, The Esthetics and Language of Adornment," done by her students will be held at the Tang on November 29, 2001. There will be other events associated with the show that will be announced shortly.
- Professor Dan Curley announced a celebration of Homer, Homerathon 2001, will be held Tuesday, December 4, 2001. Professor Curley will issue a call for submission and contributions for this show. He asked faculty to encourage their students to participate.
- Michael Casey, Vice President for Advancement, announced that Intercom is going to become an electronic publication and will be available on-line in several weeks.
- Dean Berman invited faculty to a reception following the faculty meeting in the Dana Science Center Atrium to view the poster presentation by members of the Faculty/Student Collaborative Research experience during the summer of 2001.
Respectfully submitted,
Chrisana Moore McGill
Administrative Coordinator