Some very valid points about FSU's academic direction and current leadership.
Interim Provost
pauldirac
4/2/2014
"Well, I see little reason to be excited with a Provost
who comes from an arts performance and education background given the problems I
see with low expectations and weak management of departments on campus. FSU
suffers from a cultural problem on campus where the administration has been
doing little more than encourage a thousand flowers to bloom and where subpar
performance in research and scholarship is not only tolerated but is even
encouraged -- especially in what should be considered the university's key
engines for research funding, engineering and medicine. McRorie may be a
terrific cheerleader for faculty, and she is certain to want to encourage
flowers to bloom everywhere on campus (she has celebrated faculty receiving
recognition awards everywhere), but we so far I don't see Barron or any of his
acolytes do anything to really move the ball forward for us on the front of
research and scholarship.
The problem is this: FSU has a let a
thousand flowers bloom problem and Barron basically pandered to the UFF and
helped to fertilize it, not prune it back. Some important strategic decisions
need to be made for our FSU in areas including hiring initiatives, faculty
evaluation and tenure standards, and expectations for research and scholarship.
More than anyone on campus, a provost sets and implements these standards and
recruits faculty and sets expectations for them across campus. I've been
claiming for years now that grant funding is one area where FSU has not
requirement any faculty, effectively, and I see little indication that this is
changing. Our requirements and expectations as a university for grant funding
remain low in comparison to our peers, and it shows with out tepid growth in
grants over the past decade, when other universities we consider peers have seen
a doubling or tripling in grant funding. FSU is subpar in this area in
comparison to our peers and it remains the most significant barrier to any AAU
invitation. Changing it has to begin with every new faculty member we hire and
how the Provost sets their career expectations and implements them in tenure
review. Does a Provost who comes from an arts performance and education
background carry the weight and stature to set high standards and to implement
them? Will McRorie set high goals for grant funding and published scholarship
for faculty and the institution? We need a strong Provost in terms of academic
expectations, not a weak one. I guess we shall see with time if Stokes or
McRorie can be that person but I hold hopes that a new President will set higher
standards than Barron and his acolytes have to date. "
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