M E M O R A N D U M
DATE: September 29, 2000
TO: Members of Planning Committee on Academic and Research
Organization – Research Initiatives, Interdisciplinary Interactions, Collaborating,
Shared Governance
FROM: Brian Foster, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs
SUBJECT: Charge to committee
Thank you for agreeing to serve on the planning committee on “Academic
and Research Organization – Research Initiatives, Interdisciplinary Interactions,
Collaborating, Shared Governance.” This committee is a critical part
of the University’s strategic planning process. Attached is a membership
list of the committee. To give you a sense of how your work fits
in the broader strategic planning process that is underway, we have also
included a brief summary of the planning process and its calendar, along
with some other background materials. Your committee is one described
in the section called “Working Papers” and will be chaired by Jack McIver,
Chair of the Department of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences.
For more detail on the process, please consult the planning web site at
www.unm.edu/~unmstrat.
It may be helpful if I give you some background on what has been achieved
so far in the planning process. We have now completed several important
foundational activities that will guide the next steps:
-
UNM’s mission, vision, and value statements - a small group has reviewed
these and suggested changes.
-
environmental scan - the environmental scan examined the environment in
which UNM will exist for the next five to ten years.
-
brainstorming sessions - a series of these sessions with a wide variety
of university constituencies and community members produced a comprehensive
list of activities that the University should undertake together called
“the domain of the plan” (Your committee’s work will focus on one
sub-domain.)
It is important that you keep each of these foundation activities in mind
as the committee’s work proceeds.
Your committee is one of approximately twenty that are writing working
papers on which the rest of the planning process will be based. A list
of all of the working papers that are currently under development is appended
to this letter. All of the committee reports will receive broad public
distribution and commentary late this fall. The reports and commentary
will be the source material for the central Planning Task Force to identify
a small number of strategic directions (i.e., broad institutional goals),
which will be the main elements of the strategic plan. Each of these
strategic directions will be associated with a set of major objectives
as well as tactical means of reaching the objectives.
The charge to your committee is to:
-
Produce a working paper no more than five pages long on “Academic and Research
Organization – Research Initiatives, Interdisciplinary Interactions, Collaborating,
Shared Governance;” your topic is outlined more fully in the paragraph
below.
-
Describe broadly: what are we now doing in your committee’s area?
What should we be doing? How does it all fit together? How
well are we doing it? What are the gaps in our inventory of programs
and activities in this area?
-
Please consider the entire University in your thinking, including for instance
the branch campuses, broadcast media, and the Extended University.
-
Your committee’s deliberations are likely to intersect with those of other
committees (e.g., several have technology or financial components).
It will be helpful if you communicate with other groups to understand the
nature of these common concerns and perhaps cross-reference them in your
report.
-
Consider UNM’s unique resources, strengths, and competitive advantages
in the area as well as our limitations and prospects.
-
Include a one-page set of bullets on the issues that arise in your paper
and what they mean for assessing where the University is now and where
it is or should be going. (This is in addition to the five-page report)
-
You may append some background information to the five-page report (keep
in mind the Task Force was not constituted with the kinds of expertise
needed to analyze the subject matter of your report. That is the
task of your committee, and we hope that you will present thoughtful and
grounded conclusions based on your expertise that will guide the Task Force
in its task of crafting the university’s strategic directions.)
The Planning Task Force encourages you to think broadly about your topic.
This definition of your topical focus is meant not to constrain how you
think about your subject matter, but only to demarcate the broad area that
needs to be addressed in the planning process. “Academic and Research
Organization – Research Initiatives, Interdisciplinary Interactions, Collaborating,
Shared Governance” should consider that although the organization of most
research universities has much in common, over the years important changes
have occurred in response to developments in the composition of the disciplines
(e.g., the life sciences over the past few decades), creation of new ones
(e.g., Computer Science, Materials Science and Engineering), and the emergence
of new areas of research (e.g., Cognitive Science, Genomics, Cultural Studies).
Research funding has greatly impacted the way we are organized, as has
needs of government agencies (e.g., for policy studies), human resource
needs of business and government, the development of the professions, and
so on. UNM has had a highly decentralized structure, with nearly
all resources and much power vested in academic departments, colleges and
research centers. This is a very conservative organizational force
in many ways, since vesting resources in existing units significantly inhibits
organizational change and cross-unit cooperation.
For UNM Main and the Branch Campuses, we need:
? to consider ways to organize current academic and research units
(e.g., departments, colleges, schools, centers, institutes), and academic
programs (e.g., degree programs (majors), minors, certificates, concentrations,
specializations) that will make best use of current and projected resources
and facilitate the success of the Universities’ current and future academic
and research initiatives.
? to look at mechanisms for reaching across boundaries of units and
programs.
? to examine the role for shared governance in this organizational
mix.
It may be helpful to mention two key elements of the Plan. First,
it will be tied closely to our resource base. All objectives and
tactics must be accompanied by credible and reasonable resource scenarios.
Second, all working papers, reports, draft plans, and other materials produced
in the process will receive close public scrutiny, and all comments received
will be considered as part of the record in subsequent planning activities.
Much dissemination of the information and public comment will be accomplished
through our strategic planning web site (www.unm.edu/~unmstrat).
Again, for the Task Force and for President Gordon, and for me personally,
I want to thank you for your willingness to serve in this important role.
cc: William C. Gordon, President
Members of the Strategic Planning Task Force
Attachments:
Summary and Schedule of Planning Process
Membership list
List of Working Papers
Environmental Scan
Mission and vision statements