Not all donors are billionaires, but many faculty teach philanthropy by focusing on wealthy donors. With National Philanthropy Day on Monday, Nov. 12, David Campbell, professor of public administration at Binghamton University, State University of New York, suggests a different approach for teaching philanthropy to young people.
“Many faculty teach experiential philanthropy courses through the lens of debates about giving largely shaped by the assessment of the role wealthy donors play in civic life. But most of our students will NOT become billionaire (or millionaire donors); rather, they are likely (we hope) simply to become generous individuals, who give regularly to support the issues that are important to them. For me, this has meant reorienting my classes to ask students several core questions and to get them to focus on these questions over the course of the semester:
What responsibility do you (we) have to give to your community?
What core values and experiences motivate your giving?
What would it take to make giving a regular part of your life? (For students, this is hard, because they are students, and don’t yet have any money to give away)?
What are ways that people of limited means can be generous and still make a difference?”
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Binghamton University, State University of New York
ALBANY, N.Y. (Nov. 1, 2023) — On Monday, President Biden issued a new executive order on “Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence,” aimed at ensuring the United States leads the way in leveraging the promise of the technology, while also managing the risks.
The executive order is the first of its kind in the U.S.—requiring new safety assessments, equity and civil rights guidance and research on AI’s impact on the labor market.
Berg calls the executive order a “good first step” toward ensuring that AI use is positive and not disruptive for modern society.
“As artificial intelligence technology has become more and more successful, it is becoming an increasingly significant part of people’s lives. It has the promise to improve their work, education, and personal lives. It also has strong potential downsides, such as increased chances of threats to personal privacy, legal rights, employment prospects, and even health.
“The President’s executive order does not limit the innovation that drives the amazing advances in these new technologies, but at the same time, it highlights the good and bad that can come from their deployment and points us in the direction of how in the U.S., and worldwide, these technologies should be harnessed to maximize their benefit.”
Berg is available for phone or live/recorded interviews. UAlbany has an on-campus television studio available for remote interviews.
About the University at Albany:
The University at Albany is one of the most diverse public research institutions in the nation and a national leader in educational equity and social mobility. As a Carnegie-classified R1 institution, UAlbany faculty and students are advancing our understanding of the world in fields such as artificial intelligence, atmospheric and environmental sciences, business, education, public health, social sciences, criminal justice, humanities, emergency preparedness, engineering, public administration, and social welfare. Our courses are taught by an accomplished roster of faculty experts with student success at the center of everything we do. Through our parallel commitments to academic excellence, scientific discovery and service to community, UAlbany molds bright, curious and engaged leaders and launches great careers.
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University at Albany, State University of New York
Newswise — ALBANY, N.Y. (Oct. 27, 2023) — While flooding, tornadoes and hurricanes often dominate headlines when it comes to deadly weather, heat-related events claim more lives in the United States than any other type of extreme weather.
From 2004–2018, an average of 702 heat-related deaths occurred in the United States annually, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s more than the average from hurricanes and tornadoes combined.
A new study, led by researchers at the University at Albany’s College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity (CEHC), in partnership with collaborators at the National Weather Service, is aiming to improve those statistics through a critical aspect of extreme weather resiliency — risk communication.
The two-year study will focus on how current heat information is accessed and understood by people in the U.S. through $471,805 in support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
“The way that extreme heat events are communicated has implications for how members of the public take action to protect themselves,” said Michele “Micki” Olson, a senior researcher at CEHC’s Emergency and Risk Communication Message Testing Lab and the project’s lead principal investigator.
“Our study will provide a baseline assessment of current heat risk and preparedness messaging, including how it is understood by vulnerable populations.”
A National Review of Heat Messaging
To conduct their assessment, project researchers will lead 16 focus groups in areas across the U.S. that represent different climatologies and population types.
Focus group participants will first view the content of recent social media posts shared by their local National Weather Service Forecast Office (WFO) during recent extreme heat events. They will then be invited to share their thoughts about the heat risk, impacts and actions they can take to protect themselves based on that information.
“In our prior work, we found that there’s a lot of technical language — or jargon — used to describe heat risk and its impact on vulnerable populations,” said Jeannette Sutton, an associate professor who directs CEHC’s Emergency and Risk Communication Message Testing Lab and is the project’s co-principal investigator.
“Our focus groups will be looking at text as well as images in each message because these communicate different things. In particular, we want to know what terms may be confusing and why. We will then ask participants about their prior experiences with extreme heat and how they obtain heat-related information.”
Following the focus groups, the researchers will send out a national survey, allowing them to gather additional data and compare how people think about extreme heat in different parts of the country.
Their findings will be shared through presentations at the American Meteorological Society and the National Weather Service, as well as in published articles.
“Using both methods — the focus groups and a national survey — will provide us with a more complete picture of how people understand heat-related information,” Olson said. “By communicating directly with the National Weather Service, and other emergency managers, we can provide immediate actionable recommendations that can be implemented for heat risk and preparedness messaging.”
Extreme Weather Communication
Along with this study, researchers at UAlbany, including Sutton and Olson, are currently leading several other projects that are focused on improving the preparedness and response to extreme weather events in the U.S.
Earlier this year, Erie County turned to researchers at UAlbany and the National Weather Service to help ensure Western New Yorkers are better prepared for future winter storms. Among the project’s goals is to assess communication around last year’s Christmas blizzard, which brought nearly 52 inches of snow to the Buffalo area over five days.
“Much of our previous work is relevant to this newly funded project,” Sutton said. “Being able to understand messaging is one of the first steps to taking protective action. People cannot act on warning if they do not understand the information it contains.”
The latest project will also fund a UAlbany graduate student researcher with an interest in the intersection of weather and risk communication.
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University at Albany, State University of New York
Newswise — ALBANY, N.Y. (Aug. 31, 2023) — Last summer, the University at Albany’s Paleoclimate Lab opened its doors, offering a new way to analyze samples of natural materials, such as coral and lake sediment, to help reconstruct Earth’s climate history.
Now, through nearly $800,000 in new support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) this summer, lab researchers are focused on South Asia and the Middle East.
Aubrey Hillman, an assistant professor in UAlbany’s Department of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences (DAES), was awarded $417,242 from the NSF for a collaborative research project to create a 50,000-year continuous record of the Indian summer monsoon by analyzing lake sediment collected from Loktak Lake in Northeast India.
Sujata Murty, a DAES assistant professor, was awarded $339,771 from the NSF to lead another collaborative research project that aims to reconstruct Red Sea surface hydrology since the 1700s by analyzing coral cores along its eastern edge.
Both projects are now active and will run through the summer of 2026.
“The NSF Paleoclimate program is highly competitive; therefore, it is notable that both of these projects were funded,” said Ryan Torn, DAES chair and professor. “Aubrey and Sujata’s work will provide greater insight into Earth’s past climate and offer new research opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students.”
Changes in the Indian Summer Monsoon
The Indian summer monsoon typically lasts from June to September, with much of India, along with other parts of South Asia, receiving a significant amount of its total annual precipitation during this period.
Hillman’s new NSF project proposes to create new paleoclimate records from Loktak Lake that will provide insight into the causes and consequences of abrupt changes in Indian summer monsoon rainfall over the last 500 centuries.
To do so, Hillman and her research team, which includes collaborators at the University of Pittsburgh, Manipur University in India and Washington University in St. Louis are using the Paleoclimate lab to analyze lake sediments collected through the project.
In 2018, the research team traveled to Loktak Lake to start the collection process, using a UWITEC coring device that lowers a long tube to the bottom of the lake and fills it with sediment cores. That tube is then brought home, preserved and analyzed.
The team plans to return within the next year, collecting a total of 30 meters of lake sediment.
“The lake sediments will offer us new data to analyze changes in the Indian summer monsoon season over tens of thousands of years,” said Hillman. “There are few records that currently exist at this long of a scale.
“We believe our findings will offer new insight into the timing, direction, magnitude, and rate of changes in the Indian monsoon season through history, all of which are important to the more than one billion people who rely on it to deliver water and support agriculture,” she added.
Following the sample collections, the research team plans to hold a series of public engagement workshops with colleagues in India regarding topics such as lake water balance, paleoclimate and monsoons. The project is also supporting graduate student researchers from partnering institutions.
Climate of the Red Sea
Our oceans play a critical role in influencing regional and global climate by absorbing much of the solar energy that reaches Earth and releasing heat back into the atmosphere.
While there’s significant research around the climate history of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Indian Ocean, the third largest of the world’s five modern oceans, is much less understood.
Murty’s NSF research project, which includes collaborators from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and Union College, will focus on analyzing coral samples to determine how climate variability over the last 300 years has impacted ocean circulation in the Red Sea, a marginal sea of the Indian Ocean.
“The Indian Ocean is one of the most under-observed tropical ocean regions in the world,” Murty said. “We do not have a strong understanding of past Indian Ocean climate or ocean circulation patterns, so I’ve been slowly moving my research over to this area, beginning with the marginal seas, such as the Red Sea.”
“Our research findings will lead to improved understanding of Red Sea hydrographic variability and interactions with regional climate, aiding in climate and ocean circulation prediction efforts in the region,” she added.
Corals have annual growth layers, similar to tree rings, that can offer valuable information on how environmental conditions have changed over time and provide insight for future climate modeling.
Oceanographers like Murty scuba dive in the ocean and drill cores from massive boulder corals, taking care not to harm them. The samples for the new research were collected prior to this project and are now in the Paleoclimate Lab.
Along with analyzing the corals, project researchers also plan to participate in art-science outreach initiatives such as Synergy II, a collaborative project between Art League RI and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution that offers a unique opportunity to share ocean science research through artistic expression.
The NSF funding also supports graduate and undergraduate students assisting with the coral analysis.
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University at Albany, State University of New York
In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision last week outlawing race-conscious admissions, college administrators who work in diversity, equity, and inclusion say that their efforts to recruit and retain a diverse student body, and to help students of color feel a sense of belonging, are even more critical now that colleges will not be allowed to consider race as a factor in admissions.
While some administrators said they may have to tweak some of their tactics, several interviewed by The Chronicle said their work could become even more challenging if the number of students of color on campus shrinks, as experts expect.
The Supreme Court ruling also comes at a time when conservative politicians in many states have attacked colleges’ work in diversity, equity, and inclusion; The Chronicle is tracking 38 bills that were introduced in 21 state legislatures this year to restrict DEI efforts in higher education. So far, six of the bills have been signed into law, with some restricting specific diversity strategies, such as the use of diversity statements, while others, including one in Texas, ban diversity offices and staff at public institutions altogether.
According to a Chronicleanalysis, at selective institutions that admit less than 25 percent of applicants, underrepresented-minority students make up 29.6 percent of enrollments; at less-selective institutions, such students compose 40.9 percent of the enrollment.
Since last fall, James A. Felton III, vice president for inclusive excellence at the College of New Jersey, has been meeting with an informal working group, including the public college’s vice president for enrollment management, director of admissions, legal counsel, and provost, to discuss how a Supreme Court ruling against race-conscious admissions might affect the campus.
The group has discussed the potential impact of such a ruling on its high-demand programs and whether the college — which is a selective institution that did consider race in admissions — might be able to expand its reach into geographic markets it hasn’t traditionally targeted, for example.
Now that the Supreme Court has ruled against race-conscious admissions, the group will take some time to digest the decision and weigh it against the college’s current programs, initiatives, and policies before creating an action plan in time for the fall’s recruitment season, Felton said.
For example, some of the college’s scholarship and grant programs assess students holistically, and may consider a student’s race and background. But the college does not expect changes in the programs.
“I don’t think it, for me, will have a major bearing on the vision and the mission and goals of our institution, as well as higher education over all,” Felton said, noting that New Jersey has not enacted any anti-DEI legislation. “I think the Supreme Court decision just compels institutions to consider new and strategic ways to approach the work.”
But Felton expects the ruling will shrink the number of Black and Latino students on campus, which means the scope and scale of programs the college can offer, all of which are open to people of all backgrounds, will also probably decline.
The California Precedent
John B. King Jr., chancellor of the State University of New York system, said the role of chief diversity officer had become even more important in light of the Supreme Court ruling. Chief diversity officers will need to work with campus leaders to forge a path forward that is consistent with the law but also honors a commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, King said.
“If you look at what happened in California and in Michigan,” King said, “one of the challenges when the tool of race-conscious admissions was removed is that you had a precipitous drop in the presence of students of color, and that makes it that much harder to create a climate of belonging.”
California’s voters banned race-conscious admissions at public universities in 1996 through a ballot measure, Proposition 209, so Kathleen Wong(Lau), university diversity officer at California State University-East Bay, has been working without race-conscious admissions for years. Despite spending more than a half-billion dollars on race-neutral alternatives to diversify campuses, the University of California system has struggled to recover Black and Hispanic enrollment, particularly at its most selective institutions. “I’ll be frank,” Wong(Lau) said. “Holistic evaluations have been able to repair some of the loss. It has not been able to completely bring us back up to the point where we were allowed to use race as one of the criteria.”
Wong(Lau) said that senior diversity officers in California had focused on retention and climate, which she believes are not affected by the Supreme Court ruling, but that those efforts can go only so far when the sheer number of students of color in American higher ed remains minuscule. Black students at some public colleges in California can go an entire week without seeing another Black student, Wong(Lau) said, a situation that can make it difficult to create a climate where students really feel as if they belong.
Michael Benitez is vice president for diversity and inclusion at Metropolitan State University of Denver, which, as an open-access institution, is not directly affected by the end of race-conscious admissions. But he worries that prospective students could interpret the Supreme Court ruling to mean that they are not welcome on certain campuses.
“It’s not entirely on the school, but it certainly creates a feeling of perhaps not belonging, or I’m not wanted there, or I’m not going to make it there, or there’s little chance I’m going to get in, and I think so much of it is based on a misperception more than anything else,” Benitez said. As a result, he said, colleges will need to work harder now to communicate to students and families that diversity is still important on their campuses, and that students will have the support and resources they need to succeed.
Caroline Laguerre-Brown, a member of the Board of Directors of the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education, expects to see colleges focus more on recruiting.
“I think that universities are going to start spending a lot more time engaging in pipeline activity … designed to generate that diverse candidate pool,” said Laguerre-Brown, who also serves as vice provost for diversity, equity, and community engagement at George Washington University. “I think a lot of us will be strategizing about ways to reach communities that we haven’t reached in the past to try to encourage … that more-diverse, more-rich candidate pool.”
Newswise — ALBANY, N.Y. (May 26, 2023) — New York’s bail reform law had a negligible effect on crime, a study by a recent PhD recipient and a professor in UAlbany’s School of Criminal Justice (SCJ) found.
Bail reform has been a hotly debated issue in New York and throughout the United States, with proponents arguing that a cash bail system is unfair to poorer defendants and opponents arguing that setting bail for those arrested deters crime. In 2019 New York lawmakers passed a law eliminating bail for most misdemeanors and some non-violent felony charges, with the accused allowed to go free until a court hearing or released with conditions such as electronic monitoring. An amendment that went into effect in July 2020 rolled back some aspects of the reform, expanding the list of offenses eligible for cash bail.
The SCJ study, “Does Bail Reform Increase Crime in New York State: Evidence from Interrupted Time-Series and Synthetic Control Methods,” was published earlier this month in Justice Quarterly. Led by Sishi Wu, who received her PhD from SCJ in April, it’s the first study to evaluate the effects of New York’s bail reform law on the entire state and “the first attempt to disentangle the effects of bail reform and national historic events” such as the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Wu and co-author David McDowall, a distinguished teaching professor at SCJ.
Their study found that murder, larceny and auto theft increased after bail reform, but that bail reform itself did not contribute to that increase.
“We used data from the New York State index crimes, consisting of monthly crime counts for seven offenses: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft,” Wu said. “Monthly crime data from other states were also collected from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program to create a control group to compare with New York.”
Jail population dropped in the state from 2019 to 2020 — one of the goals of bail reform. During the same period, violent crime rose by 1% in the state and murders increased by nearly 47%, from 570 in 2019 to 836 in 2020. However, this increase could be attributed to the pandemic, which caused disruptions ranging from a lack of work and income to a lack of social services.
To account for the pandemic, the authors compared New York crime data with a control group constructed of other states similarly affected by the pandemic that did not reform their bail laws. That comparison showed “NYS experienced 0.02 more murder, 6.16 more larcenies, and 1.16 more motor vehicle thefts per 100,000 people per month than its control series after the bail reform” – not a statistically significant increase, the study found.
“Using findings such as ours, legislators and stakeholders can better address public safety concerns when continuing the implementation of bail reform,” McDowall said.
This academic year, public colleges in Washington state were required to provide training for faculty and staff on diversity, equity, inclusion, and anti-racism — a new mandate based on a 2021 state law.
As colleges’ diversity efforts face possible bans in some states, lawmakers in others are doing the opposite: They’re aiming to affirm these programs through legislation.
Proposals this year in Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey present a striking contrast to what’s happening in states like South Carolina, where lawmakers have debated defunding diversity efforts, and Texas, where a handful of bills would ban critical race theory and prohibit diversity training, among other restrictions. A Chronicleanalysis has found that at least 29 bills have been introduced in 17 states so far that would affect diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Leah Hakkola, an associate professor at the University of Maine at Orono who studies diversity in higher education, said the legislative initiatives today are particularly polarizing.
“Our country is more divisive than ever,” Hakkola said.
In that environment, Hakkola said, legislation that promotes diversity, equity, and inclusion at public colleges is increasingly important. Most administrators understand that these efforts improve accessibility and foster innovation, she said.
Massachusetts
In Massachusetts, S.1973 would require every state and quasi-state agency — including the state’s 29 public colleges — to establish a senior-level position that has the title of director of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
The bill was introduced by State Sen. Nick Collins, a Democrat. Collins’s office did not respond to a request for comment from The Chronicle.
Hakkola said that some universities may find it helpful to have a director of diversity, equity, and inclusion, but she stressed that the burden of promoting diversity should be “collective” across administrators, departments, and the campus community as a whole.
New Jersey
In New Jersey, A3944 would require the state’s 33 public colleges to develop a faculty and student diversity plan.on second thought, let’s lose the hyphens that I added. This is the bill’s language./hl Each campus plan would have to establish diversity goals for increasing the recruitment and retention of students, faculty, and staff who represent diverse backgrounds; identify steps and metrics to monitor those goals; and create programming aimed at improving the campus climate for diversity. The bill would also require that an annual diversity report that includes enrollment, retention, and graduation rates be submitted to the state’s secretary of higher education.
The bill was introduced by Assemblywoman Annette Quijano, a Democrat.sic Her office did not respond to a request for comment from The Chronicle.
New York
In New York, Senate Bill 1452 would require all 89 campuses in the State University of New York and City University of New York systems to establish courses in ethnic studies, women’s studies, and social justice. The legislation would also require students to complete at least one three-credit course in one of those disciplines to graduate.
State Sen. James Sanders Jr., the Democrat who introduced the bill, said requiring students to complete such a course would deepen their understanding of prejudice — particularly as the country continues to grapple with the systemic inequities brought into sharp relief by the pandemic and the murder of George Floyd.
“Racism is a major problem in New York and America,” Sanders said. “New York should go forward and not backward, like states that ban similar requirements.”
Such a ban has surfaced as legislation in Florida, for example, where House Bill 999 would ban majors in gender studies, critical race theory, and intersectionality.
Finding Common Ground
While state law is one way to preserve the future of diversity, equity, and inclusion, Hakkola said, colleges looking to entrench these efforts could also consider rebranding by using more-inviting, low-risk language — like “intercultural sensitivity” or “intercultural competence.”
Ultimately, Hakkola said, it is important for both skeptics and supporters of campus diversity efforts to find common ground.
“This fighting will not necessarily come to a conclusion or some kind of compromise unless we are able to talk across our differences,” Hakkola said. “We just have to be open to those conversations.”
Newswise — BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — With National OverTip Day coming up March 10, new research from Binghamton University, State University of New York reveals that employees at public companies tip their taxi drivers more on days when their companies perform well in the stock market.
While the effect on tipping is short-lived, the research finds it is stronger for firms offering more stock-based compensation. These findings have implications for how employees make a local economic impact in the areas where they work.
“Employee spending is a big factor that governments consider when trying to attract companies into their area, as it can stimulate the local economy,” said Cihan Uzmanoglu, an associate professor of finance at Binghamton University’s School of Management.
Uzmanoglu analyzed the GPS and payment data from around 2 million taxi rides that took place in New York City between 2009 and 2016. He focused on pickups that took place between 5 and 6 p.m. (the end of a typical work day and New York Stock Exchange trading hours) within 100 meters of public firms headquartered in NYC to account for the taxi rides of employees. Uzmanoglu then explored how a firm’s stock market performance impacted tipping for taxis taken near its headquarters location.
“The taxi setting is great because you’re unlikely to bump into the same taxi driver again, so how you tip now isn’t going to influence the quality of service the next time you take a taxi,” he said. “How someone tips a taxi driver probably says something about how they feel in that moment — do they feel happier and wealthier? And is that being driven by the stock performance of their employer?”
Uzmanoglu found that when a firm experienced a positive shock to its stock performance, its employees would tip their taxi drivers more. This increase of tipping would only happen on the day of the positive stock performance though, meaning the effect is short lived.
“The short-lived nature seems to suggest that the employee feels good about the stock performance of their company that day, and that happiness is motivating them to tip more,” Uzmanoglu said.
Some other findings:
The effect of stock performance on tipping is greater at firms that offer more stock-based compensation.
The number of taxis taken near a firm’s headquarters increases with the firm’s stock returns.
Increases in tipping also came after a firm’s initial public offering (IPO), particularly at the end of its IPO lock-up period, when employees are allowed to begin selling the stocks they hold in the firm.
Uzmanoglu also found that tipping does not decrease significantly when firms’ stocks perform poorly.
“There seems to be a socially acceptable minimum tipping amount that people follow, regardless of stock performance. So when you have a bad day in the stock market, I don’t see people tipping less than this socially acceptable benchmark,” he said.
Uzmanoglu ran a number of checks to test the strength of his findings by looking at tipping activity at different times of the day and in wider perimeters around the companies he studied.
“The further you get away from the physical locations of these companies, as well as the end of the work and trading day, the more the effect decays. This just points to the conclusion that the increase in tipping behavior is coming from employees of these firms,” he said.
Uzmanoglu said these findings could have broader implications about the impact businesses have on the community around them.
“Employee spending is an important economic driver for the location where a business is located. If employees are doing well, they are likely to spend more money in that local economy,” he said. “While I just looked at taxi rides here, these findings may indicate that the stock performance of a firm may influence the overall discretionary spending of employees.”
Some key numbers are moving in the right direction at the University of Oregon. The flagship institution enrolled 5,338 freshmen in the fall of 2022, its largest entering class ever. First-year enrollment increased 16 percent over 2021, which was also a record year. Meanwhile, Western Oregon University, a regional public institution an hour’s drive north, just outside Salem, lost nearly 7 percent of its enrollment over the same period.
For more analyses that will help you anticipate and respond to key developments in higher education, read on.
The good times/bad times dynamic is playing out elsewhere in the state, with total enrollment since 2010 at Oregon’s regional public colleges down more than 18 percent, while it’s up more than 17 percent at the state’s flagships. In 28 states, flagships have seen enrollment rise between 2010 to 2021, while regionals have trended down, according to a Chronicle analysis of U.S. Education Department data. Across all states, enrollment at 78 public flagships rose 12.3 percent from 2010 to 2021, the most recent year for which data is available. Enrollment at 396 public regional universities slumped more than 4 percent during the same period.
Enrollment is perhaps only the most tangible and consequential measure of the diverging fortunes of, and increasingly fierce competition between, flagships and regionals. Flagships typically dominate the attention of elected officials and ordinary citizens in their states. They’re the marquee institutions, the research centers, the academic powerhouses, the foundation of a statewide alumni base, and often the state’s athletics brand, too.
But the workhorses of public higher education in most states are the regional public universities, the less renowned four-year institutions with teaching missions that exist in the shadows of the flagships’ spotlight. And shifting demographics, reduced levels of state support, and hobbled state oversight have led many regional universities to suffer.
Losing even relatively few students can present challenges for a regional public college. Not only are many state-funding formulas based on enrollment, but with state dollars per full-time student effectively flat from two decades ago, public colleges are more dependent on tuition dollars than ever. “We’re asked to support students who have historically been unserved or underserved,” says Jesse Peters, Western Oregon’s president, “while at the same time we’re planning to reduce our spending, which in higher ed, is largely spending on employees.” Many of the cuts are likely to come in student-facing positions.
Competition for students and resources between flagships and regional colleges is nothing new, but it’s grown more lopsided than the jockeying that has gone on in the past, experts say. The divide between haves and have nots in public higher education is widening, making it harder for regional institutions to serve their mission.
Competition between flagships and regionals didn’t matter as much when public higher education was booming, says John R. Thelin, a professor emeritus of educational policy studies and evaluation at the University of Kentucky, and a historian of higher education. During the long post-World War II boom of American prosperity, public higher education expanded with the population and the economy, and there were plenty of students and tax dollars to go around.
Even during the early years of the 21st century, flagships and regionals still operated in a growth mode premised on, and promising, a brighter future. “Not everybody’s getting all that they want, particularly from, let’s say, state budgets,” Thelin says of public institutions in those years. “But they’re all gaining, so you can live with the inequities, as long as your own institution is still growing and ascending.”
Competition between flagships and regional colleges is nothing new, but it’s grown more lopsided.
The 2008-9 recession devastated state support for higher ed and flattened the curve of long-term financial growth.
In 2003, local, state, and federal governments spent about $9,300, adjusted for inflation, on education appropriations per full-time equivalent, including financial aid, according to an analysis by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association. In 2021,spendinghad only just caught up to the 2003 level.
The recession initially helped bolster enrollments, as companies shed jobs and students flocked to colleges to wait out the storm. But shifting demographics threaten the once seemingly bottomless bounty of traditional-age college students. Nathan D. Grawe, a professor of economics at Carleton College, has projected that more than half of the states will have 15-percent fewer collegebound students by 2029.
If the flagship is gaining big enrollments in a state that is not having an overall growth in high-school graduates, it’s “poaching from the other institutions,” he says, “because it’s probably recruiting and enrolling students who probably were historically matched for the regionals.” Many state coordinating boards used to keep that poaching under control by negotiating with all the public colleges to set enrollment goals. Leaders could be penalized not only if they undershot them, but also if they exceeded them, Thelin says. Coordinating boards could also keep colleges from duplicating programs that existed at nearby institutions and prevent public colleges from establishing branch campuses were they might compete with existing institutions.
LJ Davids for The Chronicle
A Chronicle analysis of federal data showed, for example, that in Michigan, a state being hit hard by demographic shifts and with no central higher-ed authority, the flagship University of Michigan at Ann Arbor saw undergraduate enrollment rise 16 percent between 2010 and 2020. Over the same period, it fell at 11 of the state’s 12 other four-year public campuses. Eastern Michigan University, in Ypsilanti, between Ann Arbor and Detroit, lost 31 percent of its enrollment. Central Michigan University, in Mt. Pleasant, near the geographical center of the lower peninsula, lost 39 percent.
In some states, heightened competition is also affecting flagships as they vie with each other. Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, a 52-year old collaboration between two flagships that functioned as an open-access regional institution in the state’s capital, announced last year that its partnership would dissolve, and Indiana University and Purdue would both maintain presences in the city more closely tied to their own brands and agendas. Some public regionals, on the other hand, are seeing the need to cooperate. Pennsylvania, for example, is combining six of its regional universities into two new institutions, in hopes of keeping institutions with faltering enrollments open while continuing to serve those areas of the state.
But using the competition for students as a reason for regionals’ faltering is “a bit of a red herring,” Koricich says. Bringing in more students wouldn’t be so important to flagships or regional colleges if public higher education were adequately funded. With more public-college budgets dependent on tuition, increasing enrollment is the only reliable way to grow or, in many cases, innovate.
Regional universities have contributed to the lopsided competition with flagships through their own hopes to be more like mini-flagships. Most regional institutions started out as teachers’ colleges, with practical missions more akin to those of community colleges — providing access and affordable degrees to local residents. Over the late 20th century and into the early 21st, many regional institutions have undergone mission creep, adding graduate programs and other attributes more common to research universities. The tighter academic job market of the past several decades has filled the faculties of regionals with professors, and eventually administrators, educated at more-prestigious institutions, says Thelin, which creates great faculties but also a more aspirational internal culture.
States also need to take a more active role in protecting, and reimagining, the mission of the regional universities, Koricich believes. “There are communities across this country, including small cities, that will never have population growth ever again,” he says. “That doesn’t mean we don’t need a college. It just means we have to think differently about what kind of college we need.”
While flagships and regionals might be competing with each other, the picture is more complicated. Enrollment dynamics don’t play out solely within a state’s borders.
Last fall, the University of Kentucky welcomed 6,120 freshmen, a record and about a 15-percent increase over the previous record in 2019. Eli Capilouto, the president, says he’s “not so certain we made a heavy dent into our regionals” to achieve that growth. Much of the university’s growth has come from nonresidents, he said. It has enrolled about 21,000 in-state students in the 2022-23 academic year, almost exactly what it enrolled in 2013-14, according to institutional data. The number of out-of-state students has grown, however, to 11,370 from 8,117 in 2013-14, an increase of 40 percent. Capilouto wonders if his institution isn’t benefiting from flagships in other states becoming more crowded and selective: “Are we getting those students who couldn’t get into Ohio State, but, gee, Kentucky’s not such a long drive?”
If a flagship is gaining big enrollments, it’s probably poaching students who were “historically matched for the regionals.”
Capilouto hears the concerns of his colleagues at Kentucky’s regional universities about their enrollments. Four of the state’s six regional institutions lost students over the past decade, according to a Chronicle analysis. The flagship enrolled about 6,100 freshmen last fall, and plans to enroll about that many this year, he says. And just because Kentucky hasn’t hurt for new students in recent years doesn’t mean that Capilouto and his administrators don’t “sit around, waiting anxiously,” wondering “what does our first-semester retention look like?” Serving more students these days means providing more supports and services, and hoping they help.
But Capilouto doesn’t rule out future growth for the flagship so long as it’s “smart growth,” he says. “We want to know that we do have the people and physical infrastructure in place to provide a quality education.”
The range of options afforded to Capilouto and the presidents of most flagships are broader than those available to the leaders of the nation’s regionals confronted with drops in enrollment, especially since those drops make everything about their jobs harder. When Jesse Peters, president of Western Oregon, showed up in Salem last summer to assume his new job, he hoped that his institution would be doing better than it has. About 50 percent of the university’s operating budget comes from the state, so last fall’s 7-percent enrollment drop left it with an $8-million deficit for the current year, on an annual operating budget of about $70 million. “When enrollment declines at a smaller regional university, it seems like that pain is felt very quickly and very seriously,” he says, “because we’re so dependent upon tuition dollars.”
A decade or more ago, regional institutions in a financial bind might have been able to economize on travel or nonessential positions. But after years of cutting and austerity, there’s little fat to trim. At Western Oregon, as enrollment has dropped, inflation has driven up the cost of essentials like energy, food, and construction materials, Peters says. “Putting a roof on a building to maintain it is more than double what it was a year ago.” The needs of the student populations that regionals often serve can also create additional expenses for these institutions, placing them under further financial strain.
Peters and other leaders at Western Oregon are considering how they might be able to build back their enrollment and educate more students. Recruiting more adult learners represents one possibility, but Peters says it isn’t clear that the university could make up the financial difference with this group alone. Working students often require substantial advising and academic support, and since they have busy lives off campus, they won’t help fill Western Oregon’s residence halls.
And then there’s paying to put new ideas into practice. “People can easily say, ‘Well, why don’t you pivot and do these other things?’ And it’s like, we would love to, but we’re also trying to figure out how to survive financially,” Peters says. “It’s not as if we’re not willing to do things differently. But what we need is enough funding to do it.”
Without investment or innovation, lagging regionals are likely to continue losing out to their flashier flagship siblings. And if more students bypass institutions like Western Oregon in favor of the flagship, Peters worries that an important resource for some of the state’s most vulnerable students will continue to weaken. “If we really are serious about increasing the numbers of students from first-generation families and underserved communities who obtain a college degree and change the trajectory of their lives, then the regional universities are the place where that happens,” he says. “Putting us in a position that makes us struggle to accomplish those goals is a sad thing.”
As the saying goes, the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, and the second-best time is right now. In states where elected officials and higher-education leaders let their public colleges build up decades of dysfunction and redundancies — as in Pennsylvania, where 149 public and private colleges serve a population of about 12 million — it’s too late to head off the current problems. Fixing them now will require mustering political will, says Koricich, and that means elected officials or coordinating boards refereeing the competition among institutions, and standing up to the flagships to protect the interests of the regional institutions. “The state has the responsibility to make sure that these institutions are not cannibalizing each other, they’re not spending half their time fighting for resources against the others,” he says. Unfortunately, “you don’t see a lot of states doing that.”
But maybe, rather than appealing to the referee, regional universities need to rethink the game. Before coming to the state-colleges group, Teresa Brown served as an administrator in the State University of New York and University of Wisconsin systems and has seen plenty of competition between public colleges. Given shifting demographics, she thinks regional public universities should be thinking hard about who they serve and how. “Do you, as an institution, try to compete with the flagship?” she says. “Or do you do what a lot of institutions are doing, which is to really be clear about what their mission is as a regional public, serving their particular region?”
Rather than looking to the flagship for cues, regional public colleges should perhaps look to community colleges for inspiration, Brown says. Focus on teaching and local work-force needs. First-time, full-time students are important, of course, but so are adult learners, a vital demographic to meet any state’s work-force goal, and a largely untapped source of enrollment gains. “I don’t believe that there’s a shift from something to something else, like we’re becoming something different,” Brown says. “It’s an embracing of the mission that has always been.”
Rather than looking to the flagship for cues, regional publics should perhaps look to community colleges for inspiration.
A good example of this embrace is the University of West Alabama, in tiny Livingston, near the Mississippi border. The institution sits in a swath of deep rural poverty. Its enrollment has fluctuated over the years, but it grew from 5,094 in 2010 to 5,734 in 2020, an increase of 13 percent, according to a Chronicle analysis of federal data. It did so, in part, by embracing a number of practices more typical of community colleges than of regional universities, according to Tina N. Jones, a professor of English and director of the university’s division of economic outreach and development.
While some regional universities focus on the work force in their areas, West Alabama offers seven two-year programs for credit, such as a popular certified-nursing-assistant program, as well as noncredit certificates. “Many four-year institutions let go of those,” Jones says, “and we never did.” Not only do such programs provide a low-investment path to a job for students, she adds, “some of them do go on and decide, Hey, this is my first step, and now I see that I can actually maybe go on to our two-year nursing program. And then maybe they go on to a four-year program.”
Sumter County, where West Alabama is located, and the surrounding region has lost more than a quarter of its population over the past 50 years, according to U.S. Census data, and shrinking rural communities often lack the kind of civic support that might help connect colleges and employers, to work on economic development in the region. “That’s where my division steps in,” she says. With six full-time staff members, the office does some of the work that the local or state government might otherwise do in courting potential businesses to move to the area. West Alabama participated in persuading Enviva, a company that produces pellets for wood stoves, to build a $180-million facility in Sumter County.
West Alabama also educates many adult learners. As flagships and regional institutions battle over new high-school graduates, degree completers and other adults looking for new careers or reskilling offer a huge opportunity — even as some states consolidate campuses in hopes of keeping them open.
To Koricich, the potential market of adult learners should help college leaders reframe their thinking. “There may be fewer students in graduating high-school cohorts,” he says, “but until your state has 100 percent of people who need a postsecondary credential holding one, you’re not at a shortage for students. Not even close.”
Brian O’Leary and Audrey Williams June contributed to this report.
Newswise — ALBANY, N.Y. – A series of strong storm systems known as “atmospheric rivers” have dumped massive amounts of rain and snow on California since late December, producing deadly flooding, mudslides, severe thunderstorms and tornadoes.
California officials reported on Tuesday that the storms have claimed the lives of at least 17 people, which is more than the death toll of wildfires in the region over the past two years combined. More severe weather is expected to hit this weekend.
Ryan Torn, chair and professor at the University at Albany’s Department of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, is an expert on atmospheric predictability and numerical weather prediction (NWP) models. Currently, he’s leading research in collaboration with the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes that seeks to improve our ability to predict atmospheric rivers along the U.S. West Coast, including where to take additional observations to reduce forecast uncertainty.
The goal is to develop and test targeted airborne and buoy observations over the Northeast Pacific to improve forecasts of where atmospheric rivers will make landfall, and their potential impacts, with lead times of at least one to five days.
“The recent heavy precipitation has helped alleviate some of the multi-year drought for California, yet the precipitation has come too quickly to avoid some of the hazardous impacts, like river flooding and mudslides,” Torn said. “Thankfully, advancements in past and current research of atmospheric rivers have improved our ability to forecast these events, often several days in advance.”
Torn is available for phone or live/taped interviews. UAlbany also has an on-campus television studio for satellite interviews.