IMS Global: Founded
60 years ago, people may not realize that the University of Maryland
University College is the 12th
largest degree-granting university in the United States and one of the
largest providers of online education in the nation. What else should
they know that differentiates your institution?
NA: Two things come
to mind. One is that we are a complete university devoted to serving
the non-traditional student, from eighteen to eighty plus. If you look
around the nation, there are few complete universities devoted to this
student. Most deliver continuing education as an adjunct or collateral
service appended somewhere to the traditional organization. We're
probably one of the few truly open access institutions in the United
States as opposed to some of the great open universities in other parts
of the world. We will not turn away a single qualified student who
wants to come to us to achieve their education. Our entrance
requirements are minimal, but that brings certain obligations as well.
If prospective students show up at our door with the minimum
qualifications, but they have not been adequately prepared elsewhere,
we see an obligation to provide systems and resources that will help
these students acquire the skills they need to succeed. That's a big
obligation.
Another
unique feature about UMUC is that as a public university, we receive
little public funding. To give you an idea, currently we receive more
funding from the State of Maryland than ever before, but still only 6.5
percent of our annual $265 million budget comes from the taxpayers. The
rest comes mainly from tuition and fees. That feature has required us
to develop a culture where we're much attuned to business and
administrative systems as well as the academic systems. We've had to be
entrepreneurial to survive and flourish.
In the
University System of Maryland, there are 13 public higher education
institutions. Eleven of them, including UMUC, are degree-granting
institutions. We are a completely separate university with our own
president, our own leadership, and our own operational and academic
units.
IMS Global: You've
been the provost of UMUC for almost a decade. What have been some of
the major changes that have occurred in higher education during your
tenure?
NA: On a broad
level, it has been the rising tide of expectations, not only in our
society, but around the world: the expectation that education is a
right; it is the hope for a better future. If you look across most
societies, one of the common values people have for their children if
not themselves is to go to school and learn new things and have a
better opportunity for employment, a more fulfilling life, and more
active citizenship in society. Education is increasingly seen as a
human right. It is interesting that the recent Spellings Commission
report has a statement that says that every citizen who desires to
achieve a degree should have the opportunity to get one. That's a very
progressive statement and it was published under an administration
known for more conservative views.
Of course
the
seismic change that has happened in the past decade is the Internet
revolution that has started to impact education at many levels. It has
already transformed other industries as mass communications, financial
and banking for example. It's starting to happen in higher education. I
say "starting" to happen because while some institutions as UMUC
embraced this change quickly in the mid-90s, others are just now
getting it. It's happening and it is also happening outside the United
States. That worries me a lot because I tend to think our higher
education institutions may not be moving fast enough here.
For the
teaching profession, the Internet revolution and its potential for
supporting faculty and students also has to be at the top of the
list....helping teachers teach better and students learn better. And
not just as a delivery channel. The Web provides a rich treasure of
resources and research tools if one can cut through all the junk. Think
about what technology has done for the emergence of great virtual
libraries, as we have at UMUC, for example. The access the Web provides
both students and teachers to learning resources is revolutionary.
We're also on the verge of something else that is emerging under the
title of Web 2.0. I don't know that any of us really knows where this
will lead yet. But something is taking place that will be of great
value to higher education once it settles out. We need to pay attention
because it is going to provide greater leverage to faculty and students
in achieving learning.
Two other
challenges that have occurred during the past decade are the
accelerating needs of our students and the accelerating cost of
education. For educational institutions, it means keeping up with the
growth in knowledge, skills, and abilities our students need to learn
in today's rapidly changing world. It's probably always been a worry,
but I think more intense today than it was 25 or 50 years ago. For
educational institutions that are more open, it means having to deal
with a highly diverse level of preparation of the learners that appear
at your door.
Meanwhile,
the cost problem is the sleeper. Costs keep going up and up as do
tuition and fees. For public institutions it means that we have an
undebated policy of exclusion taking place. People are waking up to it
only now. It's serious.