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Posts tagged as “Michael Schill”

President Schill: Aligning our resources to achieve academic excellence

Sent out this morning. It’s not your generic “welcome back from break” letter. President Schill and Provost Coltrane will be at the Senate meeting on Wed, Jan 13th, to discuss this in more detail and answer questions. Dear Campus Community, Since I assumed the presidency of the university last July,…

Schill: Obviously, if I get savaged, I might have some behavior modification

The Portland Tribune’ story on UO President Mike Schill’s comments regarding the Morlok / Stokes retaliation lawsuit against UO is here. Today they’ve posted more from their Nov 11 interview with Schill, here: FWIW, I hear the University of Nike domain name is for sale. More from the interview: PathwayOregon grants Schill says he hopes…

Portland Tribune editors interview President Schill about – lawsuits.

Online here. I’ll take a guess that he was hoping to talk about his “Oregon Commitment” initiatives, instead of having to rehash and defend Doug Park’s lousy decisions for the nth time: … University of Oregon President Michael Schill defended the university’s actions regarding a December 2014 transfer of medical records from…

President Schill speaks to campus on plan to increase retention, graduation

Update: The official website is here, and reporter Caley Eller has more details on Schill’s “Oregon Commitment” plan in the Emerald, here: Schill then announced the Oregon Commitment, a plan of seven initiatives and investments totaling $17 million over five years to support his goals. The first is supporting pipeline programs that…

Register Guard editors confused about UO’s inflection point and sports

9/23/2015: This latest RG editorial is a response to Jack Stripling’s story in the Chronicle of Higher Ed about UO, “An Academic Reputation at Risk“. That is still gated if you are off campus, but I put up a few extracts here.

The RG’s editors are confused about the meaning of “inflection point” (Hint: Check the 2nd derivative, not the first). More significantly they seem blissfully unaware of the years of research results, including two NCAA sponsored white papers, that cannot find evidence for the claim that athletic success is a cost-effective way for a university to increase enrollment. Here’s what the RG says:

The rise of athletics coincided with the decline in public financial support, and came just as the UO needed to market itself outside the state’s boundaries. In that respect it was a godsend, giving the UO a foot in the door with prospective students everywhere.

Aren’t journalists supposed to follow the money? This argument has made millions for the athletics directors, coaches, and the compliant presidents whose PR flacks keep repeating it.

The online comments are pretty good though, as is the basic story about how declines in state funding forced UO’s leaders to go after out-of-state undergraduates. That kept them and UO’s faculty employed, but led to a relative decline in research resources and focus, and our national reputation.

And if you ignore the math error and the cheap shot at the faculty who’ve stuck with Oregon’s flagship university through all this, it’s hard to argue with their conclusion, here:

The [Chronicle] article goes on to suggest that the UO has reached an inflection point: Either the trade-offs of quality vs. quantity will be locked in, or something will happen to initiate a virtuous cycle, with first-rate academic programs attracting first-rate faculty to create first-rate academic programs.

Launching such a cycle would depend on leadership and money. That’s why so much is riding on Michael Schill, who in July became the UO’s fifth president in six years, and on the university’s $2 billion fundraising campaign. Other factors will also be at play, but leadership and self-generated resources are the two that are most subject to the university’s control.

The “flawed reputation” in the Chronicle’s headline is disheartening but undeniable. The task now is to confront it boldly, and bend the UO’s trajectory in an upward direction.

9/13/2015: Register Guard editorial on UO President Mike Schill

“Schill’s academic focus: New UO president hopes to replicate athletic success in labs and classrooms” 

In the RG here:

New interim Portland VP Jane Gordon, and interim LCB Dean Jim Terborg

6/19/2015: From Around the 0:

Jane Gordon has been named the interim vice provost for UO programs in Portland and Jim Terborg will become interim dean of Lundquist College of Business.

Gordon will fill in while a search is conducted to replace Wendy Larson, the current vice provost for Portland programs, who is retiring. Terborg is taking over during the search for a new business school dean following the decision of Kees de Kluyver to step down.

6/9/2015: Kees de Kluyver out, UO searching for 4 Deans and VP of Research

Incoming President Schill begins Johnson Hall reorganization

MEMORANDUM June 16, 2015 TO: Executive Leadership Team (ELT) Academic Leadership Team (ALT) President’s Office Staff Johnson Hall Staff FROM: Interim President Scott Coltrane Incoming President Michael Schill RE: Reporting Lines and Organizational Structure Colleagues, As you are all aware, this is a truly transformational time for the University of…

Semi-live-blog: Senate to meet on policies, with new Pres Michael Schill to speak at end, reception

Cocktail party version of today’s Senate meeting: Old president Scott Coltrane said no, no, no, no, no, to the Senate legislation on sexual violence prevention and athletics. New President Michael Schill talked to the Senate and answered questions for a good 30 minutes, and didn’t say “Go Ducks” once. He’d been misinformed about…