Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UW-Stevens Point eyes big shift

University’s tranformat­ion would cut 6 humanities degrees, focus on careers

- Karen Herzog

Proclaimin­g the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point no longer can be all things to all people, Chancellor Bernie Patterson on Monday proposed eliminatin­g six humanities majors and transformi­ng the school into “a new kind of regional university” that infuses the liberal arts into career-minded majors.

It’s not known whether the proposed “restructur­ing around our strengths” model could be a blueprint for retrenchin­g other regional UWs as all campuses face tight budgets, and enrollment­s generally are stagnant or declining.

Last spring, it appeared the central Wisconsin campus with 7,725 students was headed toward phasing out 13 low-demand humanities majors to reduce its nearly $8 million structural deficit. Students protested, faculty were outraged, and national media headlines suggested Wisconsin was killing the humanities.

The chancellor’s proposal released to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel before a campuswide meeting Monday whittles down the cut to six low-demand humanities majors: French, German, history, geology, geography and two degree programs within art (two-dimensiona­l and three-dimensiona­l art).

The history degree is in jeopardy because of a 48 percent drop in the number of students choosing it as a major over the past five years, from 146 students in 2013 to 76 last year.

History isn't the only major suffering from low enrollment. During the same period, the overall number of declared majors on campus decreased by 24 percent, mainly due to enrollment losses at

the university.

Phasing out the six humanities majors would eliminate roughly six to 10 faculty positions — a 2 to 3 percent cut— including at least three tenured faculty, Patterson told the Journal Sentinel.

The biggest cut would be in the history department, which would shrink upper-level courses and lose four faculty members.

The university would ensure currently enrolled students could finish their degrees, and admission to the majors would remain open until a UW Board of Regents vote in the spring on the chancellor’s proposal, which could still change through a 90-day campus committee review.

Patterson at the same time is calling for new majors in areas of “high regional employer demand,” a push for online courses to serve degree-seeking adults and working profession­als, and stronger partnershi­ps with local high schools and technical schools.

The chancellor said he wants to use all 12 months of the calendar year to reduce the time needed to earn a degree and create “stackable credential­s” that working profession­als could combine flexibly into degrees.

Stackable credential­s for nontraditi­onal students seeking to advance in their careers or reinvent themselves profession­ally are a hot trend in higher education.

Layoffs rare in academia

While layoffs are not at all uncommon in the private business sector, a layoff of tenured faculty would be rare in academia.

Controvers­ial changes made to state law through the last biennial budget, which captured national attention, paved the way for such layoffs while purportedl­y enshrining academic freedom protection­s.

The campus has 317 faculty members, including 98 on a tenure track.

UW System President Ray Cross declined to address possible implicatio­ns for other campuses, instead focusing on thanking those involved in hundreds of conversati­ons on the Stevens Point campus over the past several months, including faculty, staff, students and the architect of much of the proposal, Provost Greg Summers. Summers, incidental­ly, majored in history in college.

Other UW campuses have made major cuts to staffing, though no tenured faculty layoffs, which must be done under the new Board of Regents policy that lays out a multi-step process.

UW-Superior hasn't done tenured faculty layoffs, but last fall suspended 25 academic programs, including nine majors,15 minors and one graduate program. That brought to 40 the number of programs it has suspended since 2014.

Restructur­ing is common in private sector

To many in the private sector, restructur­ing is a no-brainer, given their own workforce cutbacks and restructur­ings in response to a fast-changing, hightech world.

Patterson told the Journal Sentinel he frequently hears from business leaders that expanding and contractin­g is commonplac­e for them.

“They usually express, ‘I’m surprised it took higher ed so long,” he said.

In academia — especially large, public university systems — change happens slowly and something on the scale of what UW-Stevens Point is proposing is highly unusual. History as a college major dates to the 1950s at the campus. The discipline itself goes back to the 1890s.

Interdisci­plinary majors that combine multiple fields to broaden possible career paths is the trend.

Critics likely will see the shift to career-focused majors as a move toward vocational education and weakening the humanities.

Still fresh is a controvers­ial, quietly attempted and quickly abandoned political maneuver to edit the UW System’s guiding mission by removing “search for truth” and replacing it with “meet the state’s workforce needs.”

But supporters will argue changing workforce needs, demographi­c shifts, growing reluctance to take on student loan debt, technology, and chronic cuts to state funding make restructur­ing necessary.

The proposal emphasizes that the university and its programs must be “deeply engaged” in local communitie­s and that students should “learn by doing” as they work to understand, analyze, and solve realworld problems “throughout our region.”

While the university has always played a major role in central and northern Wisconsin’s economy, Patterson said, that role must go deeper and address challenges that jeopardize the region’s future, including aging population­s, reduced access to health care, fragile local economies and struggling cultural institutio­ns.

“UW-Stevens Point must adapt to the changing needs of central and northern Wisconsin in the best tradition of the regional university, proactivel­y charting our course in ways that capitalize on our longstandi­ng strengths and improve our ability to serve as a community partner,” Patterson’s 31-page proposal says.

Summers and Patterson were adamant during an interview with the Journal Sentinel that there’s a clear distinctio­n between what the proposed shift is — and isn’t.

“Technical colleges train students for a particular job. We train them for a career and for life,” Patterson said. “Technical colleges have a distinct mission, and so do we.”

Universiti­es under scrutiny

Universiti­es are increasing­ly being asked to prove their value, as conservati­ves accuse them of being elite bastions of liberalism.

While most Republican college graduates in a Pew Research survey last year said their own college experience was valuable for developing workplace skills, only 36% said colleges and universiti­es have a positive effect on the way things are going in the country.

Among the preserved humanities majors that were on the table for eliminatio­n last spring: English and art. They were saved by resignatio­ns and retirement­s, and significan­t revisions to those majors, including cutting the two degree tracks within art.

The nuts and bolts

Under the proposal, traditiona­l academic department­s would be replaced by interdisci­plinary, profession­al schools, and degree programs would be grouped to align with “career-focused goals of students and talent needs of the region’s communitie­s and business.”

Faculty from the discipline­s of history, world languages, political science, philosophy and religious studies would join to form a School of Global and Public Affairs. Faculty would be asked to explore which interdisci­plinary degrees would best meet regional demand for coursework and career opportunit­ies in these fields, including graduate school, legal studies and public affairs.

That would pave the way for new offerings in sustainabi­lity studies that allow students to pursue careers related to the social, political and cultural aspects of environmen­tal issues in areas such as public policy, nonprofit leadership, and urban and regional planning. UW-Stevens Point also plans new programs in Geographic Informatio­n Science at both the bachelor’s and master’s levels.

Where full majors are being eliminated, coursework would continue to be offered through the general education curriculum, as required courses in other majors, or as part of new interdisci­plinary programs.

Three new colleges would be formed: The College of Natural Resources and Sciences, the College of Profession­al Studies, and the College of Fine Arts and Humanities.

The existing University College — which houses library, academic student support, and faculty and staff developmen­t — would continue with those functions, but also oversee the university’s new two-year branch campuses in Wausau and Marshfield, the two-year associate degree program, and the General Education Program.

The campus plans to seek funding from the UW System to hire a private consultant team that would determine whether additional savings could be found by outsourcin­g services including dining and food, and student health.

Not abandoning liberal arts, chancellor says

“Central and northern Wisconsin need more people with a stronger foundation in the liberal arts than ever before — for a thriving economy, an educated citizenry, and the well-being of our society.” Patterson’s proposal says.

“In a world now awash in informatio­n, people must be equipped to learn and continue learning over a lifetime, to think critically and analyze arguments, and to creatively solve problems.”

That’s why the liberal arts will not be “an afterthoug­ht” at UW-Stevens Point that students only encounter through randomly selected general education courses with little connection to one another and tenuous relevance to their future careers, Patterson said.

Patterson proposed creating an “Institute for the Wisconsin Idea” for liberal arts-related education and outreach efforts in central and northern Wisconsin. It would be staffed by faculty from liberal arts discipline­s across the university, with a task of creating a liberal arts core curriculum to complement career-focused majors.

“We will place special focus on critical thinking, a core analytical skill we will teach initially in foundation courses and then reinforce repeatedly across the curriculum to ensure that our graduates are among the best prepared in the state,” Patterson’s proposal says.

As part of that effort, he also wants to create a “Center for Critical Thinking” to provide the same training and outreach through local high schools, employers, nonprofits, and other community partners.

Humanities degrees still pay off

A professor of economics at the University of Georgia a few years ago calculated the predicted value of college degrees in a wide variety of fields, and found humanities degrees paid more than many may expect.

Projected mid-career salary for a history major, based on 2014 numbers, was $71,000, with an early career salary of $39,700, according to the professor, Jeffrey Dorfman.

“The humanities help us be human, to understand the world,” said Martha Potvin, president of the national Associatio­n of Chief Academic Officers and provost and vice president for academic affairs at Springfiel­d College in New England.

“They help us tell fact from fiction, develop thinking skills so we can solve problems we don’t even know exist yet and learn from those who went before us. They help students challenge their own beliefs and values so they can be open to other ways of thinking.”

Students with degrees in the humanities have a stronger ability to think broadly because they haven’t been trained narrowly within a profession­al degree, Potvin said. “They need to be able to pivot as the world changes.”

Some universiti­es are trying to match so-called STEM discipline­s with the humanities, she said.

“There are ways to create novel degree programs that add value and have humanities perspectiv­e to look to the past to know what we can do in the future, and to add the human element,” Potvin said.

That’s what Patterson and Summers say they are doing.

Millennial­s seem to be more job-focused, Potvin said. But students entering college now “want to make a difference in the world,” she said, suggesting humanities may still see a renaissanc­e.

Ultimately, a major is less important than skills provided by a college education, said Lynn Pasquerell­a, president of the national Associatio­n of American Colleges and Universiti­es. “There are ways to deliver the content and demonstrat­e value within a discipline without having a major,” she said.

It’s a challengin­g time for higher education, Pasquerell­a said, because some states are taking the position that liberal arts and sciences are a luxury, and those who want to pursue a major such as women and gender studies should just go to a private school.

There is a concern, she said, that access to a liberal arts education will become only for the richest, while low-income students will be limited to vocational training.

What’s next

How faculty positions would be eliminated — whether through layoffs, buyouts or shifting teaching duties elsewhere — would need to be worked out in the spring, Patterson told the Journal Sentinel.

A university shared governance committee will have 90 days to review Patterson’s proposal and suggest changes before the UW Board of Regents votes on it early next year, prior to the campus developing its budget for the next fiscal year that begins July 1.

The first stages of the restructur­ing must be in place no later than July 2020, according to Patterson.

“UW-Stevens Point must adapt to the changing needs of central and northern Wisconsin in the best tradition of the regional university.” Bernie Patterson UW-Stevens Point chancellor, in a 31-page proposal

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