04-22-94 Merger of Social Work and Education MERGER OF SOCIAL WORK INTO COLLEGE OF EDUCATION IS PROPOSED COLUMBUS -- The Ohio State University Office of Academic Affairs has proposed that the College of Social Work become a school within the College of Education. According to the proposal, the merger of Social Work and Education would provide programmatic and financial benefits to both the social work and education programs, allowing for greater collaboration among faculty and greater economy in administration. Specifically, course offerings common to both programs could be better coordinated, support functions could be shared or shifted, field placements in local schools and social agencies could be made more accessible to students, and the university would have greater flexibility to meet accreditation standards. In making the announcement, Richard Sisson, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, said there will be extensive discussion and consultation with the faculty, staff and students of both colleges. The proposal will be presented to the Steering Committee of University Senate, the Council on Academic Affairs, and the Senate Oversight Committee on Restructuring for consideration before a final version is submitted to University Senate for appropriate action. "The intent of this proposed merger is to provide a framework for enhancing programs while at the same time supporting the efforts of the Social Work faculty," Sisson said. "Such a merger could enable the consolidation of related human services programs with Education and provide new collaborative program opportunities between Social Work and other programs in Education related to schooling and educational policy." The proposal is part of the ongoing restructuring of the university and meets three criteria established by the Office of Academic Affairs for consolidating academic units. It has potential for: (1) creating new programs or consolidating existing programs which can build on the complementary expertise of faculty in both units; (2) increasing flexibility in meeting curricular and teaching responsibilities; (3) improving efficiency in carrying out core administrative functions. Social Work has been a separate college since 1976. Before that it was a school housed in what is now the Max M. Fisher College of Business. The college has 27 full-time equivalent tenure-track faculty members, and does not have departments. Because it lacks the economies of scale and the financial flexibility of larger colleges, Social Work has been particularly hard pressed to absorb the budget cuts of recent years. It offers the Bachelor of Science in Social Work and the Master of Social Work degrees as well as the Ph.D. Approximately 75 percent of its nearly 700 full- and part-time students are enrolled in graduate programs. In 1992, the college had the second largest Master of Social Work enrollment in the Big Ten and the 21st largest in the nation. An additional factor in presenting the merger proposal now is that the college is currently searching for new leadership. According to today's proposal, "The expanded college could enable, encourage and provide leadership for collaborative efforts with other academic units that have instructional or research programs with an education or human services dimension." Any programmatic changes would be phased in so as not to affect the ability of currently enrolled students in either college to complete their programs of study. # Contact: Robert Arnold, associate provost, (614) 292-5881. [Submitted by: GERSTNER (gerstner@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 22 Apr 1994 13:54:13 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.