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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
July
Former president: governing
boards 'need to be re-examined, reformed'
Mark Reutter, Business & Law Editor
(217) 333-0568; mreutter@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| University
of Illinois photo |
| Former
Illinois president Stanley O. Ikenberry is calling
for governing boards of public universities to be
"re-examined and reformed." |
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7/5/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The composition of governing boards of most U.S. public universities
does not reflect the expanded mission, programs and sources of support
of higher education, the former president of the University of Illinois
writes in an article.
Stanley O. Ikenberry, president of the University of Illinois from 1979
to 1995 and currently the Regent Professor at the U. of I.’s Institute
of Government and Public Affairs, said governing boards “need
to be re-examined and reformed” in order to reaffirm and strengthen
the public character of public universities.
“As the funding base of public universities and colleges has diversified,
the accountability obligations of public universities have grown beyond
the ‘state’ to include donors, students and parents who
pay an increasing share of the cost, business partners, the federal
government and other stakeholders,” Ikenberry wrote in the latest
issue of Policy Forum, which is published by IGPA.
The governing structures of most public universities, however, have
lagged behind the rapid changes taking place in higher education, according
to Ikenberry. “Public governing boards tend to be relatively small
– seven to 12 members – with a range of talent and perspectives
that may or may not align with those expanded responsibilities,”
he wrote.
Ikenberry called for a rethinking of the composition of public governing
boards.
“Size of governing boards need to be increased. Sources of appointment
or election must be diversified. A single governor, a single legislative
committee, a single party caucus, should no longer control the composition
of public university governing boards,” he continued.
In an interview, he noted that several public universities around the
country have inherited or moved toward a more diversified board structure.
Penn State’s board, for example, includes six trustees appointed
by the governor, nine trustees elected by alumni, six trustees elected
by state agricultural societies, and six trustees elected to represent
business and industry.
Ikenberry expressed concern that financial pressures, in particular
the reduced priority given higher education by state governments, may
be changing the character of public universities.
“Cuts in state support to public universities have forced tuition
increases, as campuses have attempted to replace lost state revenue,”
he said. “Unfortunately, increases in tuition and fees outpaced
inflation, growth in personal income and virtually every available benchmark.”
As a result, the danger of public universities becoming “less
public” is growing. “Students from upper-income families
are five times more likely to attend college than their counterparts
from the lowest-income quartile,” he wrote.
“Is the ‘public’ mission or character of public colleges
and universities shifting?” Ikenberry asked. “While most
presidents and chancellors might argue, ‘no,’ still, market
forces and competitive instincts are increasingly shaping institutional
policy, priorities and decisions. Public support for strong statewide
policy and coordinating bodies appears to be weakening.”
Most worrisome, he said, the changes in higher education have taken
place “piecemeal – campus by campus, state by state –
absent any overarching design, any significant national debate or studied
assessment of the broader implications.”
Ikenberry called for a national dialogue on the future of public universities.
“The barriers separating state policymakers, business and civic
leaders, academics and the public at large must be broken down, and
a conversation on the future of public higher education begun.”
Following his retirement as Illinois president, Ikenberry was president
of the American Council on Education, an organization representing 1,600
accredited, degree-granting colleges and universities.
His article, “Uncertain and Unplanned: The Future of Public Higher
Education,” can be accessed at www.igpa.uillinois.edu.
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