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Tag: University of Michigan

  • Does Stanford Have More Administrators Than Undergrads?

    Does Stanford Have More Administrators Than Undergrads?

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    In an opinion column in The Wall Street Journal on Sunday, former U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos criticized administrative bloat at Stanford University, writing that the institution “employs more administrators than it enrolls undergrads.” DeVos’s commentary, which takes aim at Stanford’s handling of false sexual-assault accusations made by a student, repeats a sentiment that’s circulated in many publications in recent months. The Free Press, for instance, noted that Stanford has nearly enough administrators “for each student to have their own personal butler.”

    That eye-popping claim capitalizes on a frequent criticism of higher ed: that it relies on an ever-increasing tally of administrative staff whose duties are of dubious value, whose often heavy-handed decisions tend to lead to controversy, and whose presence on the nation’s campuses is driving up the cost of college.

    DeVos’s numbers are correct: Stanford enrolled 7,645 undergraduates in the fall of 2021 and employed 8,800 full-time staff members outside of its medical school who didn’t have teaching as a primary duty according to data it reported to the Department of Education. But the numbers also ignore several layers of nuance, one expert says. (While Stanford offered the data, university officials did not respond to a request for comment; the Department of Education referred The Chronicle to a 2022 statement about proposed changes in Title IX guidance.)

    Undergraduate education is only a part of what they do.

    For one thing, Stanford, like many highly selective research institutions, isn’t focused on only the undergraduate experience. “A lot of people don’t understand how a large research university functions, and especially these super-elite ones that have small undergraduate populations,” said Robert Kelchen, a professor of higher education at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. “But even in your big public flagships, undergraduate education is only a part of what they do. There’s a lot of graduate education and a lot of research, and that’s where a lot of the staff and administrators are.”

    That’s true of Stanford, which in the fall of 2022 had 10,035 graduate students and devoted $1.82 billion to externally funded research projects, including its Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, which employed 1,700 people in 2021-22.

    Data from the U.S. Department of Education’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, or Ipeds, doesn’t account for those differences, making it difficult to discern which administrators are working directly with undergraduates or with graduate students or on external research projects. In the fall of 2021 — the most recent data available through Ipeds — Stanford’s payroll included 9,201 full-time staff members outside of the medical school, 8,800 of whom didn’t have teaching as a primary duty. That number has increased by 35 percent in the past decade.

    Included in that total were 294 research staff members and 1,011 people in “management occupations,” which can include chief executives and managers in fund raising, facilities, computer systems, and more, according to the government classification system Ipeds uses. Stanford also employed 1,173 people in “computer, engineering, and science occupations,” a category that includes such positions as customer-support specialists, web developers, architectural drafters, and life-, physical-, and social-science technicians. The university had 703 employees in “office and administrative support occupations,” and — the largest category of staff members — 2,725 people working in business and financial operations. That category can include business managers, project managers, and accountants, Kelchen said. “A lot of what used to be considered just purely staff secretarial support, they’ve moved into this ‘business and financial operations,’” he said. “For example, anything with HR is there; compliance; anyone who touches finance, essentially.”

    DeVos’s column highlights how administrative staffing numbers can easily be turned into grist for a wide variety of criticism. The former secretary, who during her tenure sought to strengthen rules protecting the rights of students accused of sexual assault, wrote about a case at Stanford in which an employee in its housing department was charged with filing false reports of rape. The university spent more than $300,000 on an investigation and improving security measures in the wake of initial claims, which were also part of the impetus for a campus protest. The situation, DeVos wrote, was “complicated by the incessant buildup of nonteaching bureaucrats.”

    Other voices in higher ed have complained about the influence of administrators, but for different reasons. Some professors, for instance, protested Hamline University administrators’ intervention after an art-history lecturer showed a painting of the Prophet Muhammad in an online class (the lecturer’s contract was not renewed; Hamline’s president announced her retirement on Monday). One faculty member wrote in The Chronicle about her “cartoonish cancellation” by University of Michigan administrators when she became the subject of an equity-office investigation there. Meanwhile, some say the proliferation of administrative staff is necessary — because students clamor for more mental-health services, for example.

    In addition to student demand, risk-management and legal concerns can drive some of the growth in administrative positions. Kelchen pointed out that Stanford’s Title IX website lists 20 employees, two of whom are students. “We could have a discussion about whether they should have five or 50″ employees in that office, he said. “But even if they have 50, it’s a small percentage of their staff.”

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    Megan Zahneis

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  • CBS Evening News, November 25, 2022

    CBS Evening News, November 25, 2022

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    CBS Evening News, November 25, 2022 – CBS News


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    Walmart shooter legally bought gun hours before killing; 11-year-old boy surprised by Michigan marching band.

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  • 11-year-old Michigan boy gifted surprise performance by University of Michigan marching band

    11-year-old Michigan boy gifted surprise performance by University of Michigan marching band

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    He may have only been in third grade, but a Michigan boy already knew what he wanted to be when he grew up. Henry Boyer found his passion in the University of Michigan marching band as they performed before a football game.

    In 2020, Boyer wrote the band a letter saying he hoped to sign up one day, and in response, the band sent him a bunch of swag and a card inviting him to audition when he’s older.

    Boyer said he was “surprised and heart-warmed.”

    After that, he asked his mother if he could double up on piano lessons and start learning the drums.

    “Like the card said, ‘Practice hard.’ And I will practice hard,” he said. “I just have a really good feeling that I’m going to be in the marching band.”

    If all goes as planned, Boyer will join the band in the fall of 2029. But CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman and the school decided that it was too long of a wait to see his dream come true.

    So they set up a little surprise. Boyer’s jaw dropped as soon as he saw the marching band play right in front of him. 

    “Henry, this is your Michigan marching band,” said a drum major. “We’re so excited to have you here with us.”

    Last weekend, the band invited the now 11-year-old Boyer to lead the march to Michigan’s stadium.

    “Just seeing the band play right in front of my face, that made me want to join the band even more,” he said.

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  • Michigan State Players Appear To Hurl Punches, Kick Michigan Player In Postgame Fight

    Michigan State Players Appear To Hurl Punches, Kick Michigan Player In Postgame Fight

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    Police are investigating an incident inside the Michigan Stadium tunnel after Michigan State football players surrounded a University of Michigan player and fought him after their team’s loss on Saturday.

    Video — shot by The Detroit News’ Matt Charboneau — shows several Michigan State Spartans players kicking and hurling punches at Michigan Wolverines defensive back Ja’Den McBurrows before he’s eventually tossed to the ground in the tunnel.

    The fight occurred after the Wolverines beat the Spartans 29-7 and comes in the same tunnel where the Michigan team had a heated exchange with the Penn State Nittany Lions football team — whose football coach called the tunnel a “problem” — earlier this month, The Detroit News reported.

    The newspaper reported that in Saturday’s tunnel fight Michigan State players Zion Young and Angelo Grose appeared to be hurling punches at McBurrows.

    Melissa Overton, University of Michigan deputy chief of police, said in a statement that her university’s police department along with Michigan State police are reviewing and investigating what happened in the tunnel on Saturday.

    “Situations like these, and the safety of our community, are taken very seriously,” Overton said.

    University of Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh said two of his team’s players were “assaulted” by Michigan State players and referred to the fight as a “10 on one” situation.

    He added that one of the players — whom he did not name — has a nasal injury that could be a broken nose.

    Michigan Athletic Director Warde Manuel called the altercation unacceptable and said Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren will open an investigation into the fight.

    Michigan State coach Mel Tucker, who appeared to swing at a fan after they reached toward the team, said he didn’t know what happened and referred to the situation as a “heated” one.

    Several Wolverines and Spartans declined to comment on the altercation following the game, The Detroit News reported.

    However, some Michigan players, including Roman Wilson and Darrius Clemons, appeared to reference the fight on Twitter.

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  • Wynton Marsalis joins forces with Michigan Marching Band

    Wynton Marsalis joins forces with Michigan Marching Band

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    ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Wynton Marsalis has done just about everything in the world of music.

    One thing he hasn’t, however, is team up his Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with a college marching band — until now.

    “I’ve never seen a jazz band like ours play with a marching band, where the actual music we’re playing is integrated into the music the band is playing,” Marsalis said during one of his many stops this week in Ann Arbor, where the Grammy and Pulitzer winner is taking part in a weeklong residency at the University of Michigan.

    On Thursday, the 60-year-old Marsalis and members of the JLCO strode onto the Michigan Marching Band’s practice field to rehearse for Saturday’s show. They’ll play during the Michigan football team’s game against Penn State at the 107,000-seat Michigan Stadium.

    The legendary trumpeter opened the rehearsal with a solo that was met with raucous applause from those who packed the field. Afterward, Marsalis was surrounded by band members and others who waited patiently to pose for a picture with him.

    The University Musical Society, a nonprofit affiliated with the University of Michigan and one of the oldest performing arts presenters in the country, brought Marsalis and his orchestra to southeast Michigan for the residency. It includes a pair of concerts at the school’s Hill Auditorium as well as masterclasses and workshops, plus a performance for K-12 students and a visit to a federal prison.

    And, of course, the halftime show at the Big House.

    “Hopefully, you are going to win the game. We know the music is going to be good,” Marsalis jabbed at Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel during a lecture and discussion earlier in the week at the Michigan Theater.

    “That’s the plan,” Manuel said.

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