Winter/Spring 2002
   

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Members of the Council of Independent Colleges during the 2002 Presidents Institute annual meeting endorsed a report on the results of the Council’s year-long strategic planning process. The "Report to the CIC Membership on Strategic Planning" describes CIC’s strategic planning process, which was initiated to determine future directions for CIC.
    CIC conducted a total of 22 roundtable discussions (17 with presidents, four with chief academic officers, and one with church association executives) between March and October of 2001 (see the fall issue of the online Independent). Two additional meetings were held in July and November to assess the findings of these roundtable discussions and sharpen understanding of the key issues. Substantial, initial financial support for these efforts was provided by the William Randolph Hearst Foundations, Inc.; additional support came from The Booth Ferris Foundation and The Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation.
    The report to the membership enumerates the current challenges facing independent colleges and universities as expressed by campus leaders. It also includes suggestions made by roundtable participants of ways that CIC can assist institutions in meeting those challenges, and then raises questions about how CIC should develop as an organization to provide these programs and services.
    CIC President Richard Ekman said "There was considerable agreement across the roundtables about the current challenges our members face. CIC’s challenge now is to consider the suggestions and ideas generated by the strategic planning process and begin the implementation process."
    The six major challenges now facing independent colleges and universities, and possible activities that CIC could undertake to help institutions address the challenges, the report states, are:

  • Financing high quality education. Revenue issues, including tuition discounting and enrollment management, and expenditures such as hiring and retaining faculty, deferred maintenance, information technology, and facilities maintenance and construction are among the set of financing issues that constitute the most important challenge for independent institutions. Possible new programs and services include holding Presidents Institute sessions on these issues; publishing papers and guidebooks; developing access to quantitative data sets; and establishing an information technology advisory service.

  • Making the case for independent colleges and universities. The competitive nature of higher education was a context for almost all of the roundtable discussions, leading to the request that "independent institutions, singly and together, make a stronger case for the forms of education offered by small to medium-sized, teaching-oriented, independent colleges and universities." Potential activities suggested for CIC include gathering data about successful programs and developing activities to give the private sector of higher education an increased national voice.

  • Presidents and trustees. "Since board action is often the central instrumentality of institutional success, presidents must develop boards capable of exercising genuine leadership." Among the ways CIC could help presidents improve relations with their board: hold regional meetings for presidents and trustees; establish a roster of consultants to assist presidents with their boards; and gather and share examples of board information and organization.

  • Faculty, institutional mission, and leadership. "Significant numbers of faculty members’ retirements, long predicted, are now underway; and institutions will be reshaped in this process." The suggested avenues for CIC action included framing a larger dialogue, involving presidents and chief academic officers about the broader (mission) and more focused (advising) aspects of recruiting and strengthening faculty members.

  • Changing student body. "The increasing diversity of students …reflects trends in the larger society [and] the broad accessibility of higher education. But overall these student populations differ significantly from those of earlier decades, including more students genuinely at risk; and they are testing institutional resources." Sharing effective practices on serving diverse groups of students and on providing faculty and staff development opportunities were among the ways suggested that CIC could address the issue.

  • Ensuring quality. "There is concern that many of the regulatory organizations are insufficiently aware of the burdens of time, staffing, and money caused by standards and processes formulated with larger, public institutions in mind." CIC might be able to help by developing better mechanisms for accreditation, suggested roundtable participants.

    Because most of the challenges identified have broad institution-wide implications, roundtable participants suggested that CIC "increase the number and variety of services tailored for presidents" and that chief academic officers "continue to be seen as a key CIC constituency," the report states.
    Overall, participants thought that CIC did not need to be a radically different type of organization, and they "were generally pleased with CIC’s existing activities and would like CIC to do more."


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Last updated: April 12, 2002
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