When the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
was established 40 years ago its founders believed that if Milwaukee were
to be a great city, it would need a great, urban public university. A
critical element in the creation of UWM was the strong support of the
citizens and leaders of Milwaukee. In their minds, this was to be Milwaukee's
university.
That same central purpose
is evident in UWM's Select Mission, which is centered on meeting the diverse
needs of Wisconsin's largest metropolitan area by providing a wide array
of degree programs, a balanced program of applied and basic research,
and a faculty who are active in public service.
When I launched UWM's strategic planning process, I asked the Academic
Planning Committee to keep UWM's urban mission in mind while developing
a Vision Statement that would carry the university into the next century.
The Vision Statement begins by setting the goal that UWM will be one
of America's premier urban universities, recognized for excellence and
dedication to the principle that the education of its students is its
primary purpose.
The next step in the strategic planning process was to develop a strategic
plan, which sets specific priorities for UWM's future direction. The
plan evolved through stages as its substance was discussed by the Academic
Planning Committee, the Faculty Academic Planning and Budget Committee,
other campus committees, community boards, and many individuals. The
initiatives set forth in the plan address the realities that public
institutions of higher education face, including declining state support,
increasing demand for life-long learning opportunities, growing requirements
for assessment and accountability, and rapid changes in technology.
This strategic plan will enable UWM to meet the challenges and the opportunities
of the next decade. It is entirely consistent with the recommendations
made by members of the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents
in their report on the Study of the UW System in the 21st Century. Among
the Regents' recommendations are preserving and enhancing access to
quality, creating new knowledge, fostering career and professional development,
and restructuring and improving efficiency. This strategic plan addresses
these and other issues.
Every school and college, every division, every department and every
individual in the UWM community has a stake in the plan because its
implementation depends on long-range plans that address the organization
and structure of the university, both biennial and annual budgeting,
and day-to-day activities. As a result, some areas of the campus will
be restructured and job duties for some may be realigned. Whatever changes
are made, however, must be centered on UWM's primary purpose--the education
of our students.
Framework of the Plan
As a nationally recognized
urban research university, UWM will continue to do the things that have
contributed to its dramatic growth and development in its first four decades.
They include:
- Providing high quality research
and instructional programs.
- Guaranteeing educational
access and opportunity for a broad array of traditional and non-traditional
students while increasing the diversity of the student population.
- Promoting public service
and research efforts directed toward meeting the social, economic, educational
and cultural needs of metropolitan Milwaukee and the State of Wisconsin.
- Ensuring a campus community
that values human diversity, promotes free and open inquiry, and treats
each person with respect, tolerance, dignity and civility.
- Maintaining an attractive
and safe campus.
These ongoing areas of emphasis
will remain basic elements in the campus planning process. The strategic
plan will not diminish their importance but will add new initiatives intended
to improve and strengthen UWM and move it to the next level of excellence.
Objective of the Plan
The main objective of the
strategic plan is to firmly establish UWM as one of the nation's premier
urban research universities within the next decade and thereby increase
the value of a UWM degree and increase the university's value to Milwaukee
and Wisconsin.
In striving to achieve this
objective, UWM will focus on four priorities:
- Strengthening and more
effectively integrating the university's central functions of creating,
disseminating and applying knowledge. In other words, better using UWM's
strengths as an urban research university to enhance the education of
its students.
- Stabilizing the university's
enrollment and resources.
- Dramatically expanding
the use of technology across the campus.
- Enhancing the campus learning
and working environment.
When considering the four
priorities, it is important to keep in mind that they are not stand-alone
entities. They are interwoven, interdependent and mutually reinforcing.
More closely connecting research and teaching will improve learning. Improving
the campus infrastructure will permit researchers to increase the volume
and quality of their work. Increasing interaction with the community will
promote more research and enhance the educational experience of students.
Stabilizing UWM's resources and keeping the campus up to date in
technology will reinforce
all of its academic strengths. Developing a more collegiate
atmosphere for students will encourage higher student enrollment and
retention rates.
Examples of the specific initiatives
and tactics that will be used to implement the plan are listed under each
of the four priorities. Some of the tactics already are being implemented,
some require the development of implementation plans, and in some cases
additional tactics will be added as the plan evolves.
Strategic Priorities
#1 Integrate the Creation,
Dissemination and Application of Knowledge
Initiative
Advance UWM's stature as
a center of scholarly excellence and improve its position in the Carnegie
ranking of Research II universities.
Tactics
- Implement and revise, as
necessary, the campus-wide UWM Research Plan, which sets specific goals
for research, scholarship and creative activity and promotes collaborative
research initiatives.
- Target existing research
funding for areas of proven excellence, areas that have the potential
for excellence, and those areas that have the demonstrated potential
to generate increased extramural funding.
- Restructure the Graduate
School so that it can more effectively increase and encourage the university's
research efforts.
Initiative
Enrich the learning experiences
of UWM students.
Tactics
- More widely organize instruction
around a "paradigm of discovery" which engages undergraduate
as well as graduate students in research and creative activity.
- Continue to develop new
undergraduate and graduate programs responsive to the changing needs
of society.
- Provide freshmen and transfer
students with a variety of activities, such as the Freshman Scholars
Program, that increase contact with faculty.
- Fully implement the recommendations
of the Blue Ribbon Committee on the Undergraduate Experience.
Initiative
Expand UWM's urban mission
and reinforce the university's commitment to enhancing the quality of
life and economic base of the Milwaukee metropolitan area and the State
of Wisconsin.
Tactics
- Better organize, coordinate
and promote partnerships, alliances and collaborations with Milwaukee
area businesses, governmental agencies, educational institutions, arts
groups and neighborhoods.
- Encourage more research
and scholarship that addresses issues and problems confronted by metropolitan
Milwaukee and the state.
- Intensify efforts to use
the university's metropolitan location to expand the student educational
experience by providing more internships, fieldwork, co-op programs
and other learning opportunities in the community.
#2 Stabilize Enrollment
and Resources
Initiative
Increase student enrollment
and retention, better utilize existing resources, and find ways to enlarge
the university's resource base.
Tactics
- Meet UW System's Enrollment
Management III target for the campus of the equivalent of 16,304 full-time
students for the year 2000.
- Improve the retention and
timely graduation of both traditional and non-traditional students.
- Reallocate existing resources
to achieve the initiatives of the Strategic Plan.
- Utilize and, as necessary,
revise the existing recognition, reward and promotion structure for
faculty and staff to achieve the initiatives of the Strategic Plan.
- Adjust academic program
array to maintain high quality and to meet the needs of students.
- Take advantage of opportunities
for additional state and federal funding in targeted areas.
- Increase private sector
gifts and revenue-producing activities.
#3 Expand Technology
Initiative
Employ appropriate information
and communication technology to improve the academic, student service
and administrative operations of the campus.
Tactics
- Build a comprehensive campus
technology plan that will address near-term goals and long-range potential
in areas such as distance education and administrative efficiency.
- Establish a Learning Technology
Center dedicated to helping faculty and teaching staff integrate educational
technologies into their courses.
- Eliminate areas of deficiency
in access to technology.
#4 Enhance the Campus Environment
Initiative
Improve the support systems
and physical facilities that make the campus environment conducive to
learning and working.
Tactics
- Improve quality of and access
to scholarly sources and references through the Golda Meir Library and
other campus facilities.
- Augment services to students
in areas such as admissions, registration, financial aid, career counseling,
food service, residence life and child care.
- Continue to update and modernize
classrooms.
- Target existing professional
development resources for employees, especially faculty, instructional
academic staff and teaching assistants, to achieve the initiatives of
the Strategic Plan.
- Continue development of
the NCAA Division I athletic program.
- Expand residence halls,
sports and recreation facilities, and parking capacity.
Implementation and Accountability
Implementing this plan and
continuing with the strategic planning process will take the efforts of
the entire campus community. We all share in the responsibility of meeting
the plan's main objective--firmly establishing UWM as one of the nation's
premier urban research universities within the next decade. For this effort
to succeed, every individual in every division, every department and every
program must play an active and integral role in improving UWM, enhancing
its reputation, and promoting the accomplishments of its students, faculty
and staff.
UWM Provost Kenneth L. Watters
will have overall operational responsibility for implementation of the
Strategic Plan. In the next several months he will work with appropriate
administrators and faculty and staff governance groups to define more
specifically the steps to be taken, to assign accountability, and to determine
how results will be measured. An essential part of this process will be
the utilization of the annual campus budget process to accomplish the
initiatives and tactics of the plan.
Annual Report
Beginning in June of 1997,
I will make an annual report to the campus on implementation of this plan.
In addition, periodic updates will be provided in the UWM Report and in
occasional letters to the university community.