THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents |
FROM: |
Johanna Duncan-Poitier |
COMMITTEE: |
Higher Education and Professional Practice |
TITLE OF
ITEM: |
Master Plan Amendment: SUNY College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill, B.S., Child Care and Development |
DATE OF
SUBMISSION: |
April 23, 2004 |
PROPOSED
HANDLING: |
Approval (Consent Agenda) |
RATIONALE FOR
ITEM: |
Master plan amendment is needed to authorize an institution’s first program in a new discipline |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goal 2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
SUMMARY:
The State University of New York Board of
Trustees seeks approval of an amendment to the State University of New York
master plan to authorize the College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill
to offer a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) program in child care and
development. Master plan amendment
is needed because this would be the College’s first program in the discipline of
education. A petition for action
requesting approval for the Trustees to confer the B.S. degree at the College at
Cobleskill appears separately on the Regents
agenda.
The Office of Higher Education has determined that the proposed program, if approved, would meet the standards for registration set forth in the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education.
Recommendation: I recommend that the Regents take the following action:
VOTED, that the master plan of the State University of New York be amended, effective May 18, 2004, to authorize the SUNY College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill to offer a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) program in child care and development. This approval will be effective until May 31, 2005, unless the Department registers the program prior to that date, in which case master plan amendment shall be without term.
B.S. in Child Care and
Development
The proposed baccalaureate degree program
will prepare students to provide child care and development services for
children from birth through age five via a curriculum of field-based
experiences, family-focused training and academically rigorous coursework in
theoretical foundation, arts and sciences.
The baccalaureate program would not lead to teacher
certification.
The program is consistent with SUNY
Cobleskill’s mission of “relevance to the working world,” with “emphasis on
competence.” The proposed program builds upon SUNY Cobleskill’s long and
distinguished history of offering an associate degree in Early Childhood.
The curriculum consists of 126 credits of coursework, comprising 63 credits in the major (33 upper-division), 61 credits of liberal arts and sciences (21 upper-division) and 2 credits of free electives. The Early Childhood faculty believe that the strengths of the program are an academically rigorous curriculum designed to integrate critical thinking, problem solving and extensive field experiences; the close student-faculty relationship; and the expertise of faculty who teach the Early Childhood program leading to the Associate in Applied Science (A.A.S.) degree.
The projected student enrollment
is expected to reflect the current student body in both ethnic composition and
geographic distribution. Consistent
with SUNY Cobleskill's enrollment goals, SUNY indicates that special efforts
will be made to increase minority enrollment through high school programs
designed to encourage excellence in child care and development. Projected enrollment for the first year
is 25 students (20 full-time, 5 part-time). By the third year, enrollment is
expected to be 100 students (80 full-time, 20 part-time), and by the fifth year,
enrollment is expected to be 150 students (120 full-time, 30
part-time).
The new $2.2 million Cobleskill
Campus Child Care Center scheduled for completion in summer 2004 will be the
centerpiece of the proposed program.
It is a 13,000 square foot facility with six classrooms, a large motor
room, library, parent lounge, children's kitchen, and art room. The facility is state-of-the-art and is
designed to serve up to 82 children ages 6 weeks to 12 years. The Campus Child Care Center is the only
accredited child care program in Schoharie County. Additional campus resources include 14
computer labs, 3 child development labs, and 9 science
labs.
The library holdings consist of
77,000 print items, 4,800 audiovisual items, and 290 magazine
subscriptions. The College has
budgeted $33,000 to expand library holdings.
The Early Childhood faculty
consists of ten professors, four of whom hold doctoral degrees. An additional doctoral-level faculty
position has been approved.
Significant job growth is
anticipated in the area of child care and development based on Bureau of Labor
Statistics projections, and the results of surveys conducted by the
College. It is also expected that,
based on data gathered from graduates of the associate degree program in Early
Childhood, a significant percentage of the graduates of the proposed program
will pursue advanced degrees before seeking
employment.
A canvass was conducted of the
Northeast Region of New York. There were eight responses. All responses supported the program.