Bristol
Community College
Faculty &
Professional Staff Senate Meeting
B113 3:15 p.m.
Senators
in attendance: Betsy Kemper French, Tom Grady, Jeanne Grandchamp, JP
Nadeau, Howard Tinberg, Jim Corven, Susan McCourt , James Pelletier, David Warr, Kelemu Woldegiorgis, Rebecca Clark, Alan Rolfe, Martha
Williams, Robyn Worthington, Sally Gabb, Ron Weisberger, Gina Heaney, Cecil
Leonard, Jennifer Boulay, Cindy Poore-Pariseau,
Sharon Pero, Deb St. George, Johanna Duponte
Excused
Absences: Sandy Lygren, Jim Constantine, Kevin
Forgard, Jean Myles, Sil Ferreira, Paul Robillard
Absences:
Thomas McGarty, Joy Rose
Guests:
7
Special
guests: Associate Vice President of Academics Anthony Ucci & Senator Sharon
Pero
Meeting
called to order 3:15
MINUTES: Minutes from both May 2013 and August 2013 were each
reviewed and each approved unanimously.
MEETING
1) Report from the Joint Governance Committee: Sharon
Pero and Anthony Ucci (Document attached below.) The proposed policy was
discussed by the Senate and guests in full detail. Background on the JGC’s work
and areas where difficulties emerged were given. The implementation process was
difficult, in particular. Should a dashboard be used? A blog? The fact that
both policy and process will be a "cultural change" at the college
was explored. It was indicated by both Acting VP Sethares and Senator Pero that
the intent is for administration, faculty and staff to work on the policy and
process together, try them, evaluate them and change them, making policy and
process more permanent only after full evaluation has been done.
The draft document submitted
in name of the JGC by Acting VP Sethares and Senator Pero will be discusses
fully at the next Senate meeting in order that Senate recommendations might be
sent on. It was indicated that a copy of the document is present as an
attachment in Senators’ email. Senate Vice President Tinberg closed by observing
the momentousness of this occasion, that policy and its process offer a
potentially monumental change in how the college tackles academic
decisionmaking.
2) The Calendar of Meeting Topics for AY2013-2014L
presented by Senate President McCourt was discussed briefly and accepted for
use by Senate.
3) The Strategic Planning and Senate Goals for
AY2013-1014 document, presented by Pres. McCourt was briefly discussed and
accepted for use by Senate.
4) Proposed changes to Senate By Laws: The discussion
revolved around the following: how membership is counted per division; how
difficult counting part-time faculty and staff is; how seniority list is little
help with the process of counting Senate members. The By-Laws Committee
determined to investigate the divisional reports as help with assessing senate
membership.
5) Senate Interest Groups: In recent Senate discussions
stemming from the summer 2013 Senate Retreat meeting, the notion of disbanding
Senate committees no longer used and beginning work on interest groups was
raised Today’s discussion continued on that tack, with the floor being opened
to suggestions of which groups should be added to the draft list currently in
Senators’ possession. The question of where sustainability fits in the interest
group topics was raised. Should this issue have its own interest group? Does it
fit with the mission of an academic Senate? It was suggested that the
sustainability focus of the Senate could insure sustainability would not be overlooked
by academic areas. An ad hoc group was formed to discuss sustainability vis a
vis the Senate Interest groups, with Jim Corven and several Senate constituents
looking to see if and how sustainability fits with the Senate's Interest Group concept
and academic mission.
The consensus of the Senate
being that the Interest Group concept, whereby Senators declare an interest and
follow up on college-wide news breaking that pertains to their interest, be
undertaken, Pres. McCourt agreed to send out email asking Senators to choose an
Interest Group from the list discussed today. She requested first and second
choice and indicated that any Senator not responding with a preference will be
assigned a group. There was a motion to try this process for a year, which
passed unanimously.
Meeting adjourned at 4:14
p.m.
NEXT MEETING: Monday,
October 21st at 3:15 in B113
A Reception followed from
4-4:30 p.m.
ADDENDUM:
Respectfully submitted:
Jeanne P. Grandchamp, Secretary, Faculty & Professional Staff Senate
PROPOSEDACADEMIC INITIATIVE
IMPLEMENTATION GUIDELINES
Submitted September 18, 2013
As a result of information
gathered at the Senate/Administration Round-Table discussions held on May 11
and November 30, 2011, a Joint Administration/Senate Taskforce on Academic Decision Making and
Governance was appointed by the College and Senate presidents to develop a
procedure to better inform the College Community of the academic decision
making process at Bristol Community College. The charge to the taskforce was to:
Establish a clear,
inclusive, closed-loop process for academic decision-making,
including timelines, identification of stakeholders, clear
roles & responsibilities, broad input, and verification
that stakeholder input was heard.
The guidelines included here provide a framework to initiate and
implement academic initiatives and inform stakeholders and other interested
parties. Further, the guidelines will help to
avoid duplication of efforts and to provide guidance along the way to make the
academic decision making process as successful, comprehensive and trouble free
as possible. They are designed to
encourage creativity and foster innovation.
By following these guidelines an initiator can develop consensus earlier
in the process, solicit, confirm institutional support and insure necessary
resources are available for their project.
These guidelines are not designed to replace or supersede any existing
academic policies or requirements (i.e. a new curriculum initiative would have
to follow the CWCC process, a revision to academic policy would need to be
approved by the Academic Standards Committee, etc.).
Section 1: Academic Initiative Definitions
For the
purposes of these guidelines an Academic
Initiative (AI) is defined as any initiative that has a direct or indirect
effect on academic personnel and professional staff. Due the varied level
of impact these types of projects can entail, it is important to define the
different types of AIs. For the purpose
of these guidelines, AIs will be categorized as follows:
Personal/Individual Academic Initiative – This is an AI which, if implemented, would
only affect a single instructors section of a course or a dedicated facility
solely used by a single individual. Implementation
of this type of AI is often protected by Academic Freedom (For Associated MCCC
Contractual Rights & Responsibilities see Article 7.01 - Academic
Freedom) if implemented by a unit member. While it is not necessary to submit a formal
proposal for this type of AI, following these guidelines is still recommended
(especially the guideline associated with reporting) to maintain the integrity
of the college’s academic offerings and to insure the decision is transparent,
inclusive and has the appropriate level of impact. It is also important to understand that while
many AIs are initiated by individuals, they can grow into larger projects.
Departmental/Service
Area Academic Initiative – This is an AI which affects the offerings,
personnel and/or facilities of a single department or service area. In terms of course-level AIs, these would be
limited to projects involving courses that appear in a single department’s
offerings or as a generic elective in another program.
Divisional
Academic Initiative – This is an
AI which affects the offerings, personnel and/or facilities of multiple departments
or service areas. These would include
projects involving courses that are required courses and/or prerequisites for
courses in programs offered by other departments and divisions.
College-wide Initiative – This is an AI which affects the offerings,
personnel and/or facilities of many departments or service areas. These would include but are not limited to
projects involving, new programs, general education competencies, courses
sequences which appear in multiple programs, changes in placement policies or
facilities that are available for use by the entire staff or student body.
System-wide Academic Initiative – This is an AI which has impacts beyond the
institution and may impact offerings a multiple institutions. It is important to understand that these are
often initiated and controlled by agencies external to the college and are thus
beyond the scope of these guidelines. It
is understood however, that while external agencies may not require it, the
College is committed to following an inclusive, transparent process similar to
the process described in these guidelines as circumstances allow.
Section 2: Establishing
an Initiative
STEP 1 – The
Academic Initiative
The first step of the process is
to develop a clear and easily communicable concept of what this initiative will
entail. To do this an Academic Initiative
Proposal form (attached) must be completed by the prime contact person for the
initiative (lead faculty member or administrator). This form must include the following:
·
Working Project Title – expresses the nature of the initiative
clearly and concisely & may be changed prior to final implementation.
·
Working Project Summary – a brief description of project including
any resources (funds, personnel, facilities, etc.) which appear to be necessary
for the project’s success which will be modified throughout the process based
on stake holder responses.
·
Due
Date – include an explanation why a decision must be made by
this date. A review period of two
weeks is recommended unless quicker responses are necessary.
·
Population(s) to be Served –
stated population is congruent with college’s mission and strategic plan
·
Estimated
Budget & Source of Funding – either identified or requested
This form is
meant primarily as an internal communication tool so please keep it simple and
use clear language. This proposal
form is then forwarded to the appropriate Academic Leadership depending on
which type of academic initiative is being proposed
Step 2 –
Approval to Investigate
Departmental/Service Area Academic Initiatives
|
It is
essential for an initiator to notify and receive approval to investigate from the Department Chair, Program
Coordinator or Department before proceeding along the implementation process.
|
Divisional Academic Initiatives
|
The
initiator must notify and receive approval
to investigate from both the Department and appropriate Academic
Dean.
|
College-wide Initiatives
|
The
initial stage is to inform college-wide academic governance agencies. These include the Academic Affairs Vice
President’s Council (AAVPC) and the Faculty and Professional Staff
Senate. In the early stages of the
implementation process, it may also be important to include applicable
Governance Committees and/or Union Representation (if the AI has the potential
of impacting work responsibilities and/or working conditions specifically
covered by existing contracts).
|
Whenever
possible it is preferred that initiatives receive the approval of the larger
group (Department, Division, Committee, etc.) but, if circumstances do not
allow for this, a chair’s approval is acceptable, with the understanding that
it is the initiator’s responsibility to disseminate it to the wider
audience. Individual signatures are not
required at the investigative stage but evidence of approval should be recorded
in written form of some type (blog, email, memo, meeting minutes, etc.). The primary
purpose of this stage of the process is to define responsibility, insure
transparency and inclusivity (i.e. identification of stake holders) and to determine
the next step in the process. In each of
these cases it is understood that Approval to Investigate Does NOT
Constitute Final Approval.
Step 3 – Implementation Team
Academic
Initiative requires someone to take
ownership of the project and accept the responsibilities of developing
consensus among stake holders, determining all necessary information, making
sure the projects is in compliance with college policies and inform the wider
college community of project impacts. To
do the creation of an Implementation Team is suggested. The team composition is suggested:
·
Lead Faculty or Professional Staff
·
Lead Administrator
·
Students Services Representative (if AI has a significant SS Component)
·
Committee Representative (if AI is associated with a Standing
Committee Function)
In addition other members of the
community or other agencies or institutions may be included depending on the
nature of the AI being investigated and implemented
Section 3: A Transparent
and Inclusive Process
Transparency
and inclusion are
necessary components of an effective College Governance system that values
Shared Governance-Shared Responsibility (For Associated MCCC Contractual Rights & Responsibilities see Article 4A.01 - College Governance). The system must be responsive to stakeholders
as a matter of everyday process. Communication
of AIs and their status is an ongoing
process as the proposal moves forward. There are many communication
formats to that can be used to provide this including:
·
Department
& Division Meetings
·
Committee
Meetings
·
Professional
Staff & All-Academic Area Meetings
·
Web Based Tool
o Academic Affairs Blog
o @ Everyone e-mails
o Bristol Buzz
o Angel Community Spaces
o Sharepoint
The purpose of this proactive communication
is to inform stakeholders of the initiative & engage feedback at designated
benchmarks to better inform the initiative. This allows for broad input and promotes a culture of accountability.
Initiators are
urged to:
1. Use a Systems
Perspective rather than a Linear Process. This means
to look at initiatives through the perspective of how they affect the whole with
each action having a counteraction to consider.
2. Use technology for
dissemination of information, gathering feedback, and providing status updates to move
the process along in a timely manner. An even faster process (fast
track) may need to be established for very time sensitive decisions.
3. Make data-driven decisions. Take advantage of existing sources of
information including Institutional Research, the Office of Grant Development,
Student Services and Graduate Information gathered by Alumni Relations, The
Perkins Grant (for Employment Information) and the Office of Transfer Affairs
It is the
initiator’s responsibility (with the assistance of their Initiation Team) to
insure that all important stake holders have an opportunity to provide their
feedback, to verify
that stakeholder input was heard and to incorporate that feedback into
the proposal where appropriate. Stake
holders are obligated to provide their feedback quickly, concisely and in a
constructive fashion. If this type of
feedback is withheld or significantly delayed the academic implementation team
will re-direct efforts to encourage greater participation. This should be a
proactive process and Failure to Receive a Response does NOT Constitute Support. An initiative does not require 100% approval,
but must take all concerns into account prior to further implementation.
These
guidelines do not restrict, reduce or eliminate the administrations management
rights. Final decision on any AI will
require sign offs by the Academic
Leadership including Dean and Department Chair at the program level, AVP and
the CAO at Divisional Level with the final decision on all AIs resting with the
President or his designee (For Associated MCCC Contractual Rights & Responsibilities see Article 4.01 - The Rights & Responsibilities of the Employer). To
maintain transparent and inclusive policy of SG-SR decisions will be made
public with associated rationales/justification for the decisions that were
made.
Section 4: Communication
& Continuous
Performance Improvement
For this process to
be fully effective the Initiator/Implementation Team must provide regular updates
to the college community. While numerous
formats are available (see Section 3: A Transparent and Inclusive Process) and their use is strongly encouraged, it is
essential that these updates occur as part of the existing Academic Affairs
reporting structure.
Lastly, to fully
realize the long-lasting benefits of any AI, Academic Affairs must adopt a policy
of proactive Outcome Assessment and Performance Improvement. This means
that there is never an end to the process because it is imperative to always go
back and recheck the processes and as one solution is found, it may affect other
processes within the system.
Figure 1: Academic Decision Making Process
It should not
be a “closed” process, rather an
“open” process with a closed loop. Therefore, pilot initiatives must be
evaluated before being fully implemented and ongoing AIs must be evaluated at
designated intervals. This should always
include feedback from stakeholders.
While this is being accomplished at the program level with Academic
Program Review, additional evaluation processes should be established so that all initiatives are
reviewed and data generated closes the feedback loop to continue, modify or
even halt the AI.
This form is provided as an example of one
method how these guidelines could be implemented
ACADEMIC INITIATIVE
PROPOSAL
Primary
Initiator(s):
Department/Division:
Telephone
# & Extension: Date:
Email:
Initial
Proposal
Working
Title of Proposed Project:
Working Summary
of Project – Include required resources (not to exceed one page
in length):
Due Date
(please indicate if fixed & why):
Identified
or requested funding source:
Approval(s)
to Investigate:
Dept. Chair/Program Coordinator or Dept. (Date of Mtg.)
Required for all Departmental, Divisional, &
College-wide Academic Initiatives
Academic Dean or Division (Date of Mtg.)
Required for all Divisional & College-wide Academic
Initiatives
President of F&PS Senate or
Senate (Date of Mtg.)
Required for all College-wide Academic Initiatives
Academic VP or
AAVPC (Date of Mtg)
Required for all College-wide Academic Initiatives
NOTE: Approval to Investigate Does NOT Constitute Final Approval
Academic
Affairs Stake Holders & Responses:
Chair/Coordinator of , Date:
(Program) (Name)
Support
Support with reservations/qualifications (see
response) Do not Support (explain)
Response:
Director of , Date:
(Service
Area) (Name)
Support
Support with reservations/qualifications (see
response) Do not Support (explain)
Response:
Repeat for multiple Chair, Coord. & Director
& expand section as necessary
Chair of , Date
of Comm. Mtg.:
(Committee) (Name)
Support
Support with reservations/qualifications (see
response) Do not Support (explain)
Response:
Repeat
for multiple Committees & expand section as necessary
Dean of , Date
of Div. Mtg.:
(Division) (Name)
Support
Support with reservations/qualifications (see
response) Do not Support (explain)
Response:
Repeat
for multiple Divisions & expand section as necessary
President of F&PS Senate or
Senate (Date of Mtg.)
Support
Support with reservations/qualifications (see
response) Do not Support (explain)
Response:
Expand
section as necessary
Other
Stake Holders & Responses (Include all that apply):
NOTE: Failure to Receive a Response does NOT Constitute Support
Implementation
Team Leader:
Department/Division:
Telephone
# & Extension: Date:
Email:
Implementation
Team Members(if applicable):
Final Proposal
Project
Title:
Project
Summary (not to exceed one page in length):
Dedicated
Resources:
Implementation
Date:
Population
to be served:
Project Budget: $
Funding
Source:
Required
Signatures & Rationales:
Academic Dean Date:
Approved
Disapprove
Rationale:
Expand
section as necessary
Academic AVP Dean Date:
Approve
Disapprove
Rationale:
Expand
section as necessary
Academic VP Dean Date:
Approve
Approve with Modifications Disapprove
Modifications and Rationale:
Expand
section as necessary
President of College Date:
Approve
Approve with Modifications Disapprove
Modifications and Rationale:
Expand
section as necessary
Please send completed form to Central Academic Affairs, D203, or
e-mail to: Academics@BristolCC.edu
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