THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
Committee on Higher Education and
Professional Practice |
FROM: |
Johanna Duncan-Poitier |
SUBJECT: |
Report on the Public Hearings on The Tentative Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012 |
DATE: |
April 29, 2005 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 1, 2, 3, and
4 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for
Discussion
As a result of their public
hearings, should the Regents make changes to The Tentative 2004-2012 Statewide
Plan for Higher Education before adopting the Plan in its final form?
Proposed
Handling
This question will come before
the Committee on Higher Education and Professional Practice on May 16, 2005 for
discussion. Following discussion,
staff will prepare the final text of the Statewide Plan. The Plan then will come before the Full
Board for final action on June 21, 2005.
Procedural
History
The Department began preparation
of the Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012, in October 2002 at the
Regents Policy Conference. In April
2003, the Regents adopted 13 Priorities for Higher Education. In May 2003, the Department issued the
Bulletin of the Statewide Plan to give guidance to the four higher education
sectors and individual independent and proprietary higher education institutions
as they prepared master plans.
Subsequently, SUNY, CUNY, the Commission on Independent Colleges and
Universities (cIcu), and the Association of Proprietary Colleges (APC)
transmitted sector-wide, long-range master plans to the Department and
individual independent and proprietary colleges transmitted their individual
plans.
The Committee on Higher
Education and Professional Practice considered drafts of the Statewide Plan in
September, November, and December 2004, and in January 2005. In February 2005, pursuant to §237(4) of
the Education Law, it authorized release for public comment of The Tentative
Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012. The Board held public hearings on the
Tentative Plan in Buffalo on March 23 and in New York City on April 5 and
8. A total of 52 persons spoke;
five other persons provided only written comments.
The issue before the Committee is whether or not to make any revisions to the Tentative Statewide Plan on the basis of the testimony presented at the public hearings. A report on the testimony is attached, including lists of the speakers at each hearing. A copy of the Tentative Plan and a complete set of the written testimony received will be available in the Regents office. Copies of the written testimony have been made available to the members of the Board of Regents.
Recommendation
Based on the testimony received at the three public hearings, the Department will modify the Plan to strengthen the following Regents Priorities:
· Closing Performance Gaps;
· Preparation for College;
· Information and Assistance in Preparing for College;
· Creation of New Knowledge through Research;
· An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School Leaders and Other School Professionals;
· Encouraging a Highly Effective System; and
· Funding a Highly Effective System
Timetable for
Implementation
Once the Regents adopt the
Statewide Plan, the Department will develop a schedule for implementation of the
Regents initiatives in response to each of its priorities over the next seven
years. Implementation may involve
adoption, amendment, or repeal of regulations, adoption or modification of
policies, proposed legislation, and budget proposals. In addition, the Department will
continue its collaboration with the sectors as they implement their own
long-range master plans.
Report on the Board of Regents Public
Hearings on
The Tentative Statewide Plan for Higher
Education, 2004-2012
In February 2005, pursuant to
§237(4) of the Education Law, the Regents authorized release of The Tentative
Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012, for purposes of public comment
and scheduled three public hearings. Those hearings were held
on:
Chancellor Bennett, Vice Chancellor Sanford and Regents Tisch, Phillips, Chapey, Cofield and Brademas participated in these hearings. Over the course of the three days, the members of the Board of Regents heard from 52 speakers, including 11 at the Buffalo hearing, 29 at the first New York City hearing, and 12 at the second New York City hearing. They included:
· 4 sector leaders - President Abraham Lackman of cIcu; Stephen Jerome, Chair of the Association of Proprietary Colleges, Chancellor Robert King of SUNY and Chancellor Matthew Goldstein of CUNY,
· 5 college presidents and representatives,
· 12 sector and institutional administrators,
· 20 faculty members,
· 3 representatives of faculty unions,
· 3 district superintendents, principals, and other school personnel,
· 2 students, and
· 3 representatives of other interested organizations.
Attachment A lists all the speakers, with their affiliations. In addition, the President of the Association of Proprietary Colleges, one faculty person, one university administrator and two representatives of additional organizations provided only written testimony.
Speakers at all three hearings endorsed the Statewide Plan or described how their institutions’ plans and priorities fit with the Regents priorities in the Plan. In New York City, a number of speakers raised concerns about the CUNY Master Plan, which is before the Regents for approval as part of the Statewide Plan, or about CUNY policies, proposed actions, or funding.
The following recommendations, which have been categorized by Regents priority area of the Tentative Statewide Plan, were suggested by those presenting testimony:
A. Maximizing Success for All Higher Education Students
· Regents Priority A.2, Articulation: Strengthen the Statewide Plan’s initiatives related to the ability of students to transfer among institutions. Staff believe that the Plan now includes the initiatives recommended by the speakers who addressed this issue and that there does not appear to be more that the Department could do in this area within current resources without infringing on institutional autonomy. Staff recommends that no change be made to the text following Regents Priority A.2.
· Regents Priority A.4, Closing Performance Gaps: Encourage continued support for and enhancement of the State’s opportunity programs – HEOP, EOP, SEEK, and College Discovery – that provide essential support for economically and educationally disadvantaged students as well as encouragement for institutional efforts to provide information literacy or Writing Across the Curriculum programs. Staff recommends that the text following Regents Priority A.4 be modified as needed to assure that the Plan reflects the Regents strong support for these programs and to endorse the CUNY’s Chancellor’s Initiative on the Black Male in Education as described in the CUNY Master Plan.
B. Smooth Student Transition from PreK – 12 to Higher Education
· Regents Priorities B.6, Preparation for College, and B.7, Information and Assistance in Preparing for College: Encourage continued support for and enhancement of support services for middle school and high school students to prepare them to enter and succeed in college, including such initiatives as the development of early college programs and CUNY’s College Now program. Staff recommends that the text following Regents Priorities B.6 and B.7 be modified as needed to reflect this support.
C. Meeting New York’s Needs through Graduate Programs and through Research
·
Regents Priority C.8, Strong Graduate Programs to Meet the State’s
Needs: Support the goal
of CUNY and SUNY to ensure that a sufficient number of full time faculty are
employed to ensure academic quality throughout the university. Staff recommends that the text following Regents
Priority C.8 be modified to reflect the recognition of the importance for full
time faculty.
·
Regents Priority C.9, Creation of New Knowledge through
Research: Modify this
Regents priority to address the continuing need for basic research initiated by
faculty as well as research responding to external interests and the need to
communicate information and research findings effectively. Staff
recommends that the text following Regents Priority C.9 be modified as needed to
reflect these concerns.
D. Qualified Professionals for Every Community throughout the State
·
Regents Priority D.11, An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School
Leaders, and Other School Professionals: Encourage the enhancement of
teacher preparation to attract more career changers, improve teacher self-esteem
and renewal, and support the public schools’ retention of teachers. Staff
recommends that the text following
Regents Priority D.11 be modified to address these recommendations more
fully.
E. A Balanced and Flexible Regulatory Environment to Support Excellence
·
Regents Priority E.12, Encouraging a Highly Effective
System: Emphasize the
importance of shared governance to the effectiveness of higher education in New
York State. Staff recommends that the text following Regents
Priority E.12 be modified to do so.
· Regents Priority E.13, Funding a Highly Effective System: Advocate more forcefully for improved funding for higher education, especially for strengthening student aid and assuring greater predictability of attendance costs for students, providing State aid for community colleges that meets the Education Law’s requirements, full funding of Bundy aid, and improved State funding for SUNY and CUNY operations and facilities needs. Speakers from all sectors recommended forceful advocacy, although they emphasized different funding programs. Staff recommends that the text following Regents Priority E.13 be modified to take into account these comments as well as the recently adopted State budget for 2005-06.
Other
Add a new priority on Workforce Development that would include initiatives that would meet the needs of companies seeking to remain in the State or to relocate from other states. Staff does not recommend that such a priority be added to the Plan. The Statewide Plan is focused on the 13 areas the Regents identified as high priority and does not address every aspect of higher education or every area of need. There are numerous economic development activities and initiatives available to help address this need.
Conclusion
If the Regents agree with the recommendations listed above, staff will modify the Plan to reflect these changes and will bring the final Plan before the Board for action at your June 2005 meeting.
Attachment
Attachment
A
List of Speakers- Public Hearings
on
The Tentative Statewide Plan for Higher
Education
March 23, 2005,
Buffalo
Name |
Title |
Organization |
Adams,
Julius |
Associate
Dean of Teacher Education |
SUNY
Buffalo |
Bishop,
George |
Executive
Vice President and Dean of Academic
Affairs |
Niagara
County Community College |
Colvin,
Dorcas |
Senior
Advisor to the President |
SUC
Buffalo |
Finley,
Lucinda |
Professor
of Law and Vice Provost for Faculty
Affairs |
SUNY
Buffalo |
Floss,
Fred |
Vice
President of Academics |
United
University Professions |
Glocker,
Janet |
Academic
Vice President |
Monroe
Community College |
Hefner,
Dennis |
President |
SUC
Fredonia |
King,
Robert |
Chancellor |
State
University of New York |
Monroe,
Anne |
President |
The
Community Health Foundation of Western & Central
NY |
Oglivie,
Donald |
District
Superintendent |
Erie
1 BOCES |
Richey,
Patrick |
Vice
President of Finance and Operations |
Genesee
Community College |
April
5, 2005, New York City | ||
Barnhart,
Michael |
Chair,
Academic Policy Committee |
CUNY
University Faculty Senate |
Beaky,
Lenore |
Professor/Secretary |
CUNY
LaGuardia Community College |
Botman,
Selma |
Executive
Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs |
CUNY |
Bowen,
Barbara |
President |
Professional
Staff Congress |
Ciaccio,
Leonard |
Director,
Discovery Institute |
CUNY
College of Staten Island |
Cooper,
Sandi |
Professor |
CUNY |
Crain,
William |
Director |
CUNY
is our Future |
Fernandez,
Ricardo |
President |
CUNY
Lehman College |
Garnett,
Kate |
Chairperson,
Department of Special Education |
CUNY
Hunter College |
Goldstein,
Matthew |
Chancellor |
The
City University of New York |
Golland,
David |
Vice
Chair, Graduate Affairs |
CUNY
University Student Senate |
Green,
Michael |
Professor,
Department of Chemistry |
CUNY
City College |
Ianniello,
Patrick |
Director
of M.S. in Education Program |
Metropolitan
College of New York |
Jackson,
Edison |
President |
CUNY
Medgar Evers College |
Jerome,
Stephen |
President |
Monroe
College |
Lackman,
Abraham |
President |
Commission
on Independent Colleges and Universities
(cIcu) |
McCall,
Carl |
Co-Chair |
New
York State Public Higher Education Conference
Board |
Mellow,
Gail |
President |
CUNY
Fiorello H. LaGuardia Community College |
O’Malley,
Susan |
Chair |
CUNY
University Faculty Senate |
Otte,
George |
Associate
Professor |
CUNY
Graduate Center |
Price,
Susan |
Professor |
CUNY
Borough of Manhattan Community College |
Richardson,
Kathryn |
Professor,
Department of Nursing |
CUNY
NYC College of Technology |
Rosa,
Chris |
University
Coordinator - Disability & Veterans
Services |
CUNY |
Salins,
Peter |
Provost |
SUNY |
Scher,
Marc |
Principal/Retired |
Discovery
Institute/CUNY College of Staten Island |
Schuler-Mauk,
Ellen |
President |
Faculty
Association, Suffolk Community College |
Start,
Ruth |
Professor |
CUNY
College of Staten Island |
Sullivan,
Edward |
|
Consultation
Services speaking on behalf of St. Francis
College |
Whittaker,
Robert |
Professor |
CUNY
Lehman College |
April 8, 2005, New York City | ||
Baez,
Pedro |
Director,
College Now |
CUNY
Lehman College |
Bell,
Martha |
Chair,
SEEK |
CUNY
Brooklyn College |
Brind,
Joel |
Professor,
Department of Natural Sciences |
CUNY
Baruch College |
Chase,
Lance |
Principal |
City
College Academy of the Arts |
Dahbany-Miraglia,
Dina |
Assistant
Professor |
CUNY
Queensborough Community College |
Diraimo,
Susan |
Board
Member |
CUNY
is our Future |
Gray,
Peter |
Associate
Professor, English |
CUNY
Queensborough Community College |
Hounion,
Morris |
Chair,
Status of the Faculty Committee |
CUNY
University Faculty Senate |
Merola,
Ryan |
Member,
Student Government |
CUNY
Honors College |
Rorschach,
Elizabeth |
Associate
Professor, English Education |
CUNY
City College |
Schwarz,
Steven |
Professor,
Assistant Dean |
CUNY
Queens College |
Wood,
Darrow |
Chief
Librarian & Professor |
CUNY
NYC College of Technology |