{"id":207171,"date":"2018-04-25T17:32:21","date_gmt":"2018-04-25T21:32:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/president\/?p=207171"},"modified":"2019-04-16T10:18:38","modified_gmt":"2019-04-16T14:18:38","slug":"presidents-spring-address-to-the-university-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/president\/2018\/04\/25\/presidents-spring-address-to-the-university-community\/","title":{"rendered":"President’s Spring Address to the University Community, 2018"},"content":{"rendered":"

Back in the days before I came over to the dark side of administration, I was a student of literature and then a teacher of literature. My mind was drawn to the language of the imagination, and, in particular, to utopian literature \u2013 the fabrication in language of whole, non-existing worlds. When I was in college, I wrote and produced utopian plays and went to graduate school with a playwriting scholarship. When I grew up, I became a university president, which is to say that I kept on at the task of creating non-existing worlds of the imagination. The most fully developed among my imaginary initiatives is called 麻豆传媒在线.<\/p>\n

As we look out upon this fictitious entity and see all the shining buildings, and the laboratories, classrooms, and technology they contain, and see all the people at work in those buildings, and all the thousands of students who come to study here, as we see the buses and the cars and the train stations and the power plants, it certainly all feels real and concrete enough. But, of course, it is not; it is all the product of our collective imagination, and all of you are implicated in taking part in the creation of this imaginary world.<\/p>\n

The best book that I read this year is Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind<\/em>, by the historian Yuval Noah Harari, in which he makes perfectly clear that all social orders are imagined. Even Sapiens\u2019 most fundamental imagined order, money, the currency of trade, clearly exists only in people\u2019s shared imagination. Whether shells, beads, or dollars, \u201cmoney isn\u2019t a material reality \u2013 it is,\u201d as Harari says, \u201ca psychological construct.\u201d We believe in money because we have all agreed to believe in it. More than 80 percent of the world\u2019s money \u201cexists only on computer servers. Accordingly, most business transactions are executed by moving electronic data from one computer file to another, without any exchange of physical cash.\u201d From money, to limited liability companies, to the intricacies of the beliefs of countless religions, to the practices associated with how we eat, to belief in the holiness or majesty of nations, the world of Sapiens is built on endless stories, stories which sometimes unite, sometimes distinguish, and, overall, serve to explain for us the meaning or existential basis of our life. A forager band in the Indus Valley believes that white-tailed foxes reveal the location of precious obsidian, even though obsidian has not been found for a long time; a large nation situated between two oceans believes that it is an indivisible nation that is sanctioned by God and that provides liberty and justice for all, even though it is clear to the most casual observer that the nation is divided in many ways, that it has no uniform concept of God, and that it does not provide liberty and justice for all. Sapiens imagine and tell stories, and that is how they impute meaning to their lives and how they create multinational corporations, or empires, or assure the standing of a nation in the collective imagination, or engage in the creation of a university.<\/p>\n

What we are today as an institution is what we have chosen to believe in; the University is the ever-changing incarnation of our collective imagination. We have chosen to believe in Sociology, Anthropology, and Chemistry. We have created the fiction of General Education and the theater piece of the classroom. We have imagined collegial governance and the primal right to parking, and, of course, we have imagined the efficacy and meaning of degrees. We could have told and passed on different stories, but these are the stories we imagined, and so this is the University we created.<\/p>\n

In addition to being storytellers, Sapiens is a communal species; we crave participation in collective fictions. We do not like to be out there by ourselves; we like to believe in the things that other people believe in. We identify \u201cus\u201d and distinguish ourselves from \u201cthem\u201d through our shared beliefs. The \u201cus\u201d was at first quite a small clan, tribe or group, very much like other social animals. As Harari notes, \u201cNo chimpanzee cares about the interests of the chimpanzee species, no snail will lift a tentacle for the global snail community\u2026, and at the entrance of no beehive can one find the slogan: \u2018Worker bees of the world \u2013 unite.\u2019\u201d But Sapiens, unlike other species, began to understand the advantages of broadening the concept of us.<\/p>\n

It would be hard to believe in cyber money or Sociology all by ourselves, but we can believe in them because there are people all over the world who believe in them too. We Sapiens are always in quest of our community, always striving to unite around a common system of beliefs \u2013 in government and politics, in religion, in arts, in knowledge systems, in trade and finance, in family and neighborhood, and in work.<\/p>\n

Even as we sit here together today, we are affirming our imagined construct of the University, but we are definitely doing that at a very confusing moment in time, because, although we long to affirm what we have imagined, we are being compelled to ask the question as to whether or not the story of the university, as it has been told over the past decades or even centuries, will remain meaningful in the future. There come moments in time when the disequilibrium caused by rapid change creates the opportunity, or the necessity, to revise or extend our story, and I think that now is such a time. With the realization that the University is the product of our imagination, if we have the courage, comes also the rather exciting freedom to jettison the chapters that no longer have meaning for us, and there comes as well the freedom to write new chapters, to make up new stories and to build upon this great work of fiction.<\/p>\n

And I know we are capable of these feats of imagination. I know it because that is how we grew from a normal school to a teacher\u2019s college to a liberal arts college to a regional university to a research university. That is how we built the buildings and renovated the labs and recruited the faculty and professionals, and created the many colleges and schools and programs that stand today where vacant land and deserted quarries existed before we imagined them all.<\/p>\n

I know it because this past fall we opened the new facility for the School of Communication and Media, which began its formal life several years ago. The new facility is right at the front edge of technological capacity in the field and has enabled the beginning of the imagination of new and innovative curricula and programs and School-generated content, ranging from a weekly student-produced television newscast originating in the News Lab to hours of live music performed on WMSC to audio podcasts created by the school\u2019s research faculty. The Presentation Hall in the new building has become a dynamic space for critical community conversations with high-profile guests, including Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Colonel Jack Jacobs, NBC\u2019s Willie Geist, WNYC\u2019s Brooke Gladstone, and ESPN\u2019s Jeremy Schaap \u2013 all streamed live from 麻豆传媒在线 across multiple digital platforms. The building\u2019s many collaborative spaces have encouraged students and faculty towards new ventures, for example, the launch of a student-run public relations agency.<\/p>\n

I know we are capable of these feats of imagination because, not long ago, the Director of Undergraduate Admissions, Jeff Indiveri-Gant, said to me that the one academic program that the University did not have that was most frequently requested by applicants was Nursing. Really, I said. Really, he said. Imagine that, I said. As a consequence of that conversation, during the 2015-16 academic year, a group of faculty and administrators did imagine that and began composing the story line of a School of Nursing and searching for someone who could really write the play about what a School of Nursing should be like in the changing world of health care in the decades to come, and the ongoing renovation of an old building called Partridge Hall also began to be re-imagined by Mike Zanko, our Associate Vice President for University Facilities.<\/p>\n

On May 9, 2016, Dean Janice Smolowitz arrived on campus, and, less than four months later in September of 2016, the University\u2019s School of Nursing came into being in newly renovated space with the admission of its first class of RN to BSN students. This spring, 22 of those students will be graduating. In fall 2017, the School admitted its first class of 50 freshmen to the four-year BSN program, and currently the MSN program is under review, and the School anticipates its first class of masters\u2019 students will begin study this coming fall. With miraculous speed and efficiency, the School of Nursing will have launched three degree programs in as many years, and they project that the School will have close to 300 students enrolled next year. A doctoral program in nursing practice is under development and could be ready as soon as fall 2020. I\u2019d say that\u2019s not bad for a work of fiction.<\/p>\n

And now we are moving ahead in imagining a new college for the approximately 2,000 to 2,500 students who have not declared a major and who do not have any formal academic home. When the University was smaller, providing guidance and a base of support to these students was more readily accomplished than it can be in the much larger University that exists today. Despite the best efforts of the knowledgeable professionals in the Division of Student Development and Campus Life, without any formal academic home, these students do not have access to sufficient academic mentoring to assist them in making important decisions about how to structure an academic program, choose a major, and adjust to the very complex environment of study in a university.<\/p>\n

Throughout the nation, many other universities of 麻豆传媒在线\u2019s size and type, and with students of a similar demographic, have adopted the solution of creating an academic home for such students, most frequently called \u201cUniversity College.\u201d In a fall 2017 meeting of the University\u2019s academic department chairs, the advisability of 麻豆传媒在线 creating such an entity was suggested and discussed with considerable interest. Subsequent to that meeting, the Associate Vice President for Student Academic Services, Dr. Allyson Straker-Banks, and the Associate Provost for Undergraduate Education, Dr. Jim German, undertook a review of such programs and consideration of the concept. Out of their work and many discussions with colleagues, a proposal was developed for the creation of University College at 麻豆传媒在线. The proposed mission for the College is very focused and clear: to retain undeclared undergraduate students who are admitted to the University; to connect those students with an appropriate program of study consistent with their abilities and interests and enable their smooth transition to a major in one of the other colleges or schools of the University; and to enhance the opportunity for those students to achieve timely completion of a baccalaureate degree.<\/p>\n

I am pleased to announce that, on April 11, the Board of Trustees approved the establishment of University College. To assist in the implementation of the College, Provost Gingerich has assembled an excellent advisory team, including: Professors of Psychology Saundra Collins and Milton Fuentes; Professor of Earth and Environmental Studies Josh Galster; Director of Undergraduate Admissions Jeffrey Indiveri-Gant; Director of Institutional Research Steven Johnson; Director of Academic Advising for the College of Education and Human Services Rebecca Madson; Professor of English Patricia Matthew; Director of Academic Advising for the Feliciano School of Business Eric Moskovitz; Professor of Communication Studies Marylou Naumoff; Director of Undergraduate Nursing Courtney Reinisch; Associate Vice President for Student Academic Services Allyson Straker-Banks; Government Documents and Data Librarian Darren Sweeper; and Director of Red Hawk Central Tara Morando Zurlo.<\/p>\n

Ultimately, University College will have a home in the renovated College Hall. For a two-year interim period, a very good space in the southeast corner on the main floor of Sprague Library will be renovated to serve as the College\u2019s initial home. Dean Hunt and the Library staff are excited about welcoming University College students to their building. The space itself is contiguous to one of the Library\u2019s very fine reading rooms, and we expect the Library and Caf\u00e9 Diem to become a natural gathering spot for these students. Dean Hunt likes, on every possible relevant occasion, to quote Albert Einstein\u2019s statement: \u201cThe only thing that you absolutely have to know is the location of the library,\u201d so I expect University College students will begin their college career with this principle well inculcated into their minds.<\/p>\n

The process of assembling a first rate professional staff for the new college is fully underway, and key to that process is recruitment for the position of Associate Provost for Undergraduate Education and Dean of University College. As most of you know, Jim German, who was our first Associate Provost for Undergraduate Education, having perfected everything here at 麻豆传媒在线, is leaving at the end of this year and heading to a new opportunity as Dean for Undergraduate Studies at California State University, Sacramento, where the weather apparently is somewhat different. His replacement will hold responsibility as the founding Dean of the University College that Jim had an important hand in shaping. We wish Jim well in his new position.<\/p>\n

I provide these three examples of the recent creation of new schools and colleges to remind us that it is quite possible for us to write new stories, and there are more that we should be considering. I know from meetings with various departments and conversations with members of the faculty and deans that many people share with me the view that our system of General Education needs serious reconsideration, as does the complex intersection of General Education, major field of study, and electives. If we began the discussion of these important elements by asking what makes the most sense for today\u2019s and tomorrow\u2019s students and what will best serve their educational needs, I am not convinced that we would come out of the discussion with the system we have in place today. And there are many other questions it might be timely to ask, but we have to have the will and the courage to ask them, we have to be unafraid to act on our deliberations, and we have to be willing to recognize the difference in importance between the big issues that affect the education of thousands of students and the small complications of our accustomed practices. If we can collectively imagine the big story line, we will be able to sort out the details.<\/p>\n

In short, I think, as we plan for life in today\u2019s much more complex and much larger institution, we need to look with clear eyes and creative minds at how the University functions for the students as an integrated and coherent whole. We have the opportunity to do that as we approach the construction of the University\u2019s next strategic plan, which is essentially our next chance to prepare to retell the story of 麻豆传媒在线. The strategic plan will not and should not answer all our questions, but it should certainly set the agenda of the important questions that are before us, in accordance with our understanding of current circumstances and bringing to the consideration the best thinking we can about how the world is evolving. I would urge you to engage in the strategic planning process. There is a website \u2013 montclair.edu\/strategic-planning<\/a> \u2013 for this initiative where you can find the most recent information, the names of the members of the strategic planning team, and suggestions for how you can engage in the process.<\/p>\n

Accompanying the questions related to the overall structure of our undergraduate programs is the thinking we will want to bring to how we invest in and pursue graduate education and research and how we integrate our research initiatives with instruction. As many of you know, the Acting Dean of The Graduate School, Dr. Brian Carolan, is leaving 麻豆传媒在线 this spring to take up a new position as Dean of Graduate Studies at Sacred Heart University. I am certain that he is going to be very successful in this new role, and we wish him well and offer him our gratitude for his committed service over the past years, both as a member of the faculty in the College of Education and Human Services and in The Graduate School. We are very fortunate to have attracted excellent new leadership in Dr. Scott Herness, who was appointed this spring to the newly created position of Vice Provost for Research and Dean of The Graduate School. Dr. Herness received his BS in Biology from the University of California, Irvine and his PhD in Biology from Florida State University, and he has had an active faculty and research career in the field of neuroscience, as well as considerable administrative experience. He joins us from his most recent position as Interim Vice Provost for Graduate Studies and Dean of the Graduate School at The Ohio State University, where he oversaw all aspects of graduate education at one of the nation\u2019s largest public research universities.<\/p>\n

The development and successful expansion of the University\u2019s graduate programs requires very intensive and immediate attention. We have made some good recent steps, including the start-up of the new PhD program in Clinical Psychology, which brought in its first class this year, and the establishment of the Department of Social Work and Child Advocacy, which has received hundreds of applications for the inaugural class this coming fall of its new Master of Social Work. In the face of a variety of external challenges, the College of Education and Human Services has developed a number of initiatives to foster program partnerships in the community and varied instructional delivery models. The online Educational Leadership program has generated robust enrollment and was highly ranked at #12 among online graduate programs in the country by U.S. News & World Report<\/em>. A new program provides teachers with a second certification in Bilingual\/Bicultural Teacher Education, which is an ongoing area of teacher shortage both in New Jersey and nationally. The program has prepared two cohorts of teachers in the Newark Public Schools, with a third cohort likely, and is now offering the program in the Irvington Public Schools. Continuing and adding to this promising work, as Associate Provost for Research and Dean of The Graduate School, Dr. Herness\u2019 agenda will include strengthening the University\u2019s portfolio of master\u2019s programs and master\u2019s-level enrollment, growing the research base to support the development of existing and new doctoral programs, and nurturing existing and developing new industry partners, and developing the University\u2019s capacity to serve their post-baccalaureate educational needs and to provide pathways to career opportunities for our students.<\/p>\n

Of course, nothing demonstrates the exercise of the imagination more than research and the connection between research and the education of the next generation of students. The possibilities are nicely exemplified by the National Science Foundation grant to Professor Robert Meredith in the Biology Department for a Next Generation Sequencer. Not only will this equipment support cutting-edge research, but its use is also incorporated into undergraduate Biology classes, engaging students in research projects related to DNA data sets and training them in experimental design, analysis, interpretation, and preparation of scientific papers. That instructional experience not only supports ongoing research, but also provides students with an extremely valuable skill set in preparation for their entrance into the biotechnology workforce.<\/p>\n

Two faculty members in Earth and Environmental Studies, Professors Sandra Passchier and Stefanie Brachfeld, have been invited to participate in Antarctic climate science expeditions with the prestigious International Ocean Discovery Program during the austral summer of 2019. They will be members of international collaborative teams aboard a research vessel collecting sediment cores. That fact alone is exciting, but, even better, it will allow those faculty members to bring the research home to our students, who, in turn, will be able to participate in the study of the Antarctic Ice Sheet\u2019s sensitivity to climatic and oceanographic changes, identifying trends in ice mass loss that contribute to sea level rise.<\/p>\n

I am pleased to report that the PSEG Foundation has provided a new grant of $1.3 million to continue the Green Teams Program and to support the development of a Clean Energy and Sustainability Analytics Center as part of the University\u2019s PSEG Institute for Sustainability Studies. The Green Teams Program, under the direction of Dr. Amy Tuininga, enables students to work on solving real-world sustainability problems identified by major corporations, giving the students experience in applying scientific knowledge while simultaneously developing their business skills and creating networks for them that lead to internships and employment after graduation. The Clean Energy and Sustainability Analytics Center, developed by Professor Pankaj Lal, will be a public research and technical assistance center for the State of New Jersey to identify, quantify, and interpret the ramifications for the state of clean energy development and to facilitate energy planning.<\/p>\n

A new Institute for Research on Youth Thriving and Evaluation (the RYTE Institute), developed by Professors Jennifer Urban and Miriam Linver of the Department of Family Science and Human Development, supported entirely by external grants, has become a robust social science research laboratory, exploring questions related to youth thriving, developmental science, and program evaluation from a systems science perspective. The Institute has generated $9.8 million to date for the five-year period from 2015 through 2020, with another $1.6 million currently under review.<\/p>\n

The Center for Research and Evaluation on Education and Human Services (CREEHS), under the direction of Dr. Eden Kyse, conducts research and project assessment for a wide range of clients, including state and federal agencies, community organizations, health services, and educational institutions. Its project base is growing, and it is beginning to come close to operating fully as an externally funded center. The University has a number of established and emerging centers and institutes designed to generate revenue, and their development is actually extremely important, both to contribute to the diversification of the University\u2019s revenue sources and to provide useful expert services to the external community, which, beyond the value of the service, has the additional benefit of expanding and elevating the reputation of the University.<\/p>\n

As we continue to develop the research and scholarly portfolio of the University, given the limitations of our resources, it would be sensible to do so in relationship to the knowledge needs of the society we serve and the students we educate. One of the great contributions of the world\u2019s universities has been the creation of communities of scholars and scientists who have ideas and who follow those ideas wherever their intellect takes them, unfettered by proscriptions about what directions they should and should not pursue in their work. We call that possibility academic freedom, and from that freedom has come new knowledge, pursued for its own sake, but, once created, applied to issues and problems arising from the societal context. That is a good thing. However, given our circumstances, it would be foolish if we were not as perspicacious as possible about building scholarly and research expertise that could be applied to areas of recognized immediate need. For example, the only new funding in the Governor\u2019s proposed FY 2019 budget for the state\u2019s senior public institutions was a $2 million proposed line item to develop a center for research on issues related to gun control. It wasn\u2019t hard to see that one coming.<\/p>\n

If we stay sensitive to the current areas of concern in the world that constitute the context for this institution, we will be able to identify the front of mind issues: yes, violence and guns in our society, but also, just for example, a sustainable energy infrastructure; issues related to climate change, flood control, and water quality; a wide range of cyber and other security issues; the tangled web of pre-K to 12 educational policies; access to affordable health care; the crisis of substance abuse; international affairs, particularly in regard to our relations with the Americas, China, Russia, and the Arab nations; and, of course, the economy, stupid. It is not a question of pure research vs. applied research; it is not either\/or. We need to be active on both fronts, and we need to be aware of what our state, our nation, and the world need help with. As Rodgers and Hart put it, we need to sing for our supper, and we very much need to enable our students to be active members of the chorus.<\/p>\n

We continue to improve facilities to support the needs of both undergraduate and graduate programs and research activities. We are getting ready to undertake one of the largest construction projects on campus, the complete renovation of College Hall. Opened in 1908, this 125,000 GSF building constituted the entirety of the original institution, the 麻豆传媒在线 Normal School. Over the past 110 years, it has served us well, and now it will undergo a major makeover in preparation for its next 100 years of life. When finished, by September 2020, College Hall will emerge as a central, integrated home for all University-wide student support services. You have probably noticed the appearance on Parking Lot 7 of a temporary home for Red Hawk Central, the prototype of the new one-stop service center for students seeking assistance with Financial Aid, Student Accounts and Registration. The Center, which opened in January, has been very well-received by students and will move more fully developed to College Hall when that building\u2019s renovation is complete.<\/p>\n

At the other end of the construction spectrum, we are in the process of finishing work on Mallory Hall. When that 52-year-old, 44,000 GSF building opens in time for the fall term, it will have been transformed into a modern facility for research and instruction in Computer Science and Information Technology. A very successful smaller project was completed this year as the lower level of Sprague Library was very creatively redesigned and renovated to accommodate the classrooms, studios, and lab rooms for the Visual Communication Design program. The new instructional and studio space provides an inviting contemporary environment with full mediation, ample desktop and production space, and convenient access to library holdings, enhancing teaching and learning across the design disciplines. Go visit when next you are in the Library.<\/p>\n

In the critical area of campus energy, the University is further strengthening its utility infrastructure with the addition of two natural gas engine generators to supplement our current plant. This expansion, which will go operational during the next year, together with upgrades to the University Substation, will allow the University to act as a micro grid, reducing demand from the external grid, reducing overall energy costs, and permitting the University to divorce itself from public utilities when necessary.<\/p>\n

In addition to buildings, we are building new capacity in a variety of ways to support research, for example, in compliance, in accounting, in equipment and personnel, and, contributing to that infrastructure, the Digital Commons, 麻豆传媒在线\u2019s institutional repository is now up, fully hosted, offering unlimited cloud storage, and providing reliable impact metrics. The repository will collect, organize, preserve, and disseminate the scholarship and creative work of the faculty and other members of the University community in a digital, open-access environment. Placing work in the repository will make it easily discoverable through search engines, such as Google and Google Scholar, and the Digital Commons will be a useful tool to facilitate networking and collaboration among faculty nationally and internationally.\u00a0Better than watching television, you can watch the Digital Commons screen showing in real time people all over the world downloading your work. For information about the Digital Commons and how to participate, please consult the website: https:\/\/digitalcommons.montclair.edu<\/a>. If any departments, schools, or colleges are interested in having a presentation to learn more about the Digital Commons or how to go about uploading scholarship into the repository, please be in touch with Dean Hunt or Librarian Darren Sweeper or send an email to digitalcommons@montclair.edu<\/a> and assistance will miraculously materialize.<\/p>\n

Talking about scholarship, on April 11th, Provost Gingerich and Dean Hunt hosted a reception to celebrate the scholarship and creative work of the faculty. The event was focused primarily on recently published books, but also included music and the visual arts. A few examples of notable publications include:<\/p>\n