An article from Inside Higher Education caught my attention last night. It
was particularly interesting for two reasons.
First, it describes the situation that Parkland College and most of
higher education in Illinois faces. Second, we had a two-hour College Planning Committee
meeting just a couple hours earlier. Our strategic plan, the process we will
use to develop the next iteration, and the fiscal realities we will face were
all topics of discussion and concern.
As our next plan is developed, it is clear that we will be doing so in
uncharted territory. We have never faced the kind of disinvestment in higher
education we have experienced over the past two years, nor is the likelihood of
reinvestment been so weak.
Consistently for the past two years, we have literally
banked on the hope that the State of Illinois would get itself together, to properly
do its job, and let us get on to more important things. This is not going to
happen. The State is no longer a viable or reliable partner. We must make our
own way.
At the moment, we are the most expensive
community college in the State in terms of tuition. It’s likely that we will see a property
tax freeze come as a part of any budget proposals as well as something called “pension
reform”.
As a result, we have cut budgets, reduced but
not eliminated, annual salary increases across all employee categories, and healthcare
benefits are less costly to the College. Yet we still have the most
flexibility, the best coverage, and most importantly, plans that are the lowest
cost in at least a 100-mile radius and probably well beyond that.
We’ve reduced the number of full-time employees
by a net 65 positions since 2015. We are a smaller College. We will be challenged to limit and focus our
efforts on our core mission. We already are.
There are 751 of us,
full-time and part, and we need every single person in every single position to
help us take control of our future, to strengthen ourselves instead of allow external
circumstances to weaken us.
However, our circumstances
are the envy of many of our peers. Our “adjustments” are trivial when compared
to the magnitude of the issues facing our colleagues across the State of
Illinois.
Parkland College an honorable
place with a noble mission situated in a community that appreciates our
efforts. We insist on treating each other as professionals and the
conditions under which we are asked to operate are reasonable or, quite
frankly, we wouldn’t be here. Fairness and respect should, by far, rule
the day.
It won’t be easy or simple. There are no bonuses for meeting a performance metric. There are no stock options to be
leveraged. There are no investors clamoring for larger returns. I have no interest
in building a resume to get to the “next bigger thing”. I’ve been at Parkland
College for 20 years and this is where my heart and soul live.
There is still a lot of work
to do, but knowing each of you as I do, I’m betting on Parkland’s bright
future.
I am and always have been “all in” for Parkland College. I hope you are as well.
_______________________________________
You can find the complete article here: https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2017/01/31/how-colleges-should-rethink-their-strategic-planning-processes-essay
Hope and Denial are Not Strategies
Today a great many
American colleges and universities -- ranging from those that, at least for
now, seem reasonably secure to those that are hanging on by just a slight
financial thread -- are faced with a series of threats. Some institutions are
involved in thoughtful, data-informed and effective planning, but others are
not directly confronting such challenges and are failing to engage in such
planning.
The institutions that
ignore their challenges offer important cautionary tales. Those who find ways
to address them by planning strategically can be useful models.
January
31, 2017
Today a great many
American colleges and universities -- ranging from those that, at least for
now, seem reasonably secure to those that are hanging on by just a slight
financial thread -- are faced with a series of threats. Some institutions are
involved in thoughtful, data-informed and effective planning, but others are
not directly confronting such challenges and are failing to engage in such
planning.
The institutions that
ignore their challenges offer important cautionary tales. Those who find ways
to address them by planning strategically can be useful models.
The threats are
pervasive. Many colleges and universities are grappling with cascading declines
in enrollment and escalating tuition discounts, resulting in decreased net
tuition revenue. Public institutions are also suffering from diminished state
support, and structural deficits are becoming more and more commonplace.
For example, Moody’s
reports in its annual Tuition Discounting Study that at nearly
half of all private non-profit college and universities it surveys,
undergraduate enrollments declined every year between 2011 and 2014. The
decline continued between 2014-15, with 37.5 percent of all colleges reporting
decreased enrollment. The situation appears even more dire for the current
academic year: As an Inside Higher Ed survey of admissions
directors reported, of those surveyed only 41 percent of
private colleges and 29 percent of public colleges were meeting enrollment
goals.
Moreover, even as many
colleges have been successful in their efforts to enroll increasing numbers of
students from low-income backgrounds, they find themselves struggling to afford
the additional financial aid required to do so and the added support services
some of these students need if they are to succeed.
These new claims on the
operating budget devour resources that, in past years, would have gone to
faculty and staff salaries, renovation and new construction, technology and
equipment, and to new initiatives.
Such circumstances are
negatively impacting the financial health and sometimes even the viability of many
colleges and universities. These financial stresses in turn lead many campuses
to experience a clash between their commitment to excellence as they have
historically defined it and their quest for financial sustainability. Or to put
it another way, many colleges and universities are struggling to afford the
kind of educational program they wish to offer. And so when educational
decisions need to be made for financial reasons, campuses often experience
tensions between the faculty, on the one hand, and the administration and the
board, on the other hand. This is especially true when institutions need to
make tough decisions or are engaged in strategic planning.
I commonly hear from
administrators that they and their boards need to be able to make timely, sometimes
immediate and often difficult decisions but that doing so conflicts with a
faculty culture that assumes that all decisions require elaborate consultation,
that strategic planning processes be consensual, and that all plans be
ultimately approved by the faculty. In my experience, even as most presidents
and boards believe that consultation and collaboration are necessary and that
faculty approval is needed for academic initiatives, they also argue that
planning needs to be ongoing and immediate and that institutional strategic
planning is the responsibility of the board of trustees, upon the
recommendation of the president.
Meanwhile, many faculty
members, administrators and trustees oppose change because they are rightfully
proud of their institution’s mission and its long-standing programs -- even
when that mission and those programs no longer attract the desired and often
necessary number of students. Others resist change because they believe that
everything will be fine if they just keep on doing what they have always done.
They believe that their institution should, and therefore will, be immune to
demographic shifts and changing student interests.
In my work with colleges
and universities across the country, I hear the following refrains:
§ “My institution has been successful for more than 100 years. We
will be here for another 100 years. “
§ “The value that we offer is so great that we are immune to
disruption.”
§ “The liberal arts have always been at risk; this is no different.”
§ “The problem is not changing demographics, student interests or
cost but simply that our admissions staff is not bringing us the students we
used to attract.”
As optimistic as such
notions are, they are often unrealistic and based on intuition rather than
evidence. They also ignore the lessons to be learned from many other
organizations -- newspapers, magazines, encyclopedias, travel agencies, taxi
cab companies and the U.S. Postal Service, among others -- that mistakenly
believed that their value was so great that they were immune to disruption.
Myths that Serve as
Obstacles
For institutions to be
successful in today’s environment, they must move beyond some of the damaging
myths held by many people on campuses. Those myths include:
Excellent marketing and
admissions efforts are a panacea. David Strauss, principal of the Art &
Science Group, reports that "the array of studies we've done for various
types and levels of individual colleges and universities over the years, using
highly rigorous techniques, indicates that the trend in prospective
undergraduates’ preferences tends toward metropolitan (vs. rural) institutions,
toward larger (vs. smaller), and toward pragmatic/professional fields (and away
from many traditional liberal arts fields).” And the best marketing in the
world combined with an excellent admissions operation will not persuade
students with these clear preferences to enroll in small, rural or liberal arts
colleges.
All strategic planning
processes are of equal value. Sadly, many planning processes fail because
those involved have been encouraged to “Blue Sky It” without grounding their
planning in a clearly-articulated vision for the future and without tethering
it to in-depth, cost-benefit analyses and a realistic financial plan -- or
sometimes simply any financial plan at all. Or to put it another way, it is a
recipe for disaster when those involved in planning are asked to imagine a rosy
future without regard to available resources: human, financial and facilities.
It is also dangerous to rely on overly ambitious fundraising goals to fund new
initiatives.
Planning processes also
fail when they are designed to try to accommodate all constituencies rather
than to seek to identify a small number of strategic institutional imperatives
or priorities. This approach generally results in an unwieldy wish list that
does not produce an institutional road map for the future from which sound
financial choices and fundraising goals derive.
Many institutions also
continue to create five-10 year static plans even though change is happening
much more quickly and requires more nimble choices and actions.
Our institution will
thrive because it is so different from others. Far too many campuses
persist in believing in the myth that they are unique or in some significant
ways better than their competitors – and then they make their choices
accordingly. For example, I often hear from faculty and staff members
that they provide students on their campus a level of personal attention that
occurs nowhere else in the country. But although giving students individual
attention is important and something institutions want to promote, it is not
unique -- and therefore not a differentiator.
Many colleges today also
claim that they are unique in their focus on such matters as social justice,
civic engagement, globalism, sustainability, experiential learning, diversity
and inclusion, research in collaboration with a faculty member, internships
and, increasingly, mentorships and career preparation. Again, each of those
emphases is worthy, but once again, they are neither distinctive nor
differentiating.
On the other hand, many
institutions that do focus on these notions have done so in ways that resonate
with the students they wish to enroll by leading those students to understand
and value the nature of the educational experience they are being offered.
Successful Models
The colleges and
universities described below, despite their varied missions, have addressed
their challenges effectively. Each of these institutions also have a set of
common characteristics that made a difference for them:
§ Each was inspired by a presidential vision, developed in
consultation with the campus and approved by the board.
§ Institutional planning was informed by data
§ Planning was simultaneously aspirational and feasible, ultimately mediating between the real and the ideal.
§ Institutional planning was informed by data
§ Planning was simultaneously aspirational and feasible, ultimately mediating between the real and the ideal.
Making core
characteristics manifest in the education of all students. Agnes Scott College has
seen record enrollments over the past two years, after redesigning its
curriculum and co-curriculum based on extensive market research. Its new Summit program has
positioned the college as one “for women who want to become leaders in an
increasingly global society.” All “Scotties” will have a four-person board of
advisers, including a career mentor. They will also have a common orientation
and a required “leadership lab,” will study a foreign language, and will create
a digital portfolio. In addition, all first-year students will have an
eight-day cultural immersion, most abroad, led by a faculty member tied to a
course, and all students will have a second more extensive global
experience.
Diversifying to attract
new student populations. Kettering University, formerly the General
Motors Institute, is taking advantage of 600 corporate partners and more than
1,000 alumni who are or have been CEO’s in this country and around the world.
After an extended visioning and planning process informed by market
research, the university launched the Kettering Global Initiative, which offers
online, on-campus and hybrid continuing education courses to those partners and
others. Kettering has also been integrating the humanities, social sciences and
the creative arts into its STEM and management programs by creating a new
College of Sciences and Liberal Arts -- expanding its interdisciplinary
offerings and developing new majors and minors in new areas of applied science.
Focusing on innovation. US News & World
Report has named Lynn University one of the country’s most innovative
universities. Taking advantage of a new wireless infrastructure that it created
through successful fundraising for one of the 2012 presidential debates, Lynn
has placed all course materials for its Great Books Core Curriculum on iPads
that it provides its 600 freshmen. By replacing conventional textbooks with
faculty-produced e-books, Lynn reports that it has saved students 90
percent of the cost of textbooks. The university also has a highly
personalized approach to admissions, tailoring each potential student’s campus
visit with a separate visit for their families.
Both initiatives have
brought the university welcome publicity and increased enrollment. More
recently, Lynn has been experimenting to good effect with three-year
accelerated degrees program.
Rethinking the
institutional mission. In January 2014, low enrollments at Iowa
Wesleyan University led to draconian steps. Despite its 173-year history as a
liberal arts college, the institution announced that it would abolish half of
its 32 majors in such areas as philosophy of religion, history, general
studies/liberal arts, sociology and pre-law and shrink the faculty from 52 to
22 and the staff from 78 to 55. The university now concentrates on business,
education and nursing, seeking to enroll older students.
This mission shift and
many layoffs were unquestionably painful. Yet Iowa Wesleyan recently announced
that its “incoming class enrollment has jumped 150 percent in just two years,”
that “student
retention has grown 35 percent over the last three years,” and
that its “international student population has drastically
increased.
Recommendations for the
Future
When it comes to
strategic planning, these examples suggest some lessons for other institutions:
§ There is no magic bullet or single approach that fits all
institutions. What works at one institution many not work even for competitors
that have similar if not identical missions. To be successful in planning, an
institution must creatively build on and sometimes even modify its history,
culture, values and mission.
§ Data must inform all planning. Assuming that people on the campus
intuitively know what will attract potential students, for instance, can be
dangerous since programs that resonate with one applicant pool may discourage
another.
§ Rather than pursuing what is often an elusive notion of
uniqueness, those involved in planning must recognize that the most selective
liberal-arts colleges in this country often offer similar programs and
services. The public flagship universities are also quite similar to one
another, as are the top private research universities. What matters to the
current and prospective students is that the institution they choose actually
provides what it promises and that what it provides is compelling.
§ If what a campus does resonates with its particular pool of
prospective students, the institution should both emphasize those aspects of
the education it offers and also provide evidence of excellence. In some cases,
as with Agnes Scott and Lynn, it makes sense to embed what the institution
values in the experience of all students. In other cases, such as Kettering, it
may be most effective to build on that common experience by offering a
diversity of new programs that are consistent with mission.
§ As part of making data-informed decisions, colleges and
universities must understand their competition. Mission statements should not
all sound alike. (And many do.) Moreover, if an institution does claim to be
distinct in some way, that claim must be legitimate.
§ If the campus is offering programs that no longer appeal to the
students it seeks, it should consider changing what it does -- but again based
on evidence and taking its mission into account, not guessing.
§ An institution should think in terms of a three-year horizon and
develop an evolving set of at most four to six strategic imperatives -- rather
than crafting a static plan for a much longer horizon that will sit on the
proverbial shelf.
§ The institution should focus its planning process on how best to
educate students rather than what will best serve any particular constituency.
§ The institution should be wary of seeking new revenue streams that
run counter to its mission or may not be financially sustainable.
§ The planning process should be a model of shared governance.
From the outset, the president must be clear who is responsible for which
aspects of the process -- who is involved, who serves in an advisory role and
who makes the ultimate decisions.
Ultimately, institutions
cannot predicate their planning on the hope that, in time, external realities
will change, and they will once again regain their previous stability. Nor can
they deny external realities and their own circumstances. In short, they must
understand that hope and denial are not strategies.
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