06-03-94 Trustees Approve College Restructuring THREE COLLEGES TO MAKE ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGES COLUMBUS -- Three colleges at The Ohio State University will make major changes in their departments by combining some programs. The restructuring plans for the colleges of Agriculture, Engineering and Veterinary Medicine were approved Friday (6/3) by the Board of Trustees. The College of Agriculture will reduce its departments from 11 to eight, and realign two programs. The College of Engineering will reorganize its 15 departments to eight. The College of Veterinary Medicine will combine three departments to form a new unit to focus on basic science education and research. The three plans are just the beginning of a university-wide restructuring, according to Richard Sisson, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost. On Feb. 1, all 19 colleges and University Libraries submitted plans for administrative restructuring. "Since November, we have examined what we do and how well we do it," Sisson said. "Reinvestment and renewal required us to consider significant change within and across colleges apart from budget considerations." Administrative changes do not impact academics, such as degree programs or curriculums. Proposals for such changes that result from restructuring will be considered separately. The College of Agriculture changes center around five priorities: Managing and using production resources, developing food and other agricultural products, enhancing environmental quality, assessing social and economic change, and developing human resources. "The driving force behind this plan is enhancing our ability to attract and adequately serve students, to better meet the needs of our external clients and to position the college to flourish in the years ahead," said Bob Moser, dean of the College of Agriculture. The changes are: =FE Realigning rural sociology from the Department of Agricultural Economics to the Department of Agricultural Education. =FE Combining the departments of Animal Science, Dairy Science and Poultry Science into a single department. =FE Combining the agronomic crops program with the Department of Horticulture. =FE Combining the soils program with the School of Natural Resources. The departments of Agricultural Engineering, Food Science and Technology, and Plant Pathology will not be restructured. The College of Engineering restructuring will help the faculty in the eight new departments to concentrate on six "Key technologies": Advanced materials, manufacturing, transportation, advanced information technologies and high performance computing, environment, and bioengineering. Collecting together faculty who have similar interests will encourage the "possibilities of cross-disciplinary teaching and research," said Jose B. Cruz Jr., dean of the College of Engineering. The changes are: =FE Combining civil engineering and engineering graphics. =FE Combining aeronautical and astronautical engineering, engineering mechanics, and aviation. =FE Combining industrial and systems engineering with welding engineering. =FE Consolidating School of Architecture departments -- Architecture, City and Regional Planning and Landscape Architecture -- into a single unit. There are no changes to the interdisciplinary program in biomedical engineering and the departments of Chemical Engineering, Computer and Information Science, Electrical Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering. The College of Veterinary Medicine faculty feel restructuring will help them reach the college's goals: An excellent, comprehensive professional curriculum; promoting excellence in research in order to improve the health of animals, assure the wholesomeness of food animal products, and contribute to the understanding of basic mechanisms of disease; providing an intellectual environment that enhances scholarly activity; educating future academicians and research scientists; and providing continuing education and consultation for veterinarians and Ohio citizens. The change is: =FE Combining the departments of Veterinary Anatomy and Cellular Biology, Veterinary Pathobiology and Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology. "The new department will provide a primary link to the biomedical community at Ohio State," said Glen F. Hoffsis, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. "The administrative restructuring has the potential of connecting the college to the recent university-wide initiative in molecular life science research." There are no changes to the departments of Veterinary Clinical Sciences and Veterinary Preventive Medicine. # Contacts: Richard Sisson, vice president for academic affairs and provost, (614) 292-5881. Bob Moser, vice president for agricultural administration and dean of the College of Agriculture, (614) 292-1889. Jose B. Cruz Jr., dean of the College of Engineering, (614) 292-2836. Glen F. Hoffsis, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, (614) 292-6661. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 03 Jun 1994 16:33:57 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.