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Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

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Page 1: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level

Margo AndersonOctober 15, 2010

Page 2: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Outline of the Presentation

• Moving from…..

• Campus Context….

• Issues in Moving Forward….

Page 3: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Moving Forward: UWM Report (September 2010)….

“Major increases in the number of graduate programs, including Africology (Ph.D.), Freshwater Sciences (M.S., Ph.D.) Linguistics (M.A., Ph.D.), Nursing Practice (D.N.P.), Public Health (Ph.D.), Sociology (Ph.D.) and Women’s Studies (M.A.)

“UWM being ranked as No. 141, awarding 115 doctorates in 2007 (source: The Top American Research Universities 2009 Annual Report). In 2009-'10, there were 153 doctorates awarded, and thus our ranking is likely to improve.

“Record research expenditures for 2009-'10 (provisional)—$67,997,194”

Page 4: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

A Longer View…..Masters and PhD Enrollment since 1970

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010YEAR

1000

2000

30004000

Val

ue

MASTERSPHD

Page 5: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

UNDERGRADPHDMASTERS

And Longer….Graduate and Undergraduate Enrollment over

Time

Page 6: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Historical Enrollment Trends: Fact Book

Page 7: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Historical Enrollment: Since 1990

Focusing in….

Page 8: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

FRESHMENPHDMASTERS

Graduate Enrollment and New Freshman Enrollment

Page 9: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

FRESHMENPHDMASTERS

Graduate Enrollment and New Freshman Enrollment – Log scale

Page 10: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Achieving Research II Status, 1994

Page 11: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Bumps in the Road….

• UWM’s enrollment decline in the 1990s reduced the size of the faculty from ca. 800 to 700

• PhD program development stopped for 17 years, from the late 1980s through 2003.

• Meanwhile Masters enrollment was stable and PhD enrollment grew.

Page 12: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010YEAR

600

700

800

900

FA

CU

LTY

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010YEAR

200

400

600

800

100012001400

PH

D

Faculty Decline and PhD Enrollment Growth

Page 13: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

1970 1978 1986 1994 2002 2010YEAR

0

400

800

1200

Val

ue

FACULTYPHD

Faculty Size and PhD Enrollment

Page 14: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010YEAR

200

400

600

800

100012001400

Val

ue

FACULTYPHD

Faculty Size and PhD Enrollment, log scale

Page 15: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Meanwhile, at the Undergraduate Level….UWM Added Undergraduates

Page 16: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

The Result…

• Doing More with Less and Strain on the Institution:– Too few faculty– Too few staff– Too little space– Too little support for graduate students….

• Framing the Issue Comparatively….

Page 17: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

ST

UD

EN

TS

UWM compared to UW Madison, UIC and Wayne State

Page 18: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

800

1200

1600

2000

2400F

AC

ULT

Y

UWM compared to UW Madison, UIC and Wayne State

Page 19: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

ST

UD

EN

TS

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

800

1200

1600

2000

2400

FA

CU

LTY

UWM compared to UW Madison, UIC and Wayne State

Page 20: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

0.03

0.04

0.05

0.06F

acul

ty p

e r S

t ud e

n t

UWM compared: Fewer Faculty per Student

Page 21: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4T

ota

l S

taff

per

Stu

de

nt

UWM compared: Fewer Total Staff per Student

Page 22: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

0.00

0.12

0.24

0.36

0.48

Fac

ulty

and

Sta

ff pe

r S

tude

nt

Faculty

Other Staff

Milwauke

eUIC

Wayne

Wisconsin

SCHOOL

0.00

0.16

0.32

0.48

Tot

al S

t af f

per

Stu

dent

UWM compared to UW Madison, UIC and Wayne State

Page 23: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Moving Forward…

• Acknowledge the resource issues• Analyze the most critical areas for

improvement• Develop a plan, both operational and

communications, to address the resource shortfalls.

• A New Master Plan?

Page 24: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Starting the Conversation…

Page 25: Moving Graduate Education & Research to the Next Level Margo Anderson October 15, 2010

Starting the Conversation…

• I have more thoughts, but let’s hear from you.– Does the analysis make

sense?– Does the approach make

sense?– What might be said in

addition or instead?

• Thank you.