96-04-18 Slavic Dept to Stay, With Conditions COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS KEEPING SLAVIC DEPARTMENT, WITH CONDITIONS COLUMBUS -- The Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures (SEELL) at The Ohio State University should remain an independent unit within the College of Humanities, says a report submitted this week by a committee appointed to evaluate the future of the department. However, the report also calls for substantive changes in the direction and focus of the department, as well as for a "probationary" period under the leadership of a department chair appointed from outside the current faculty. In January, Kermit Hall, dean of the College of Humanities, appointed an ad hoc committee, headed by Brian Joseph, chair of Ohio State's Department of Linguistics, to consider the future of the SEELL department. As part of the ongoing restructuring efforts at Ohio State, all colleges have been challenged by the president and provost to examine their organization carefully to determine if the current structure is the most appropriate use of resources. SEELL has suffered declining enrollments and loss of faculty for several years and is one of the smallest academic units at the university. Hall charged the 10-member committee to determine whether a Ohio State needed Slavic and East European studies and, if so, how that need could be best met: via an independent department, a merged department, or by dispersing the duties among several other units. The final report, presented to Hall Monday (4/15), recommends maintaining SEELL as an independent department, a decision the committee says make sense academically, intellectually, practically and financially. However, it calls for the department to be put on "probationary" status for not more than three years, during which SEELL will be headed by an interim chair from outside the department. The current chair, Charles Gribble, is to return to full-time teaching, where his expertise in Slavic linguistics and Bulgarian language is needed. The problems outlined by the report and the recommended solutions are: -- Lack of focus. The committee found little agreement among the senior faculty on what the department's priorities and goals are or should be. There is concern about how this affects the entire department, but particularly the graduate program. The committee recommends shoring up the graduate program, considering offering a terminal M.A. degree, and matching incoming graduate students with faculty advisors soon after admission. -- Outdated materials. SEELL has not kept its independent instruction materials up to date with current teaching methods and the world situation. Russian language textbooks in use do not yet reflect the break-up of the Soviet Union, for example. The committee recommends immediate updating the Russian materials, and examination of all other language instruction materials to see which need revision. -- Inattentiveness to scheduling and enrollment management. Some classes are offered too often for the demand. Others are scheduled at inconvenient times for students, decreasing enrollment. The committee recommends a review of the scheduling practices, with the aim of maximizing utility for both students and faculty. -- Division of labor in teaching assignments. Faculty are not involved in basic language courses, and graduate teaching associates are not involved in literature and culture classes. The committee recommends a "more permeable boundary between the language and literature/culture courses and between faculty and GTAs in terms of teaching assignments." -- Language pedagogy and coordinating the language program. Language instruction has been left primarily to graduate students. The committee recommends authorizing a faculty position for a language coordinator/pedagogy specialist, and also the involvement of all faculty in the language program. -- Development and public relations. While historically well thought of and supported, SEELL has recently suffered some loss of fund-raising revenue and some negative perceptions among Ohio's Slavic communities and among academic Slavicists, generated in part, in the committee's opinion, by some members of the department's faculty "spreading misleading and occasionally reckless reports about various administrative actions, past and present." The committee believes that the public awareness of the department that has come from the review itself may provide new opportunities for outreach and support. It recommends that the department immediately begin work to neutralize any damage done to the university, the college and the department by the politicizing of the review process. Joseph, as chair of the review committee, is expected to present the report to the full faculty of the College of Humanities on May 9. Dean Hall will begin implementing the recommended changes shortly thereafter. # Contacts: Kermit Hall, dean, College of Humanities, (614) 292-1882; Brian Joseph, chair of ad hoc review committee, (614) 292-4981. [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Thu, 18 Apr 1996 16:48:21 -0400] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.