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Dennis Rittenmeyer, Calumet College of St. Joseph
August 25, 2004

Welcome!

The 2003-2004 school year was another great year for Calumet College of St. Joseph. Indeed, in many ways, it was our best year in decades.

That is not say our year did not also have its frustrations and even failures. Nevertheless, as we have remarked on numerous occasions, our successes have been more than our failures, and they have been greater than our failures. Let me recount briefly what I believe to be significant milestones in the 2003-2004 academic year.

First and foremost, our enrollment reached a 20-year high. For the first time in my 17 years at Calumet College of St. Joseph, we topped 1,300 students. Obviously, we are making every effort to ensure that this year our enrollment will grow even more.

All centers of our enrollment activity contributed to this success. The traditional program enrollment has grown 21% in the last three years, and our compliments go to the admissions' and student affairs' staffs for their continuing efforts in building that enrollment. Degree Completion enrollment continues to be strong, law enforcement continues to grow, and we saw new life in our healthcare management enrollment. Our Athletic Program continues to grow and contribute traditional students to our college. Our Transition-to-Teaching Program, with the largest enrollment in the state, continues to make important contributions to our enrollment and to our community. And, our graduate program continues to be strong.

Because enrollment grew and, therefore, our finances, we were able to make continuing improvements in our building, provide more support for professional development, increase salaries at a rate above the national average, helping to close the gap between ourselves and our peers.

The college's image in the community also continues to grow. No longer are we recognized as a frail and, therefore, somewhat insignificant institution, but rather as a growing, dynamic college making important contributions to the quality of life in our community.

Perhaps the best, but not the only, example of those contributions is the activity of our Law Enforcement Institute. In addition to making continuing efforts to professionalize law enforcement, the Institute has also undertaken a number of important contractual projects. These include helping the cities of Gary and East Chicago revise their operations manuals, leadership and supervision training for the East Chicago Police Department, working on the development of a law enforcement support center that is currently targeted by Congressman Visclosky to receive substantial federal funds for its initiation, holding the first Expeditions Project jointly with the Quality of Life Council that highlighted the professionalism of law enforcement in Northwest Indiana, the continuing publication of our newsletter which is mailed to an increasingly large number of law enforcement professionals throughout Indiana and Illinois, and an annual conference on important issues in law enforcement.

Other important outreach activities include Dr. Damashek's Lunch & Learn Program, the hosting of local crime-watch meetings on our campus, and the recent "Camp-U-Can" programming for Clark School students and numerous others.

During the 2003-2004 year, we sped up and expanded our ongoing planning activities. Not only did we hold another successful administrative retreat, but also a very productive trustees' retreat. We have been engaged with American City Bureau (Don Voss here present) in an ongoing strategic planning exercise, the end result of which will be a planning document which is in its final draft stages.

We have also continued our important Center for Excellence discussions in law enforcement and have expanded those discussions to include a new Center for Excellence on social justice issues. Both sets of discussions have been an uplifting and exciting experience for all who have participated. They provide ample opportunity for members of the college family to engage in these important discussions and also to dream what might be the future of Calumet College of St. Joseph as we take these two important programmatic areas and seek to build and enhance them for the benefit of all in our institution, but also the greater community as well.

We also were pleased to receive a $750,000 grant from Lilly Endowment. That grant has enabled us to significantly enhance our student services' program to include a formalized internship program, the new bridge program, and the creation of a new department of student support services. The grant is also enabling us to take our strongest and best known programming in law enforcement to other areas of the state.

Currently, we are waiting to hear the Endowment's decision on another grant proposal submitted this summer, one which would enhance the intellectual capital at our institution. This was a state-wide grant program, and the college has requested $1M to pursue this initiative.

We held another very successful annual ball and raffle. We have enhanced our fund-raising activities through increased alumni activities and broader recognition that our college is here to stay and is a significant asset in our community.

All of this positions us well for the 2004-2005 academic year. While many of the activities, I just mentioned, are ongoing, none of what we do is totally secure or insulated from forces which may deter our efforts. Thus, as we look to begin this important year, we must be clear in our direction and focus our resources.

This past summer I sent out two update memos telling the college family of the exciting activities that had been under way. Everyone in the college family received these memos so I won't recount what I said in them. It is important to note, however, that this was an exciting and very busy summer, and moreover, it represented, yet again, significant progress at our college.

At this time last year, I opened the school year by suggesting that Calumet College of St. Joseph was in a new place. I reiterate that comment today, not to suggest that we are in "another" new place, but rather to indicate a confirmation that we are a changed institution.

Perhaps there is no greater indication that we are now a different institution than our graduation this past year. Graduation is always an exciting experience, but in 2004, we graduated more baccalaureate students than ever in our history. Furthermore, a significant number of our total graduates, more than 10%, were students who completed requirements for a master's degree. While we anticipate this year's graduating class may be somewhat smaller, by virtue of the cyclical nature of our adult programming, we expect this upward trend to continue. Just as significant is the Higher Learning Commission's recent review of our application for a second graduate degree. The Master of Science in Education has been approved by the readers' panel and the Institutional Actions Committee, and as of this morning, per Sister Michele, by the Board of Directors of the Higher Learning Commission. Congratulations to all who helped make this application a success!

Thus, we are witnessing another milestone in our college's evolution. No longer are we tied to the past, which, while glorious at the time, saw the college graduate mostly associate degree students and a few baccalaureate degrees.

And, so as we continue to affirm that Calumet College of St. Joseph is in a new place, we must also continue to review our actions, our policies, our commitments, and make sure that we do not lose ground in this race, but, in fact, build upon our successes, confirm our progress, and move forward as rapidly as our resources and talents will take us.

During the past year, we have been involved in significant planning activities. I have confessed to many of you that I don't particularly like planning because I find it so difficult to make formal, long-range plans in a time of uncertainty. Rather, I prefer to remain nimble, taking advantage of opportunity when it appears. Nevertheless, continuing discussions about our future are important, so that we make sure we both understand our current position as well as the value and, equally important, the liability attached to every opportunity that arises.

I have suggested that to participate in planning at Calumet College of St. Joseph and to keep one's sanity, we must maintain a high tolerance for ambiguity. My reasoning is obvious. What we decide to do today when faced with new opportunity, we may choose not to do tomorrow. Thus, again, it is important to recognize that in our history, we have successfully taken advantage of opportunities and enjoyed more successes than failures and successes which have been grander than our failures.

Still, past success is no guaranty for the future. Thus, we must continue to chart a future as best we can know it, both knowing what we want and assessing realistically our chances for success. Many of you know this story, but I believe it bears repeating.

One of our ongoing planning activities is our Center for Excellence discussions on law enforcement. We have actually been holding these discussions for over two years. They have given birth to the Law Enforcement Institute; "The Register," our law enforcement newsletter; several bully-pulpit strategies; newspaper articles and opinion pieces; direct appeals to elected officials on issues pertaining to law enforcement; grant applications; contracts; and numerous other activities-every one of which has been successful. Still, one of the proposals, sometime ago, was that Calumet College of St. Joseph exercise a leadership role in organizing and implementing the first in a series of 12 Expeditions, representing the 12 Quality of Life Indicators with co-sponsorship by the Quality of Life Council.

This idea was the "brain child" of John Davies, present here today as he was last year, and John appealed to our group and to me directly to take on this responsibility and lead the way for Northwest Indiana. Over a period of approximately six months, every time John would bring up the idea, I told him it was crazy, and I didn't want to do it. I thought it was filled with liability, represented a tremendous amount of additional work, and if we did not do it well, it would be embarrassing. I felt the risks were just too high. Nevertheless, John persisted to the point of occasionally eliciting a frustrated response from me.

However, subsequent to having a conversation with Dan McDevitt of Lansing, one of our closest friends and one of the best police chiefs in all of the Calumet Region, in which he said he thought it was a great idea, and he was sure the entire law enforcement community including his department would participate and help us, I changed my mind. Subsequently, we inaugurated the Expeditions project. Over 17 law enforcement agencies participated, hundreds of local community leaders showed up, and countless visitors as well. It set the "bar" for all of the subsequent Expeditions projects and ensured that everyone in Northwest Indiana knew that Calumet College of St. Joseph was the undisputed leader in law enforcement education.

I don't want to suggest that every crazy idea really has merit or that it will always take us or me six months to come around. Nevertheless, the process by which we increasingly and more carefully accessed the benefits and liabilities of the project certainly caused me to change my mind, others to join with us, and, in the end, led to a very successful project.

Nowhere in any long-range plan has it ever been written that we participate in something called the Expeditions project, let alone lead the way. Indeed, nowhere has it been written in the past that we would launch a law enforcement program, undergraduate or graduate, create an institute for law enforcement. Yet, these are all opportunities that presented themselves over the last few years, and we have attempted to take advantage of every single one of these activities because law enforcement is "our football."

The reference to "football," I believe, is instructive. While not wanting to offend anyone here present, who is a graduate of "our extension in South Bend," I believe it is well known that it is football that built the University of Notre Dame. Notre Dame is today an excellent university, recognized as the premier Catholic university in the world. But, that was not always the case. Indeed, during the time of Knute Rockne, Notre Dame was not especially recognized as an outstanding institution. The success of football built Notre Dame, and, yet, I am sure that for the pure academics at Notre Dame, football was, and perhaps still is, a bit of an embarrassment.

Nevertheless, it put Notre Dame on the map, and taking advantage of football has made Notre Dame University what it is today. And, so I say, law enforcement is our "football." We have undisputed excellence in the field, we are recognized increasingly throughout the region, we have a grant to export our program throughout the state, and we have a growing number of activities and projects in which people have come to us for assistance. And so, certainly, now our planning activities must take into account that law enforcement is our "football." And besides, law enforcement is an academic field, not a sport.

And, now, let's turn our attention to this year and beyond. Despite our numerous successes this past year, much still needs to be done. With the approval of our new graduate program in education by the Higher Learning Commission, we must necessarily be about the business of building enrollment in that program. There is substantial interest, but as we know, neither interest nor need always translates directly into students. We must also continue to review our existing programmatic inventory looking both for ways to improve it and trim individual course offerings within programs. We still have majors with far too many requirements, making it virtually impossible to increase class size. That is not to say, that all of our classes should be large. It is to say our class size continues to be too low, and, therefore, too costly and inefficient. In addition, by trimming courses within the curriculum, we can provide opportunity for our students to graduate with more than a single credential. I have said for some time, our working-class student body needs multiple credentials. Most recently, the Lumina Foundation, in making recommendations on college affordability, has suggested students need more options for credentials within the existing baccalaureate curriculum, thereby providing them with more opportunity to explore their professional interests and better insulation from economic uncertainty.

Also, we need to continue to make improvements in our instructional facilities, both to ensure that our programs are consistent with best current practice in education, but also to create enhanced "curb appeal" for our Admissions Office to recruit prospective students. In particular, our science facilities need to be upgraded and, hopefully, this year, we can make a decision as to whether that upgrade should occur where they currently are located or in a new place where they could be located in the future.

More generally, on the issue of curb appeal, it is critical to the future of our college that we enhance our building and grounds. Much money has been spent on the infrastructure in our building, and we must continue to make those infrastructure improvements. Nevertheless, the general attractiveness of the facility must be enhanced as well as the grounds surrounding our college. The second floor renovation, which was completed sometime ago, has made a tremendous improvement in our building, but we need to continue to look for ways to make other similar improvements.

In that regard, I want to thank all of those who have and will be participating in the repositioning of the library books, thereby opening the future home of our "black-box theatre." I harbor no illusions that the black-box will be fully equipped and operational in the near future, but I do expect it will be usable for the first play of this year.

Next, the strategic planning exercise which we are completing with the support of Don Voss of the American City Bureau needs to be brought to a successful close. There has been ample discussion, ample opportunity for everyone in the college family to make suggestions and comments, and certainly plenty of introspection. The time has come now to bring this to a close and agree upon the future directions of the college. Indeed, some of those decisions have already been made.

Clearly, the college has adopted a policy of growth-that is, we want to grow our enrollment and grow our footprint and image as well. Growing enrollment is a strategy to strengthen an institution, its quality, and certainly its size and financial resources and impact. Inherent in adopting that growth strategy, however, must be continuing improvements in the management of the institution. Although there are some who would argue that our institution is already too heavily managed, I simply do not agree.

Improved management of the institution is the only way we will reap the benefits of growth. For, if we simply grow, but do not improve the management, the oversight, and our cost recovery, we will simply be bigger but not better.

There is no better example of this dilemma than our salaries. With the support of the college's Board of Trustees, we have had a longstanding commitment to lift our salaries annually. Those salaries have improved every year, but one of the 17 years I have been at Calumet College of St. Joseph. And, those increases have all been above the national average.

Admittedly, we started from a low base, and we remain at the low end of our peer group. Nevertheless, we are in the cellar no longer, and our salaries are increasingly competitive. Still, much needs to be done.

Our best comparative information is on faculty salaries, and there we are at 85% of the state-wide average for our peer group and a lesser percentage of the national average for church-related institutions. However, if we want that to improve, as I assume we all do, we really only have two choices in our professional lifetime. One, we can increase tuition leaving enrollment stable. Since our tuition is still half of the national average for institutions of our type, certainly one can argue we should increase tuition dramatically. Most of us believe, however, that incremental increases should be our strategy because a dramatic increase could drive away the very students we hope to enroll.

The only other option is proportionally increased use of part-time faculty, thereby making only modest increases in the size of the full-time faculty as our institution grows. For it remains the case, that if we are successful in growing our institution and increasing the institution's fixed expenses consistent with that proportion which we have today, we will only be successful in being bigger, and we won't make other improvements that are necessary if we are to be stronger and better. The NCA warned us of this dilemma several years ago. And, finally, I'd like to say a word about the evolution of our profession, systems theory, and Calumet College of St. Joseph's current situation.

There was a time when the predominant view in our profession was that you just hire really bright people, well-educated people, and then let them do whatever they want. That gave rise to disjointed and wasteful organizational structures and an academic view that one could simply "pass the best and flunk the rest" and move on with limited accountability.

The rise of professionalism in higher education and most recently the accreditors' demand for continuing assessment of student-learning outcomes have marked a significant departure from that historic view. Today, at this enrollment-driven point in our history, improved management, as I've already indicated, must be our hallmark.

Bob Sevier, Senior Vice President of Stamats, the consulting company which we used several years ago, is a prolific author and pundit on the profession. Most recently, he advocated more attention to a systems-theory approach to our profession. He began his argument with an often told story, one that even I have told before.

"It seems there were these fishermen, two fishermen in the front of the boat and two fishermen in the back of the boat. The fishermen in the back of the boat were bailing vigorously because there was a hole in the back of the boat. One of the fishermen in the front of the boat remarked to his colleague that he was sure glad that hole wasn't in the front of the boat."

The obvious point of the story is that we are all in the same boat. One of the reasons we have this meeting every year and have had it for 18 years is to make the point that we are all in this boat. A leak in any one of our offices or in any vice-presidential area can, in fact, sink the entire boat. That is not to say we should be busy doing someone else's work or interfering with someone else's work because we don't think that person is doing it well, or that we should be territorial and wall ourselves off so that the hole in the other end of the boat doesn't sink us as well. These approaches won't work.

Rather, it suggests we take an enlightened professional approach to the system of which we are all a part-the system, that if it is successful, as we have been, will, in fact, benefit us all. And, if there is a hole in any part of our boat, it holds the potential to sink the entire boat and all of us with it.

And, so, as we begin this year, I say again that we are in the best position ever in the history of our college. We are stronger, we are better known, we are a significant player in the higher-education enterprise of Northwest Indiana to include metropolitan Chicago, and with the support of Lilly Endowment, soon, Indianapolis. All of these activities represent opportunities, but they are opportunities we must manage to make sure they are successful. If we do, our track record of more successes than failures and bigger successes than failures will continue.

I am proud to serve as your President this coming year. Good luck to all of us! Thank you.

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