96-11-1 Trustees: Restructuring Academic Enrichment, Advising TRUSTEES HEAR REPORTS ON RESTRUCTURING, ACADEMIC ENRICHMENT AND STUDENT ADVISING COLUMBUS -- Provost Richard Sisson told The Ohio State University Board of Trustees Friday (11/1) that three years of intensive restructuring, reallocation and reorganization have allowed the university to: -- Cope with an $80 million loss of state subsidies to its base budget. -- Shift $20 million to $25 million within academic units to strengthen extraordinary programs and meet university academic priorities. -- Come to terms with $40 million in budget deficits from the 1980s. -- Supplement funding for interdisciplinary research. "It is very important that such a process be principled and driven by values," he said. "It is also essential that it involve a broad range of voices, and that it involve the senior administration, but not be exclusively determined by them." Sisson said he and President E. Gordon Gee agreed from the beginning that faculty, staff and students would have to implement change, and so should have a say in how to accomplish restructuring goals. Ohio State will continue to restructure. However, it will be in a less intense way, Sisson said. Colleges and academic support units will look at areas of growth selectively. Sisson also reported on the Academic Enrichment Program, a major way that Ohio State supports the quest for intellectual and academic excellence. More than $5.2 million has been reallocated over the last three years to support university priorities. The money has gone to hire faculty to lead cutting-edge research efforts and staff to administer projects. Grants also are used to buy and upgrade scientific and computer equipment. "These initiatives, and the faculty behind them, are a source of great pride for all of us," Sisson said. Seventeen projects have been funded this year. The board also heard a report on academic advising. Martha Garland, undergraduate dean for the Colleges of the Arts and Sciences, outlined several changes being made to better serve the 10,000 students in the five colleges. Efforts include hiring more professional academic counselors, grouping counselors by disciplines to concentrate on specific majors, and using technology to connect directly with the University Registrar and Admissions and Financial Aid offices. Dean Bobby Moser and Associate Dean L.H. Newcomb of the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, explained how the college's advising system differs from the rest of the university. The college's faculty have a long-standing commitment to personally advising their undergraduates, Moser said, and so students are assigned a faculty adviser when they are admitted. Enrollment is small enough that the 80 faculty members can directly counsel 15 students each, meeting two times each quarter. In addition, a "Faculty Friend" is assigned to Norton and Scott residence halls, where agriculture majors room together. College counselors are available one evening a week in the halls. # Contacts: Richard Sisson, (614) 292-5881 Martha Garland, (614) 292-1882 L.H. Newcomb, (614) 292-6891 [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 1 Nov 1996 14:31:25 -0500] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.