"The University has adopted a wide-ranging new academic vision to shape its next decade of progress."
http://today.uconn.edu/blog/2014/04/uconn-adopts-bold-academic-vision/
I congratulate your university for the adoption of your new academic vision. Although athletics, economics, geography, population, etc. are critical factors in B1G expansion, it is of vital importance to the Presidents and Chancellors of the B1G that any candidate university be an academic and cultural fit for the conference.
A few selections from your new academic vision that speak to your university as being an academic and cultural fit for the B1G.
http://academicvision.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/643/2014/04/academic-plan-single.pdf
"As our state’s flagship public University, and as a land and sea grant institution, we promote the health and well-being of citizens by enhancing the social, economic, cultural, and natural environments of the state and beyond."
"A top flagship university provides access to a rich campus experience and offers lifelong learning opportunities to traditional and nontraditional students alike. It is a center of excellence for graduate and professional education, research, and scholarship—creating knowledge and innovation that fundamentally improves learning and the way people live. An internationally renowned university excels in the arts and sciences, dynamically enhancing the way our graduates understand and experience their world. Finally, a top public state university serves its citizens in a multiplicity of useful ways."
"The initiatives noted in our plan should and will play a major role in moving the University toward its vision of joining the ranks of the greatest public research universities in the world."
Although you can better speak to the vision of the leadership of your university as it relates to conference realignment, from my vantage point this new academic vision aligns exceptionally well with the other universities of the B1G if it is the intention of your leadership to seek membership for UConn in the conference.
I think you have the cause and effect backwards. The commitment is being made with the intention of being one of the top universities in the world. It has nothing to do with playing football with Ohio State.

The document itself is mostly platitudes, but the reality is that Herbst is trying to drive UConn to the next level. I don't think it is much of a secret that this is Herbst's plan on conference realignment. Per the other thread, WhartonHusky was getting a similar message, and I have heard second hand from people that have met with senior administration members in recent months that this is the plan. Herbst believes she can drive the academic (edited from earlier post) profile high enough that, together with the strong basketball and adequate football, it will be hard to ignore us. Her first responsibility is to the academics anyway.
I think you have the cause and effect backwards. The commitment is being made with the intention of being one of the top universities in the world. It has nothing to do with playing football with Ohio State.
Thank you Mr. Delaney for participating in our discussion.
We have post-tenure review all the time, and it's not about accountability. I dare say if there was anything tied to employment prospects with post-tenure review, then UConn's academic reputation would plunge. The reviews are conducted by other faculty, and they are wrapped up in accreditation efforts (in other words, we have to account for our production all the time for accreditation, so a post-tenure review is relatively easy to do since we'll be using the same systems to conduct the review). This will not have ramifications on people's jobs. The only thing I saw there that made me raise my eyebrows is the idea of a teaching faculty taking on additional courses. That would strike me as something UConn should not want to do because it is something only teaching institutions do, and it degrades the reputation of UConn's departments. Certainly isn't anything that a B1G school would have, since faculty in each and every department are expected to conduct research of one kind or another. No research university I know has any contingency plan for such things. Usually, people who have no interest in research end up in administration anyway.
Right. It's all about playing football with... Michigan.
Go Blue.
More classic Muntz.
"The priority is academics, but they are also hoping it helps to improve our standing for conference realignment."
"This has nothing to do with conference realignment."
But Nelson, those two statements contradict eachother.
"You're stupid"
I agree that her plan is to boost academics for the sake of improving the university. That should be her goal as president, but athletics plays a key role in that by providing visibility, revenue, and desirability (ironically). The manner in which they are improving on academics, the focus of the investments, and the fact they keep telling everybody about it, shows they realize this is an important piece to a B1G invitation. And like you said, they'll need the money, so a B1G invitation is an important goal. Playing football with Ohio State is an important part of this. You keep lecturing us about UConn needing more revenue. Gaining admission into the B1G gets us more revenue.
I'm certain Herbst has an idea of what we need to do to get an invite. I doubt Delaney said "do x, y, and z and you're in". But it's reasonable to assume she was told, by someone or some group involved, "The presidents have concerns about x, y, and z. If those can be addressed, then UConn will be more attractive." Obviously I don't know if that happened. But it's reasonable to believe that conversations between Ward/Herbst and Delaney and/or his representatives led to something more than:
"Hey can we get an invite to the party?"
"Nah bro."
Louisville doesn't have the academics we do. They didn't need to. They are located in the south, have a larger football stadium with a longer history, more credibility, and a fanbase that travels better. Combined with other sports, including basketball, that are excellent, they didn't need to push the academics. They also weren't getting into the Big no matter what. UConn is in the conversation for the B1G.
Um, it's "DelanY".

You are right. Herbst is doing all this to get us into the Big 10.
I agree that her plan is to boost academics for the sake of improving the university. That should be her goal as president...
Right on. Don't forget, we'd bring all of New England with us.If you get the invite to the Big Ten I wouldn't be surprised to see a couple Big Ten presidents standing with Delany at the welcome ceremony. The energy that UConn possesses right now, both in academics and athletics, would be a good shot in the arm for the Big Ten. I think the old-guard in the Big Ten have noticed and will look beyond the AAU issue.
I know most posters on this board thing that everything revolves around athletics, but I am sorry to disappoint you when I point out that Herbst and the Trustees are not doing this "in the hopes of getting a Big 10 bid". A Big 10 invitation is tertiary to what Herbst is doing. The Foundation is telling people that Herbst's plan for the university will have the ancillary benefit of making UConn more attractive for conference realignment. I don't know if I agree with that, since the last time UConn lost in realignment it was to a glorified community college, but it is a plan and something UConn is doing anyway.
Herbst's plan is a really big deal, basically unprecedented. Schools rarely move up the prestige academic rankings. Also, almost every state is cutting support for their universities while Malloy is committing over a billion when our state finances aren't in the best shape. All of this is pretty cool if it works, and unlike 90% of this board, I would rather have UConn considered in the same breath as Texas and Michigan academically than for football, if I had to choose one. But there are risks.
Often, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. I think the ongoing efforts are tied to getting into an optimum conference. Aside from TV revenue, there are many academic and research synergies. But at the end of the day, UConn will be a better university for it. Lastly, I don't want to imply that SH deserves all the credit, because many people have worked hard over the past 20+ years to get UConn where it is in terms of academics and national stature.
I agree and LOVE the focus and the job that President Herbst is doing. This is what the University should have been doing 30 years ago.
Academics is the focus and raising UCONN to the level of UVA, UNC, Michigan, Texas is where we belong and need to get to.
If we do the right things in this respect and can also improve fottball, then we will succeed in Conf. Re-Alignment.
Upstater,
I think all universities are going to be moving away from a business model where faculty work 30 hours a week and have lifetime employment. Or one where the professors that are working full time are mostly moonlighting in corporate or publishing. It is simply not sustainable any more.
I work 6 hours a week. 30 is way too taxing for the important work we do. But I'll say this: it's all a joke anyway. What you posted above is a total joke and you wouldn't know the first thing about Higher Education.
The elbow-pad wall of silence rears its ugly head. The part I don't get about academics is why so many of you blindly defend colleagues who are so transparently mailing it in. If I was to walk down the hall at Monteith right now, what percent of tenured professors would be in their office, teaching a class, or at some definable location performing original research? Half? Two thirds?
The business faculty generally work a lot harder, for themselves in most cases. There are plenty of millionaires among the faculty at top business schools who use their affiliation with a top program to reap in the cash on consulting engagements.
Man, we'll never get an invite if we can't spell his name correctly. We're doomed!Um, it's "DelanY".
Me and a fellow UCONN alum living here in Reno enjoyed a lovely free lunch from our Arizona fan/friend who made the same bet with us!After betting who would go farther in tourney, a buddy of mine who is Michigan grad recently treated me to nice lunch to satisfy our wager.
Jerry, I think this is it exactly. You've got folks on either extreme thinking it's all for academics or all for athletics, but you've got it spot on. They need each other to raise the overall bar. After UCONN's initial men's basketball success the applications rose big time which allowed the school to be more selective in who they accepted. That started the upward trending of student quality and the impression of UCONN as an academic institution. I think Pres. Herbst knows how this works. Raise the academics and raise our profile. An increased profile and athletic success makes us a viable candidate to a better conference which ultimately increases our revenue and keeps the cycle going.I like to think that the academic and athletic departments have a symbiotic relationship...
She's also doing something that has been her absolute primary focus since she came here, and that is to shore up the schools endowment, which is only $300 million and change. If there is anything that has kept UCONN out of a big time conference, that's it. Any conference wanting us also wants us to have bucks in the bank, even lowly Louisville has an endowment over $1 billion and Maryland's is approaching $1 billion. Michigan's is something like 8 or 9 billion. All the talk of investing billions for athletics and academics and marketing us to the general public is all fine and dandy but it doesn't do if SH can't market UCONN to major corporations and wealthy alumni to get the donations she needs. To give you guys an idea of where UCONN stands right now, Sacred Heart has an endowment of just over $100 million, UMASS has an endowment of $230 million and Fairfield University's is almost $300 million. What the state needs to do more than just legislate building funds, etc is to light fires under the wealthier corporations in the state and wealthier individuals to donate to the university.Herbst is doing what she can to market our great university to the general public. State of CT needs to commit even more resources to help UCONN grow. I hope we end up in a conference with similar universities and that's clearly the B1G.
I know there are a lot of ways to donate to UCONN. How would you donate just to the endowment? Would they take $100 from someone or is endowment some kind of different beast? Clearly I know very little about it.She's also doing something that has been her absolute primary focus since she came here, and that is to shore up the schools endowment, which is only $300 million and change.
She's also doing something that has been her absolute primary focus since she came here, and that is to shore up the schools endowment, which is only $300 million and change. If there is anything that has kept UCONN out of a big time conference, that's it. Any conference wanting us also wants us to have bucks in the bank, even lowly Louisville has an endowment over $1 billion and Maryland's is approaching $1 billion. Michigan's is something like 8 or 9 billion. All the talk of investing billions for athletics and academics and marketing us to the general public is all fine and dandy but it doesn't do if SH can't market UCONN to major corporations and wealthy alumni to get the donations she needs. To give you guys an idea of where UCONN stands right now, Sacred Heart has an endowment of just over $100 million, UMASS has an endowment of $230 million and Fairfield University's is almost $300 million. What the state needs to do more than just legislate building funds, etc is to light fires under the wealthier corporations in the state and wealthier individuals to donate to the university.
I would just send her a check, plain and simple. Hey, who knows, maybe she'd send me some season tickets. LOL!I know there are a lot of ways to donate to UCONN. How would you donate just to the endowment? Would they take $100 from someone or is endowment some kind of different beast? Clearly I know very little about it.
I hear what you are saying but as I said, it doesn't mean . Oh maybe it helps down the road but cabbage in the bank, real-estate holdings, etc is what counts. That being said, Susan Herbst, IMO is doing great job. She will have our endowment over $1 billion in 5 years or less.State support though is more important than endowments. Louisville has 3x the endowment of many AAU schools, but where is the state support. It's practically non-existent. The yearly state support for UConn is equivalent to a $7-8 billion endowment. And that's not including UConn2000 or the recent initiative. Louisville's state appropriation, in contrast, is equivalent to a $3 billion endowment. The school gets half the support that UConn does.
The elbow-pad wall of silence rears its ugly head. The part I don't get about academics is why so many of you blindly defend colleagues who are so transparently mailing it in. If I was to walk down the hall at Monteith right now, what percent of tenured professors would be in their office, teaching a class, or at some definable location performing original research? Half? Two thirds?
The business faculty generally work a lot harder, for themselves in most cases. There are plenty of millionaires among the faculty at top business schools who use their affiliation with a top program to reap in the cash on consulting engagements.