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Executive Summary of the 2003 Merrill Publication
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Keynote Address -- Day 1
Debra Stewart
President, Council of Graduate Schools
- Graduate education is one of the United States'
most successful enterprises, and it is growing. More than 220,000
international graduate students enrolled in U.S. programs. Graduate
education enjoys strong support because the research enterprise
contributes to the economy.
- The Council of Graduate Schools directed the
"Preparing Future Faculty" initiative as early as 1993, and other
national reform studies have followed. These include: the Carnegie
Initiative on the Doctorate, the Re-envisioning the Ph.D. program,
the Responsive Ph.D. Project and the Sloan Professional Science
Master's program.
- Studies of doctoral education show a dissatisfaction
by students with 4 areas: breadth of the curriculum and opportunities
for interdisciplinary study; information about the process and
outcomes of study before they begin their educational programs;
attention to job skills that will be required; career guidance
and job placement (including non-academic jobs).
- Assessment has always been critical to the
success of graduate education. Interdisciplinary programs are
important for the student's learning experience and for research,
but we have not yet devised effective ways to describe and compare
these programs when making awards in an assessment-based competition.
- State universities are experiencing some of
the most dramatic budget cuts in decades and this inevitably has
an impact on state-supported teaching and research assistantships
for graduate students.
- To increase the likelihood that our graduate
students will complete their degrees, reform-based research tells
us: certain combinations of funding are better than others; placing
time limits on support encourages graduation; women benefit from
being research assistants; participation in the academic life
of a department is important and funding mechanisms can encourage
this. What we know can be built into the federal support programs
for graduate students--but will this bind the faculty PI's in
a way that damages the effectiveness of the targeted research
project?
- Graduate education in the US is dependent
on international students- particularly in the fields of engineering,
computer science, math and economics. The policies enacted in
the wake of 9/11 will inevitably slow the flow of foreign talent
to the US The United States must develop a robust domestic talent
pool for doctoral study in science and engineering, or it will
approach a national crisis in education.
- The recent US Supreme Court decision on Michigan
has engendered a good discussion about how America can prepare
effective pathways to graduate school for historically disadvantaged
groups in order to meet its future workforce needs. We must redouble
our efforts to expand graduate preparation in the U.S.--and we
must graduate those whom we admit to our programs.
Keynote Address -- Day 2
Martha Crago
President, Canadian Association of Graduate
Studies and
Dean of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, McGill University
- The Canada Graduate Scholarships were created
in 2003 to meet the federal government's goal of moving Canada
from 15th to 5th in the world in research and development. These
scholarships provide $35,000/year to doctoral students for 3 years
and $17,500 to master's research students for one year. In Quebec,
the government grants full tax exemption on all merit-based graduate
scholarships. This situation is putting pressure on faculty to
increase the amount of postdoctoral fellowships (from their own
grants) because graduate students are now funded at a comparable
level.
- The top research intensive universities in
Canada investigated the actual times to degree and graduation
rates of their students in graduate school and found that the
minimum rates in the humanities and social sciences were alarmingly
low. Median times to completion were also higher in the humanities
and social sciences than in physical and life sciences. We also
investigated the patterns of withdrawal from graduate study. Some
students appeared to run out of steam or money after as many as
8 or more years of studying-this is an educational tragedy.
- Studies about how to retain graduate students
leave us with opportunities for reform: if we know that participation
in a group is important, then funding agencies should investigate
the impact of graduate student funding mechanisms such as training
grants, that support involvement of students with others. Mechanisms
for setting objectives and tracking progress to degree should
be transparent and widely used. Students should be counseled by
advisors and administrators to withdraw earlier rather than later
if they are ill suited to research and scholarship. Universities
should consider failing students for documented lack of research
progress.
- Students want more in the way of professional
skill training. This could include: learning to present their
research to various audiences; learning to write grants; learning
about the full-range of employment possibilities; preparing a
curriculum vita; and practice interviewing for a job.
- Students want to know more about their intellectual
property rights. This includes: the meaning of the copyright on
their thesis, marketing and proprietorship of a patent, and authorship
of a journal article. Because universities increasingly have non-university
partners in research, students need guidebooks to explain their
universities' intellectual property policy as it relates to graduate
students. They need to know whether they can share their findings
with others in publications and seminars. Should they be paid
by their supervisors' spin-off companies? Can students use equipment
in their supervisors' spin off company? And universities should
offer courses to graduate students in the responsible conduct
of research and professional ethics.
- There are many unresolved issues in the postdoctoral
experience: Do we need postdoctoral administrative offices? Should
postdocs be paid a salary or a fellowship? Should they receive
benefits? Should they have to obtain a certain score on a TOEFL
test of language skills? Quebec has set a legal precedent defining
the postdoctoral experience as a research internship, not an employment
category.
Is Academic Research Sustainable?
Robert E. Barnhill
President, Center for Research, University
of Kansas
- Federal support of research is under pressure
because of tax cuts, the poor economy and more focus on post-9/11
issues. Because the federal government tends to under-fund its
mandates, no university recovers the actual cost of federally
funded research.
- African Americans, American Indians and Hispanics
are under-represented in our science and engineering programs.
We need leadership to develop this talent pool.
- State support of public universities is declining
and will not proportionally increase after and if the economy
improves.
- We must make the case for the economic benefits
of university research. In Kansas, we generate 42 jobs per $1
million of investment in university research and development.
KU's research produced over 10,000 jobs in fiscal year 2002 according
to AAU estimates.
- If the promotion and tenure committees do
not reward interdisciplinary research, then a university will
not do as well nationally as it could. Big-time research occurs
in interdisciplinary teams. Research centers have been important
in Ku's institutional success.
- KU achieved a 28% increase in federal funds
between 1996 and 2001, with the Lawrence campus seeing a 44% increase
in this market share.
- A nationally agreed-upon benchmark for return
on investment in academic research is 4:1 -- one internal dollar
should produce four external dollars. At the KU Center for Research,
we calculate return on investment at our research centers by dividing
research expenditures or indirect cost return by the total center
investment (budget allocation plus returned overhead). For the
humanities, we developed qualitative performance measures that
involve the number of prestigious awards.
First Panel of Researchers
Dan Monaghan, Professor of Pharmacology,
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Janice Buss, Professor and Director of the Molecular, Cellular
and Developmental Biology Graduate Program at Iowa State University
John Colombo, Professor of Psychology and Associate Dean of
the Graduate School, University of Kansas
- Many students do not understand the demands
of graduate school or postdoctoral training. It is important to
help prospective students know what will be expected in terms
of workload, time to degree, and the job market for Ph.D.'s. If
the selection process were more careful, there might be less attrition
in graduate school.
- Interdisciplinary programs are attractive
to high caliber students. Faculty join interdisciplinary programs
often because this gives them access to excellent students. Students
like to be on the leading edge of research discoveries.
- To have strong interdisciplinary programs
and recruit good students, we must invest. These programs are
not typically part of the regular budgeting process that focuses
on undergraduate education and is administered through departmental
and college channels. Interdisciplinary students should not always
be last on the list when allocating teaching assistantships or
emergency funding. Tuition waivers, as well as stipends, are attractive.
- Most faculty believe that graduate education-especially
doctoral education-is central to the mission of the research university.
The interplay of research and graduate education is a reciprocal
and transactional process: when an institution brings in visible
and well-funded researchers, this attracts good graduate students
which in turn makes the institution more desirable to faculty
candidates, which will enhance the reputation of the graduate
program.
- Traditional doctoral education is at risk
today because it is considered inefficient and costly in terms
of resources. We must address two problems: attrition and time
to degree in order to improve efficiency and increase the research
productivity of students and faculty.
- Rather than be more selective in admissions
as a way to decrease attrition, we should improve our administration
and advising. For example, we should set reasonable time limits
for completion of the degree and establish a probationary period
once a student is admitted. Faculty advisors should make expectations
explicit. Mentors should integrate new students into existing
lines of research by, for example, suggesting that the student
take on a programmatic extension of the faculty member's own work-this
has a high probability of providing real research credential and
the student can seek more independent contributions later in the
graduate career. The faculty can also foster a culture where research
products are generated in a timely manner.
Panel of Research / Graduate
Administrators
R.W. Trewyn, Vice Provost for Research
and Dean of the Graduate School, Kansas State University
Jim Coleman, Vice Provost for Research, University of Missouri
- Columbia
Ellen Weissinger, Executive Associate Dean of Graduate Studies,
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
- Recruiting science students with an interest
in entrepreneurship is made possible by the programs for commercialization
of intellectual property at Kansas State University. Students
can experience the full range of intellectual property services
and commercialization practices from academic theory to real world
applications. As part of the MBA Technology Entrepreneurship track,
graduate interns get practical experience in technology transfer.
The intern program is being expanded to include students from
various science and engineering disciplines.
- The KSU Research Foundation facilitates technology
transfer by licensing intellectual property to major corporations
and to local start-up companies. The Mid-America Commercialization
Corporation (MACC) promotes technology-based economic development
in the region and works with the KSU Research Foundation on commercialization
activities. MACC manages a seed capital investment fund, which
can infuse early stage funding into new startup ventures; KTEC,
the City of Manhattan and the KSU Foundation are investors in
this fund, and share in returns on the investments.
- The new focus on the economic benefit of research
has permeated almost every aspect of research on campus. Has the
focus placed on research growth overshadowed the central role
of discovery, creation, innovation and scholarship in the academy?
If state legislators tie support for state universities to "economic
outcomes" what happens to the sustainability of graduate education
if we don't deliver in clearly measurable ways?
- Identifying key areas of research investment
is part of the strategic planning process for each university.
If our plans focus on economic development, will we diminish the
full range of graduate programs and alienate some of our key areas
of academic excellence, such as the humanities?
- When we partner with the private sector in
our research, we must deliver on time and within budget. This
makes hiring research faculty, technical staff and postdocs more
attractive than training graduate students. What effect will this
have on graduate education?
- The Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate (CID)
is a multi-year research and action project to support efforts
to more purposefully structure doctoral education in six core
disciplines. The Department of Mathematics at the University of
Nebraska - Lincoln was selected to participate in the CID. These
are some of the questions the math department will answer: Is
a curriculum emphasizing broad knowledge of mainstream math still
appropriate? What revisions of our curriculum and degree requirements
are necessary to accommodate interdisciplinary research? How do
we best prepare Ph.D. students for jobs? How can we increase recruitment
and retention of underrepresented minorities? The University of
Nebraska - Lincoln is attempting to institutionalize this reform
project by extending the practices to other departments.
Panel of Graduate
School Administrators
Suzanne Ortega, Vice Provost
for Advanced Studies and Dean of the Graduate School, University
of Missouri - Columbia
John E. Mayfield, Associate Dean of the Graduate College,
Iowa State University
- The National Science Foundation now has a
"broader impact" criterion within the graduate predoctoral fellowship
awards process, which includes contributions to diversity and
social benefit. Because fellowship panels are given little clear-cut
advice on how to evaluate and give weight to the "broader impacts"
criterion, however, the process breaks down. The criterion for
advancing diversity becomes in effect a secondary selection factor,
used only after the traditional intellectual merit criteria are
fully and equally satisfied.
- At the University of Missouri - Columbia the
directors of our graduate programs have agreed that diversity
should be included as one of the 3-5 core indicators we use institution-wide
to evaluate program quality and make related resource decisions.
This will effectively close the gap between policies and programs
by making diversity a key part of the admissions process and institutionalizing
access and diversity as core principles.
- In the next 10 years, if trends continue,
Iowa State University may enroll more than 1/3 of all its graduate
students in interdepartmental programs.
- To justify new faculty positions, the Provost
of Iowa State in 2003 included interdepartmental program need
as one of the three grounds that could be used. This was unprecedented.
Three of the eight positions approved were interdisciplinary.
If this were to become a standard operating procedure for new
hires, this one policy change could have a major impact on the
quality of education delivered by interdepartmental graduate programs.
Second Panel of Researchers
/ Mentors
Jeffrey P. Katz, The Payless ShoeSource
Professor of Business and Director, Center for Leadership, Kansas
State University
Diandra Leslie-Pelecky, Associate Professor of Physics, University
of Nebraska - Lincoln
Kim A. Wilcox, Professor, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing
and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University
of Kansas
- Science and business are enjoying a renewed
period of integration unmatched since the GI Bill redefined post-secondary
education. The human genome project is an example of the way business
can accelerate achievement in the public sector. Because the publicly
funded International Human Genome Project competed with the commercial
enterprise Celera Genomics in a race to map the genome, the basic
research model changed to a time-dependent and outcome-focused
activity with specific strategic goals. Scientists in the public
sector realized that the achievement of their mission--public
access to the research results-would occur only if they became
business-savvy.
- As the number of commercial enterprises with
academic links continue to grow, we must resolve these policy
issues: developing appropriate university support services to
assist in innovation value creation; training scientists, engineers
and business students for commercial success in the world of innovation
advancement; changing the risk/reward philosophy and alignment
mechanisms in the university-industry environment; and seeking
to balance the capitalization of the research enterprise.
- NSF now requires education and outreach in
successful grant proposals- part of the "broader impact" requirement.
Most faculty members have no training to implement effective education/outreach
programs. Graduate students will eventually have to fulfill these
NSF objectives when they take jobs in academia, so they should
be prepared.
- The University of Nebraska was awarded an
NSF GK-12 grant for training graduate students from the fields
of science, math and engineering to be resources in the K-12 schools.
The Graduate Fellows spend 8 hours/week in the schools and 2 hours/week
planning with teachers in return for a stipend of $27,500/year
plus a $10,500 cost of education allowance. The institutional
effects UNL has experienced include: improving cooperation between
the College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Education
and Human Sciences; and increased faculty interest in teacher
education. The graduate students believe it has improved their
ability to work and communicate with people from diverse backgrounds.
- The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
(ASHA) was one of the first fields to require advanced training
as a prerequisite to clinical certification. At the time, this
was a high standard and has been successful in assuring the best
possible clinical services for the public; however, this decision
set in motion a trajectory that put the entire discipline at risk.
In 1951, the majority of ASHA's members were academicians interested
in the study of communication processes and disorders, but by
2003, the vast majority of ASHA's members are clinical professionals
who hold a terminal master's degree. At the undergraduate and
master's degree level, the curriculum is now geared toward preparing
individuals to be service providers. The effect is that students
pursing a research career must essentially start over after the
initial 6 years because they have not yet acquired the specific
knowledge and scientific skills necessary for a doctoral education.
Also, by formulating the curriculum around the master's degree,
the field is attracting students who have little or no interest
in science; they are drawn instead to a respected professional
field with guaranteed employment and a good salary, which can
be achieved with a master's degree.
- It is important to maintain a balance between
the discipline and the profession of a field. With Communication
Sciences and Disorders, the demand for trained professionals grew
so rapidly that societal pressures overwhelmed longer-term scientific
needs. Today, the leadership in the field is increasingly influenced
by and drawn from the professions and so, at the highest levels,
it is difficult to exert the influence necessary to maintain balance
and to retain an academic focus.
Reaction and Conference Summary
Martha Crago
President, Canadian Association of Graduate
Studies
- As universities, we
need to understand ourselves better. We need to collect the same
high quality data about our institutions, and analyze it, as we
would do in our own disciplinary research endeavors. We can capture
our transformations in facts. This can awaken us to our own local
realities because it is not always easy to get the facts straight.
- Universities need
to be strategic in difficult economic times--leverage funds and
become enterprising. At this conference, we heard about several
examples: partnering with the private sector; marketing goods
produced on campus; encouraging granting agencies to increase
funding to graduate students; and using lab space in the private
sector for graduate students. Another technique we've used at
McGill is to allocate operating funds to programs that are already
successful in attracting external fellowship money for students;
this reminds the community that the university must leverage external
money.
- I've been told that
some of the most important discoveries in science have happened
by accident. It is important to preserve the university as a place
where playful experimentation and free thought continue to exist.
We are likely to lose something if goal-oriented research is the
only research we do. It's a question of balance.
- Our students, researchers
and university administrators need to develop the kind of skills
that will allow them to communicate about their work to a wider
range of people. In this way more people can appreciate the work
of scientists and scholars, and more children will want to become
them.
- When we ask ourselves
why it has been a goal to attract international graduate students,
we must realize that it began as a sort of colonialism. If our
aim was to educate students so they might return to their home
countries and build their own higher education networks, it should
be a cause of joy that graduate education in other countries is
now a success--not a cause of jealousy. Education is a kind of
spark that we pass on to others. Today, we should go on educating
international students because for one thing they provide us with
diversity at a time when we need it most. We should take the opportunity
to learn from them-to educate our North American students about
the world.
- In the wake of 9/11,
we must think seriously about the role our universities can play
in the interest of global well-being. McGill has a Middle East
Peace Building Programs that brings students from Palestine, Jordan
and Israel together to obtain a Master's of Social Work. Their
time at McGill provides them with a safe haven to explore their
commonalities and differences and to get to know each other as
human beings, not just political foes. Higher education is an
agent of change that develops human capacity, knowledge, and understanding.
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