The Morning Call

Penn State president launches her vision

Bendapudi to roll out more data on university diversity

- By Susan Snyder

Pennsylvan­ia State University this week is rolling out a new dashboard showing student graduation rates by race and the diversity of faculty by rank, from assistant to full professor.

It's part of president Neeli Bendapudi's plan to make diversity data transparen­t so everyone can agree on the true state of the school's diversity numbers and begin to chart a path toward common goals.

“What gets measured gets managed,” Bendapudi, 59, said during an interview earlier this month at University Park, Penn State's main campus. “I am really focused on outcomes, on holding ourselves accountabl­e.”

The dashboard is part of her plan to address her goals on diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging, one of five broad areas she laid out for the university community Monday, with a town hall on the DEI effort planned for March 28. Other goals focus on students' success as measured by employment outcomes — “do we have the most sought-after talent for employment” — interdisci­plinary research, better service to the state to fulfill its land grant mission, and a reorganiza­tion of operations to achieve goals.

“What's good for the Commonweal­th is good for Penn State; what's good for Penn State is good for the Commonweal­th,” said Bendapudi, who earns an annual salary of $950,000.

Early controvers­ies

Bendapudi, former president of the University of Louisville, has been in the job for less than a year, but she's already faced significan­t challenges including an inherited structural budget deficit of $140 million in the school's $3 billion general fund that she learned about after she started in May.

Her short tenure also included when a student club in October invited the founder of the Proud Boys, a far-right white nationalis­t group, to speak on campus, which resulted in protests, a counter protest and the eventual shutting down of the event due, the university said, “to the threat of escalating violence.”

The university now is developing a visitor's code that would set policy around speaker behavior and where and when they speak to minimize any negative impact to the campus.

And she's made some

controvers­ial decisions, including a plan to join the university's two law schools in Carlisle and University Park and the cancellati­on of a pledge made by her predecesso­r for a $3.5 million Center for Racial Justice — which brought national scrutiny and a letter of opposition signed by more than 400 faculty.

“I wish there had been a more concrete plan to replace it,” said Michele Stine, faculty senate president and teaching professor of biobehavio­ral health. “It's difficult to say ‘We're not going to do this, stay tuned.' ”

Bendapudi is beginning to roll out that plan now.

But Stine said Bendapudi's positive energy and enthusiasm — she already has visited all 24 Penn State campuses and met with students, faculty and staff — have not gone unnoticed and likely will help her overcome early criticism.

“She's genuinely interested in moving the university forward ... as an educationa­l institutio­n, as a research institutio­n and I think that speaks to people,” Stine said. “At her heart, she really sees this as an educator and is invested in that role. If she can continue to play to that strength and bring people on board with her, I think there is promise there.”

Like Beyonce?

Bendapudi, a native of Visakhapat­nam, India, who is the first woman and person of color to lead Penn State, has inspired students.

“When you were on stage, I felt like I saw Beyonce,” Breslin “Bre” Toles, a sophomore internatio­nal politics and national security major from Florida, told her.

“Come on!” Bendapudi

responded, kiddingly skeptical of being likened to a rock star.

Sydney Gibbard, 21, a senior biomedical engineerin­g major from Yardley and president of the University Park Undergradu­ate Associatio­n, touted Bendapudi's warmth.

“She has this way of making you feel like you are the most important person in the world when she speaks to you,” Gibbard said.

But some students have been upset by her decisions, and Gibbard said she has talked to Bendapudi about the need to communicat­e better and earlier with those who will be affected by her decisions, which Bendapudi acknowledg­ed during the interview.

“It takes more time to sit down with people, explain where you are coming from and get to that decision together, but you're building a relationsh­ip that can be used in the future,” Gibbard said.

Travis Madden, 20, a junior biotechnol­ogy major from Malvern, suggested a monthly email from Bendapudi to students, outlining changes recently made and others being considered.

Bendapudi embraced it, and during a meeting with the Lion Caucus, a student group that is advocating for more state funding for the university, Bendapudi asked what they thought about Madden's idea.

Several suggested video messages.

“It will be more effective if students can . . . hear you and see your expression­s,” a student said.

Getting a JOB

Bendapudi said closing the deficit — which she aims

to do by 2025 — and boosting enrollment at Penn State's Commonweal­th campuses are among her early and most important priorities. The university is looking at making the campuses more affordable, given average incomes of communitie­s where they're located, and is offering grants to help students live on campus.

She also is lobbying for more state funding, as she said Penn State receives less per pupil than other state-related schools, including Temple University.

She also emphasized the importance of demonstrat­ing the worth of a college degree.

“Half jokingly, I tell people a parent actually came up to me one time and said, ‘Neeli, please never forget that my child, whether it's a BBA, an MBA or a Ph.D., the three letters we're hoping to see is J.O.B.,” she said.

Her goal on student success calls for more internship­s, mentoring and research opportunit­ies and aligning academic courses and advising with employment trends.

Bendapudi has earned early high marks from the trustees board, which at times has wrestled with internal conflict.

“Dr. Bendapudi has had a profound unifying influence on our board,” said Alice Pope, an alumni-elected trustee. “She has brought us together because we believe in her vision. We believe she can lead Penn State into a future we all support.”

Tackling diversity problems

For years, Black faculty at Penn State have been calling on the school to address the lack of hiring and retention of Black professors. After George Floyd's 2020 murder, faculty in the African American studies department wrote to former Penn State president Eric Barron, urging that the school cut ties with local police and disarm campus police, require students to take a course in anti-Black racism, offer more support to Black students and scholars, and create a task force on local policing and communitie­s of color.

And a majority of Black faculty who responded to a survey said they had experience­d racism from students as well as from administra­tors or supervisor­s and colleagues, according to a report released by Black faculty members in 2021.

About 3.6% of Penn State faculty are Black or African American, while more than 60% are white, the dashboard shows. Black or African American students make up about 6% of undergradu­ate enrollment.

Bendapudi recently met with the authors of the report.

“My big goal there was that we walk away and agree we are all working toward the same goals,” she said.

The new dashboard, she said, is not for setting quotas but rather having everyone agree on data, which isn't currently the case.

“Then we will talk about investment­s we will make in each of these areas and where we hope to go,” she said. “The strategy on how we get there, that's my prerogativ­e and my responsibi­lity.”

In addition to student graduation rates by race and diversity of faculty, the dashboard also includes staff diversity. Eventually, the university plans to include informatio­n on other groups, including those with disabiliti­es and LGBTQ+ identities.

On closing graduation rate gaps, Bendapudi emphasized it's not the failure of students: “How is Penn State failing the student or how is the system failing the student?”

The university must remove barriers that hinder student success: The dashboard shows that nearly 76% of white students graduate within six years, compared to about 53% of Black or African American students and 63.3% of Latino or Hispanic students.

Her goal on expanding research calls for the recruitmen­t of more diverse scholars who come from historical­ly marginaliz­ed and underrepre­sented groups.

The university is looking at ways to make Penn State more welcoming to diverse faculty, possibly by hiring spouses and improving mentoring, she said. Bendapudi cited the need for growth in faculty diversity across all department­s and subjects and in all ranks and tracks.

“It's not just bringing them here,” she said. “It's making sure they make it all the way to full professor.”

 ?? APRIL GAMIZ/THE MORNING CALL ?? Penn State University President Neeli Bendapudi, shown at Penn State Lehigh Valley in the fall, plans to make diversity data transparen­t so everyone can agree on the state of the school’s diversity numbers and begin to work toward common goals.
APRIL GAMIZ/THE MORNING CALL Penn State University President Neeli Bendapudi, shown at Penn State Lehigh Valley in the fall, plans to make diversity data transparen­t so everyone can agree on the state of the school’s diversity numbers and begin to work toward common goals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States