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Why don’t we like change

Implementing Change: or how to be the next Ex-Dean Bill Trumble Dean, College of Life Sciences and Agriculture Director, NH Agricultural Experiment Station University of New Hampshire. Why don’t we like change. We are in our comfort zone It is too much work It implies consequences for actions

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Why don’t we like change

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  1. Implementing Change:or how to be the next Ex-DeanBill TrumbleDean, College of Life Sciences and AgricultureDirector, NH Agricultural Experiment StationUniversity of New Hampshire

  2. Why don’t we like change • We are in our comfort zone • It is too much work • It implies consequences for actions • Things have always been this way • Misery loves company

  3. Why would you want to change? • Complicated navigation of college by students • Stale classes • Shallow teaching pools • Financial problems • Problem departments • Departmental barriers

  4. Our Situation: an example • Responsibility Centered Management • A decentralized financial model • Most tuition and F&A returned to college • College pays assessments • Faculty Collective Bargaining Agreement

  5. 6 Year Forecast • $1.36 million deficit in FY04 • $1.9 million deficit projected for FY05 • Projected accumulated deficit of $8.7 million by FY10 • Forecast assumes flat enrollments and 3% increases in state funds – reality may be much worse • Forecast does not include potential costs of vehicles, equipment or farm maintenance.

  6. How did we get to this point?(what you don’t want to do) • Flat/declining enrollments and growth in personnel – over the past 4 years undergraduate credit hours have increased a total of 5% while personnel costs have increased by 20%. • Nonexistent budget process/controls to prevent overspending. No financial accountability at the department/program level. • Faculty workload not optimal. Have significant costs in adjunct faculty and graduate students for instruction.

  7. How did we get to this point?(what you don’t want to do) • Current structure requires significant cost to administer and does not promote working across department lines. • Poor summer session performance. COLSA ranks last among UNH schools/colleges in summer session activity. In addition, many courses offered did not come close to breaking even financially. • Graduate tuition revenues discounted at 77%. COLSA ranks last among UNH schools/colleges.

  8. How did we get to this point?(what you don’t want to do) • General fund subsidization of non core programs – Total direct and indirect net costs equal to over $600k per year • Major problem is: NO STRATEGIC DIRECTION! NO CONSEQUENCES!

  9. What do we want to accomplish • Fewer, larger departments • Clear organization/meaningful majors • Faculty work load analysis • New, modern, exciting, relevant curriculum • Excellence in student education

  10. What do we want to accomplish • Greater collaboration • Change of decision makers • Efficient use of staff • Change of culture for research • Increased enrollments

  11. Implementing Change:Before Reorganization • Strategic planning – staffing, governance, curriculum • Request proposals – discuss, modify, vote • One year planning before implementation

  12. Implementing Change:Before Reorganization • New work expectations • Review course prereqs/course names • Review of fit with college mission

  13. Implementing Change:Before Reorganization • Establish new procedures • Summer classes • Grant submission • RA & TA assignments • MOU for Centers • Promise of new realistic budgets • Make financial operation transparent

  14. Implementing Change:After Reorganization • Sunset old departments – keep programs consistent with catalog • Self-select departments, joint appointments • Select new chairs

  15. Implementing Change:After Reorganization • Restructure use of personnel • Departmental reviews after one year • Incentives to departments • Increased credit hours taught • Recruitment/retention

  16. Problems to anticipate • If no consequences, people get comfortable • Change is equated with something bad • Questions of why change is better than now • Efforts to block or delay

  17. Problems to anticipate • Worry that changes are too fast for faulty or administration • Need for support from higher administration

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