Published: September 13, 2012 in the UB Reporter
There are many ways of defining the UB 2020 vision. How do
you define it?
UB 2020 is our long-range vision of excellence, focused on raising
the bar for UB in quality, stature and impact. We are a very fine
institution with the potential to be truly great—to be
recognized as one of the leading research universities in the
nation and world. UB 2020 is our roadmap for getting there.
Ultimately, this vision is about unleashing the power of what our
exceptional faculty and students can achieve and contribute
together, given the right environment and the right opportunities.
It’s about the synergy and the possibilities created when
different minds and perspectives come together to tackle societal
challenges, to make a positive difference for the bigger
communities they share.
What will it take to make this vision a
reality?
Achieving this vision really comes down to three key objectives,
all very closely connected. First, we need to focus on building
faculty strength across the disciplines: attracting more of the top
scholars who are leading today’s global conversations in
their fields, and nurturing their discoveries and ideas.
Secondly—and strongly tied to faculty excellence—is
student excellence: educating bright, globally minded leaders who
are committed and prepared to make a difference. Finally, we must
work to create the 21st-century campus environment that brings
these exceptional faculty and students together in powerful ways
and allows their excellence to achieve its full impact.
Can you give us a quick progress report? How well is UB
performing with respect to these objectives?
UB 2020 is not just a plan on paper; it’s in full motion.
This is a time of tremendous momentum and energy at UB, and we are
making tangible progress every day. Our outstanding faculty body
continues to grow in size and stature. This fall, 85 leading
faculty joined our academic community—these are faculty at
the forefront of their respective fields and they represent
tremendous breadth and depth of scholarly achievement.
Bringing even more top-ranked faculty to UB will have a critical
impact on our ability to recruit the best and brightest students,
and we are already seeing this impact reflected in the quality of
our incoming students at every level. Our students are competing
with increasing success for national honors like Fulbright, Udall
and Goldwater scholarships. We’re working to attract even
more top students through increased support for student
scholarships. And we are focused on making it easier for these
students—especially undergraduates—to engage directly
with our distinguished faculty. For example, Discovery Seminars
allow freshmen and sophomores to work directly with leading faculty
in small-seminar groups, and our Undergraduate Academies provide
students an opportunity to explore timely, interdisciplinary topics
in depth with leading faculty and experts in the field. And in just
over a year, UB has opened six major facilities on our three
campuses. Downtown, the medical school is planning for its new
home, where it will be strategically aligned with hospitals and
research partners.
What do you think are the main reasons for this progress?
What do you see as the major hurdles, and the major opportunities,
for the success of UB 2020?
All of this progress is the outcome of our long-range,
comprehensive strategic vision; none of these outcomes were
achieved overnight. But we could not have achieved this success
without the strong support and advocacy we have received—from
our higher education partners in SUNY and across our region, our
alumni and university friends around the world, local business and
community organizations, and elected leadership in our region and
state.
Right now, we’re fortunate to have state leadership that
recognizes the vital role that research universities play in
building thriving communities—and is willing to invest in
this impact. While this is unquestionably a time of nationwide
economic challenges, for UB and Buffalo it is also a time of
unprecedented opportunity. For decades, UB and our fellow SUNY
institutions have been saying that long-term state investment is
critical to realizing our full potential. This principle was at the
heart of the historic NYSUNY 2020 legislation that the governor
signed in 2011. This legislation provides critical higher education
policy reforms, including a fair and responsible tuition plan for
SUNY that ensures educational quality and access for our students,
while enabling students and their families to plan for the cost of
higher education with confidence.
This legislation has provided a vital path forward for UB during a
period of declining state funding. With the historic NYSUNY 2020
legislation and related challenge grant, we now have the ability to
plan on a five-year horizon for the first time in our history as a
public institution, rather than on a year-by-year budget cycle that
makes long-range planning difficult. This has the potential to
transform the way we plan for our collective future and invest in
our academic mission.
How is UB investing the revenues from the NYSUNY 2020
legislation to advance its vision of excellence?
The NYSUNY 2020 Challenge Grant revenues are being used to advance
two critical arms of the next phase of UB 2020—investing in
faculty strength across the disciplines and moving the medical
school downtown. We’re already making significant progress on
both fronts. Plans are moving forward with the medical school move
with the identification of world-class architectural firm HOK to
design the facility. Over the next five years, we aim to hire 250
additional top faculty using revenues generated by this
legislation, and we are already on our way. Some of this
fall’s faculty hires were made possible by the NYSUNY
legislation, and these revenues will play an increasingly important
role in the years ahead. These investments also play a vital role
in enriching the educational experience we provide our students.
Since the plan was implemented, UB has added more than 300
undergraduate course sections—creating 12,000 more
seats—in the highest-demand course areas than were available
in the 2011-12 academic year. We’ve also been able to hire
more instructors and create more graduate teaching assistant lines
to teach these new course sections.
These investments are transforming academic planning across the
university. Last year, I charged our deans and vice presidents with
leading efforts within each of their units to develop strategic
three-to-five-year plans that advance our larger institutional
goals of excellence. We also initiated the “E Fund,”
which uses new revenue from NYSUNY 2020’s rational tuition
program to invest in interdisciplinary projects that advance our
academic vision. We’ve already had two rounds of funding that
generated tremendous interest from across the university. Some of
the proposals selected for funding include interdisciplinary
academic projects, from an energy-diversification program and a
Center for Excellence in Writing to an innovative Arts and Emerging
Technologies program; as well as academic support initiatives that
will transform the student experience, including a diversity
recruitment program, the Finish in Four program and an e-textbooks
pilot program in the University Libraries. I know Provost Zukoski
is very excited about the great opportunities before us, and under
his leadership we will be working together as an academic community
to build upon our university’s excellence and impact.
What are your goals for the future? What’s the next
chapter of UB 2020?
Speaking generally, I believe we always need to be focused, as an
institution, on where we want to be in five, 10, 50 years, and we
need to define, collectively, what are the most effective
strategies that will take us there. And that’s exactly what
we’ve been doing.
We are committed to being responsive to ever-changing societal
needs and challenges, and that means we always need to be examining
the purpose, relevance and impact of our work in the classroom, the
lab and community.
Today, we have many exciting opportunities before us, and we are
actively seizing them. Downtown, the medical school is actively
planning for its new home, where it will be strategically aligned
with area hospitals and research partners. Just to name a few
examples, we are making exciting progress with our newly designated
New York State Center of Excellence in Materials Informatics, a
research center that will establish UB as a worldwide hub for the
discovery and commercialization of new materials. We’re
launching two new Undergraduate Academies—one this fall
focused on entrepreneurship and one next year in the area of
sustainability. And we continue to welcome more of the best and
brightest faculty, staff and students, who are increasingly drawn
by all that UB has to offer.
It’s a great time to be at UB, and I truly believe the best
is yet to come.