Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Plan to divide shared FSU-FAMU engineering program sparks debate

This college is a failed one (despite claims otherwise in the article below), but that is another subject.  Read this article and ask yourself this.  Why would FAMU, or ANY university, NOT want it's own College of Engineering (COE).  What does that say about FAMU?  Why would any school want to FORCE the relationship?  How healthy is that?

African American students deserve better than 'leaders' afraid to go it on their own.  It sends a very sad message.

Plan to divide shared FSU-FAMU engineering program sparks debate

"TALLAHASSEE — A behind-the-scenes effort to divide an engineering program shared by Florida State University and Florida A&M University is igniting a lingering debate about racial inequality and how state resources are allocated in higher education.

State Sen. Joe Negron says the plan will allow the universities' "good" joint College of Engineering to morph into "great" individual programs. FAMU would keep the existing building on a remote part of FSU's campus and current state funding; FSU would get $13 million to begin the multi-year process of creating a new program in a new building.
"The important thing for FAMU is there is no reduction whatsoever for the College of Engineering at FAMU, they will continue to be funded at the current level," Negron, R-Stuart, said.
According to the Board of Governors, FAMU had 369 engineering students in undergraduate and graduate programs in 2013 and FSU had 2,142.
FAMU opposes the measure and so does Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, who believes the historically black university and its supporters are being forced to fight the same battles they lost nearly 50 years ago.
Joyner was part of the last class at FAMU's law school in 1968 before the Legislature transferred its funding to a new FSU law school. It took FAMU more than 30 years to get funding to re-establish the program — in Orlando.
"I thought that we were beyond this," said an exasperated Joyner, describing the plan as "catastrophic" for FAMU. "I've lived this once."
She believes the state is trying to fix something that isn't broken. The FAMU-FSU College of Engineering is thriving, Joyner said, and this plan would create a "two-tier system" with competition for funding and resources.
"Somebody's going to suffer, and it's going to be FAMU," Joyner said.
The split is being pushed by FSU advocates, who believe the university should have a standalone engineering school as it pursues a top 25 ranking. Although the university's partnership with FAMU has been steady recently, FAMU's administrative and financial issues have at times caused strain.
Sen. John Thrasher, arguably FSU's highest profile supporter in the Legislature and a rumored candidate for the school's presidency, is championing the plan and has filed an amendment to the budget that would increase FSU's allocation for the new engineering school from $10 million to $13 million.
The Senate is scheduled to debate the budget Thursday. Specific language about how the separation would occur has not been crafted.
Thrasher downplayed concerns about creating costly, duplicative engineering programs in Tallahassee even as the state attempts to limit universities' ability to raise tuition and insists tough times should require schools to make hard decisions about how they use resources. The state should be willing to spend additional money to support programs at FSU and FAMU, Thrasher said, especially since creating graduates in science, technology, engineering and math are a high priority.
"I think it would increase the number of total engineers graduating from the programs, and that's a positive thing for our state," Thrasher said.
Right now, the proposal only exists in the Senate's version of the budget. But if it gains steam, it is likely to create a rift between the Legislature's Republican majority and the black caucus, which is heavily Democrat.
Rep. Alan Williams, chair of the black caucus and a FAMU alum, says that fight should be avoided.
"I don't think we should venture down the road that we went down in 1968 when funding for the law school was lost," said Williams, D-Tallahassee. "We are stronger together when we are apart."


Message Board Insights

NoleOne
4/3/2014

"According to the Board of Governors, FAMU had 369 engineering students in undergraduate and graduate programs in 2013 and FSU had 2,142."

15% of the students at the FAMU/FSU College of Engineering are FAMU students.

85% of the students at the FAMU/FSU College of Engineering are FSU students.

FAMU, the institution representing 15% of the students, currently controls and manages the college. FAMU wants to follow their HBCU tradition while FSU is aggressively enhancing STEM while pursuing admission to the AAU. How is this arrangement equitable to FSU students and the fulfillment of FSU's mission of developing nationally competitive programs that stimulate the state economy?

The missions of FAMU and FSU are simply not compatible for a joint program, especially one that is run by FAMU.

The state of Florida would be better off if the program were split, as FSU could follow its mission of developing nationally competitive programs that stimulate the state economy, not merely catering to one particular group. FAMU could continue to follow its mission of catering to the HBCU group.

If FAMU's specialized goal is that important then let FAMU run an HBCU-style school on their own and have FSU run an engineering school that complements FSU's mission."

Sawyer55
4/3/2014

"So FSU had a:

*Med School in the 1800s (yes, 1800s) in some form that disappeared (don't remember how). Not it is back, but has a LIMITED mission.

*FSU had a College of Journalism taken away in the 1950s by UF grads in state leg. Still gone. UF has one of best programs in the nation.

*FSU had Eng. taken away in 1971. Now it 'shares' with FAMU.

UF has done a GREAT job at holding FSU back.

Unless FSU can add a full mission to the Med School or get it's own Eng. school, UCF and FIU will eventually pass FSU in research awards ALONG with USF, Miami, and UF.

FSU shouldn't be 4th in the state now and it absolutely can't afford to fall to 7th in the state. Keep in mind this is in a state that is week when it comes to research.

If Thrasher can pull of this miracle, I am thrilled, but I think it is a hail mary type effort honestly. I almost thing keeping this quiet is the best chance for it to happen."




 

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