<p>2006 State of the University Address</p>
<p>Good afternoon.</p>
<p>It was a little over three years ago, with the change in administration, that Florida State University's Board of Trustees committed itself and made it a prerequisite of the new administration to develop a plan of action to raise the academic stature of this institution.</p>
<p>The Board of Trustees acknowledged that Florida State was already an excellent university but believed we could be even better. They wanted a plan that was bold and creative. Most at the time seemed to rally around the goal of AAU membership.</p>
<p>To the Florida State family the goal was broader. It was an effort to make FSU one of the nation's top public graduate research universities. It was a commitment to build an imaginative plan from the ground up, with faculty, staff and student involvement.</p>
<p>If FSU were to be admitted to the AAU, so be it. If not, FSU will be a stronger university because of the joint effort—Pathways of Excellence.</p>
<p>Last year, when we formally announced Pathways of Excellence, we committed ourselves to the specific plan of becoming one of the top research and graduate education institutions in the United States.</p>
<p>We said we would achieve this ambitious goal:</p>
<p>First, by dramatically increasing our federal research grant expenditures and tripling our grant awards from the National Institutes of Health.</p>
<p>Second, by increasing our number of Ph.D. graduates toward a target of 400-450 per year.</p>
<p>And third, by building our scholarly reputation and productivity.</p>
<p>So, how have we done in a year? We've made some good progress.</p>
<pre><code>* We have recorded our best research grant year yet, with $190 million. That's nearly 18 per cent more than last year.
* We have graduated 15% more Ph.D.s.
* We have enhanced our scholarly reputation.
* Our Nobel Laureate Sir Harry Kroto had the rare honor of being elected as a Foreign Associate to the National Academy of Science
* Our Professor of Dance Suzanne Farrell won Kennedy Center Honors
* We added a new Eppes Professor to our faculty. Barbara Foorman is one of the top literacy researchers in the nation.
* Simon Ostrach, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, is another internationally renowned scholar who has joined our faculty.
* We lured the Applied Superconductivity Center, led by David Larbalestier from the University of Wisconsin; we invested over $4M to renovate the Shaw Building to accommodate this world-class center. Dr. Larbalestier is also a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
* Lt. Col. Ronald P. Elrod, Commander of our Army ROTC, was named the nation's top professor of military science.
* Our nuclear physics group is recognized as #7 in the country in producing Ph.D.s over the past five years.
* The College of Information's program in Information Studies/Technology is one of the most respected and consistently top-ranked programs, and its Services for Children and Youth Library Specialty is #1 in the nation.
* Our undergraduate accounting program in the College of Business is among the top 20 at public universities.
* Our arts programs taken together put us at the very top of anyone's rankings. The latest U.S. News & World Report puts the College of Music fifth among public universities, with the opera program number three.
* Among our students, Garrett Johnson became our first Rhodes Scholar in more than 20 years, and our new Office of National Fellowships provided support so that a record number of our students have won top awards.
* We've also just welcomed our strongest freshman class ever. Not only is the class the strongest we've seen, it's one of the strongest in the nation—and that's with 30 per cent who are the first in their family to attend college.
* More and more of our students are choosing to accept the demands of Honors courses, and our Spring 2006 commencement ceremonies not only saw the largest group of graduates in the university's history, but also the largest number of Honors in the Major graduates.
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<p>We also saw construction of world-class facilities across this campus.</p>
<pre><code>* We broke ground on new Chemistry and Life Science Buildings, and we completed the final phase of Medicine, the first phase of Psychology and a new classroom building. Two new residence halls and parking garages are also under construction. Construction will start this fall on the Materials Research Building. That's just a small part of the half-billion dollars in construction that's reshaping this campus.
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<p>All of that is wonderful news. And while I could report many other significant accomplishments, I want to take the rest of my time with you to tell you about ways we are working to make our Pathways vision a reality.</p>
<p>This year, we are proud to report that Florida State University is taking unparalleled steps to build our faculty. This hiring effort is striking for its ambition, for its innovation, for its process and for the way it's funded.</p>
<p>In the next five years we will authorize the hiring of 200 senior faculty members in interdisciplinary clusters of five to eight people based on an academic theme or research area.</p>
<p>Many of those new faculty members will be national and international leaders in their field. That's going to build our faculty ranks by nearly 20 per cent over today.</p>
<p>Who we hire and how we hire them will be a far cry from what we've done in the past and from what other universities are doing.</p>
<p>No other university is saying to current faculty, “We're going to hire hundreds of top-notch faculty members in the next five years—and who they are and what they teach is up to you. You come up with the ideas for broad, interdisciplinary approaches. You decide what the clusters and academic themes should be. You nominate the new hires. You evaluate them. And central administration will provide $100 million to pay for it—with no cost sharing by your college.”</p>
<p>It's an approach that is creating a buzz around the country.</p>
<p>A recent report from Harvard recommends a Pathways-type approach. That great university has examined its academic and hiring practices and realized they were coming up short. They're trying to get more nimble. They're promoting collaborations. They want to cut through barriers.</p>
<p>They need to take a look at Florida State. We're already at work doing what they're just now proposing. And the academic world is taking notice.</p>
<p>It really provides some exciting opportunities. Although we already have many world-class programs, many others need just a little push to reach top level. Now we can provide that push. Since many of our new hires will be senior faculty, they will arrive with fully established programs, grants, and graduate students and postdoctoral fellows. Just look at the Applied Superconductivity Center as a sample of what's ahead for this institution.</p>
<p>Pathways of Excellence is an initiative with deep roots at this institution. The progress we can report today is a direct outgrowth of the vision expressed by the initial Board of Trustees and many faculty, administrators and friends of this institution. The path foreseen and recommended in 1998 by the Commission on the Future has become today's “Pathways of Excellence.”</p>
<p>Let me remind you of what that Commission said: “We aspire to move Florida State into the top tier of national research universities. Emphasis on our graduate programs and the research programs of the faculty are central to achieving excellence.”</p>
<p>The Commission told us we had the potential to move a number of our programs to top rank nationally. To make that happen, we would need to focus our limited resources and invest strategically in those areas where we have the greatest opportunity to succeed. For that reason, we would have to focus on interdisciplinary research and teaching.</p>
<p>Since the Commission report, we've put some very important interdisciplinary research and resources in place.</p>
<p>Our renowned Mag Lab is the ultimate in interdisciplinary units, with research under way in physics, chemistry, astrophysics, geological sciences, biochemistry and biophysics, materials science and engineering. Last February the National Science Board recognized the Mag Lab's record of success in scientific research by deciding to accept a renewal proposal rather than open a national competition to operate the facility. This decision means the magnet lab will remain in Tallahassee for at least the next five years.</p>
<p>The Mag Lab is far from our only interdisciplinary facility. Faculty in the School of Computational Science partner with scientists in other units to study subjects as varied as evolutionary biology, structural biology, chemistry, physics and materials science.</p>
<p>The Florida Center for Reading Research brings together psychologists, reading specialists and clinicians to ensure that all of our children have the reading skills they need to succeed in school and throughout their lives.</p>
<p>The College of Medicine is a giant interdisciplinary cluster, with faculty studying everything from the basic biomedical sciences to medical humanities. Jayne Standley is a pioneer in this kind of collaboration. Her work in music therapy has led to new techniques that help premature babies thrive.</p>
<p>See next post...</p>