THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF |
TO: |
Higher Education and Professional Practice Committee |
FROM: |
Johanna Duncan-Poitier |
SUBJECT: |
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute: Master Plan Amendment to authorize the Institute to offer a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree program in Electronic Arts |
DATE: |
January 23, 2007 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 2 and 4 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for Decision (Consent Agenda)
Should the Regents approve an amendment to the master plan of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute authorizing the Institute to offer a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree program in Electronic Arts?
Required by State regulation.
Proposed Handling
This question will come before the Higher Education and Professional Practice Committee at its February 2007 meeting where it will be voted on and action taken. It will then come before the full Board at its February 2007 meeting for final action.
Procedural
History
Master plan
amendment is required because this will be the Institute’s first doctoral
program in the discipline of Fine Arts.
Background
Information
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute submitted this proposal in April 2006 and the Department has determined that the program, if approved, would meet registration standards. Master plan amendment approval is needed to authorize Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to offer its first doctoral program in the discipline of Fine Arts.
Recommendation
It is recommended that the Board of Regents approve a master plan amendment to authorize Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to offer its first doctoral program in the discipline of Fine Arts. This amendment will be effective until February 28, 2008, unless the Department registers the program prior to that date, in which case master plan amendment shall be without term.
Timetable for Implementation
If the Board approves this master plan amendment, the Department will register the program and the Institute will proceed to recruit and enroll students.
Information in Support of
the Recommendation
Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, located in
The Ph.D. in Electronic Arts will be an
interdisciplinary arts degree that will expand traditions of arts pedagogy
through interdisciplinary research in contemporary media theory, practice, and
production. It will integrate arts practice with theoretical and historical
study.
During the
past ten years, the character of graduate education in the arts has been
changing. The most visible new features are the prominence of the electronic
arts and the development of interdisciplinary approaches. Related in part to the
previous two factors, a third critically important shift is just beginning to
materialize: the demand for Ph.D.s in interdisciplinary arts. Institutions
outside (and more recently within) the United States have initiated Ph.D.s in
the multidisciplinary and electronic arts. A current goal of the Institute is to
"achieve greater prominence" as a "world class" university. Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute needs to, therefore, participate in international
standards for graduate research and education. The Ph.D. in Electronic Arts will
contribute to this goal.
New professional standards and opportunities
require Ph.D.s. in several areas.
(1)
Many
artists are now exploring new domains of creativity which necessitate advanced
research in a variety of fields – communication technologies, biology, and
gaming – to name just a few.
(2)
In the
university teaching market, many art and interdisciplinary arts departments have
expanded what were positions previously filled only by those individuals with
M.F.A.s to candidates who hold Ph.D.s.
(3)
There
are a number of institutions for advanced creative study that offer research
positions for individuals with Ph.D.s in the creative arts.
(4)
Curatorial positions in museums and
university galleries would be a professional option for individuals with an
interdisciplinary arts Ph.D.
A review of the college’s finances found it in sound financial condition.
In response
to a canvass conducted of all doctoral degree-granting institutions statewide
and a canvass that was conducted of all the colleges and universities in the
Northeastern region of