January 30, 2019 Minutes
Faculty Senate Minutes
January 30th, 2019
SUB Room 233
3:10- 4:30 pm
Name |
Represents |
Attended |
Richards, Abigail |
Chair |
X |
Austin, Eric |
Chair-elect |
X |
Amende, Kevin |
EN/Mech & Ind Engr |
X |
Anderson, Ryan |
EN/Chem Engr |
X |
Arnold, Shannon |
AG/Agricultural Education |
X |
Belasco, Eric |
AG/Agricultural Economics |
X |
Borys, Nick |
LS/Physics |
X |
Brody, Michael |
ED/Education |
X |
Dana, Susan |
Business |
X |
Dratz, Ed |
LS/Chemistry & Biochemistry |
X |
Ewing, Stephanie |
AG/Land Resources |
X |
Fick, Damon |
EN/Civil Engineering |
X |
Gao, Hongwei |
EN/Electrical & Comp. Engineering |
X |
Gedeon, Tomas |
LS/Math Sciences |
X |
Haggerty, Julia |
LS/Earth Sciences |
X |
Hatch, Jeremy |
AR/Art |
X |
Haynes, George |
Extension/On Campus |
X |
Hurt-Avila, Kara |
HHD/Health & Human Development |
X |
Jelinski, Jack |
Emeritus Faculty |
X |
Kosto, Allison |
Extension/Off Campus |
X |
Little, Jeannie |
AR/Music |
X |
McPhee, Kevin |
AG/Plant Sciences & Plant Pathology |
X |
Meyer, James |
LS/History & Philosophy |
X |
Mukhopadhyay, Jaya |
AR/Architecture |
X |
Parker, David |
LS/Political Science |
X |
Roberts, Dave |
LS/Ecology |
X |
Ruff, Julie |
Nursing/Off Campus |
X |
Slye, Teresa |
Gallatin College |
X |
Sterman, Leila |
Library |
X |
Stowers, Steven |
LS/Cell Biology & Neuroscience |
X |
Thomas, Amy |
LS/English |
X |
Thompson, John |
LS/Modern Languages |
X |
Yamaguchi, Tomomi |
LS/Sociology & Anthropology |
X |
Yeoman, Carl |
AG/Animal & Range |
X |
ALTERNATES |
Dept |
Attended |
Wittie, mike |
EN/Computer Science |
X |
OTHER ATTENDEES |
Dept |
Attended |
Provost Mokwa |
Office of the Provost |
X |
Fastnow, Chris |
Office of Planning & Analysis |
X |
Idzerda, Yves |
Physics |
X |
Paxton, John |
Computer Science |
X |
I. Call to Order
a. Meeting was called to order at 3:10
II. Approval of the January 16th meeting minutes
Jim Meyer moves to approve. Ed Dratz seconds. None opposed. Approved.
III. Informational Items
a. DPP Committee Report
1. Presentation by Yves Idzerda
A. “The Doctoral Program Prioritization review sought to secure a measure
of relative value of doctoral (PhD, EdD, DNP) programs,
allowing relative ranking among other doctoral programs at MSU. The process was
informed by data and by input from the doctoral degree granting
departments at MSU” *
i. Launched in Fall 2017 (November) by the Office of
the Provost
ii. In response to the Montana Board of Regents and the
Office of the Commissioner of Higher Education
B. Committee membership
i. Anne Camper: Professor, Civil Engineering, Associate Dean,
College of Engineering
ii. Jayne Downey: Associate Professor, Education
iii. Alan Dyer: Associate Professor, Plant Science & Plant Pathology
iv. Tamela Eitle: Vice Provost, Office of the Provost
v. Ian Godwin: Associate Director, Office of Planning & Analysis
vi. Patrick Hatfield: Professor and Department Head, Animal &
Range Sciences
vii. Jeffrey Heys: Professor and Department Head, Chemical & Biological
Engineering
viii. Karlene Hoo: Committee Chair, Dean, Graduate School
ix. Yves Idzerda: Professor and Department Head, Physics
x. Clemente Izurieta: Associate Professor, Computer Science;
Member Faculty Senate
xi. Timothy LeCain: Professor, History &
• OSP’s "Fiscal Year Expenditures by Colleges and Departments",
and OSP’s "Fiscal Year
Expenditures by PI" (special report)
G. Scoring Process
i. Had three steps
• Ordinal ranking was applied to each of the sixteen
individual metrics
• Rankings were averaged within each of the five categories
resulting in a category subtotal
• Category subtotals were averaged in order to reach
a final prioritization score
ii. Program classification- presented
H. Final Report
i. Has details on all metrics
ii. Provides a table with all categories and values
iii. Provides descriptions of all narratives developed for each
department
iv. Provides observations made during the process
I. Questions
i. Are you measuring the careers students have gone into? Hard
data to get.
ii. Wasn’t any where to go to find a ranking.
iii. What is going to happen with this report? No clear idea where
it fits in departmental governance. Can
find places for improvement, depending on what the findings
were. What can we do to improve the
program?
iv. Many have not seen this report. Can we get it sent to Faculty
Senate? We don’t want to break the chain of
command is being shared with department heads. Willing to
share it, if it is not disseminated down the
line.
v. Numbers are specific to each program report and may not be
universal across the board.
vi. Would like to see more programs in the “highly effective” category.
vii. We are not in the position where we are going to cut programs.
IV. Old Business
a. Workload Policy Guidelines
1. “Deal Breakers” were taken to JAGS
2. Overview of changes
A. The unique nature of teaching in certain university programs, such
as Extension and the Library, may not
perfectly align with the general guidelines set forth in this
policy.
B. Example stricken: For example, faculty whose teaching expectations
are met entirely through course-based instruction, the assignment
of 40% of effort in teaching might average two course-based classes per
semester (6 credits hours based on a 3-credit lecture course
that meets for 150 minutes/week).
i. Statement at the top of page two now no longer makes sense.
Dave Roberts moves to strike the statement at the top of page
two. Leila Sterman seconds. Approved.
C. Updates on some language: “Each unit will establish standards reflective
of that reflect the unique circumstances of
the unit, variables in teaching such as enrollment size, undergraduate/graduate level
instruction, and address, where necessary, the relation between
student credit and faculty effort.”
D. Other parts relatively unchanged
3. Next steps: Motion to approve with a second? Final debate and vote?
A. Is there any rush to vote today? No, but it has been old business
for a while.
B. Do not feel that JAGS would reject our wish to change the language
on page two.
C. All of these policies has a regular review cycle, but if there were
problems they would be addressed right away.
D. Would like to show JAGS Faculty Senate’s intent.
Julia Haggerty moves to approve contingent on the change on page
two. Michael Brody seconds. Leila Sterman cautions
the group to not get in the habit of voting with contingencies.
None opposed. Three abstentions. Approved.
b. New Program - Certificate in Arabic
1. Rationale:
A. Coursework (4 Arabic language courses) exists at MSU
B. Currently no minor in Arabic exists
C. Provide a credential to students who complete all four courses (student-driven
initiative)
D. Will motivate students to continue in the program
2. Question from the last meeting about the number of credits needed for
a certificate.
A. Depends on the program
B. 12 is the minimum per BOR
C. They are popular and expect to see more of them in the future
D. Rationale (info from slide)
3. Jim Meyer moves to approve. Julie Ruff seconds. Discussion on if you
should get a certificate for taking 4 classes. It ends
up being more than the minimum of 12 credits. Courses give you intermediate conversational
and written capabilities. Trust those in the discipline. None opposed.
No abstentions. Approved.
c. Program Changes – Master of Arts in Teaching
1. Program Changes
A. Program being finalized
B. Anticipate new courses/potential changes
C. Recommend putting approval of MAT changes on hold until all alterations
complete
2. There are some changes being made. Was approved by BOR initially. Would
prefer to look at the changes all together.
d. Courses approved 1/15 by Faculty Senate Steering Committee
1. BCH 446: Metabolomics and Systems Biology
2. EENV 489: Environmental Engineering Design I
3. EENV 499: Environmental Engineering Design II
4. EQUS 498: Equine Internship
5. PSCI 339: Culture and Ideology: The development of the modern Prison
6. ECIV 526: Geotechnical Aspects of Earthquake Engineering
7. EDCI 543: Introduction to Curriculum Design and Assessment
8. Course Renaming: EDCI 553: Diversity, Special Needs and Classroom Management
V. New Business
a. New Courses
1. FYI
A. AS 403D : Monsoon Asian Civilization
i. rubric updated to conform w CCN
B. KIN 221 : Hlth Anatomy & Physiology
i. added pre-req: CHTH 210 or KIN 105
ii. auto enforcement of pre-req
C. LSCI 591-001 : Digital Humanities: Investigating Science, Technology,
and Society
i. special topics, one time only for fall 2019
ii. no formal approval needed – interested students?
2. ECNS 451: Metabolomics and Systems Biology
A. Glad they are adding this course. First course in behavioral economics.
There is a bit of overlap with a psych course
B. What is Behavior Economics? Focused on gauging a customer’s willingness
to pay for certain things.
3. EDCI courses are meant for continuing education credits teachers.
A. EDCI 555 : Technology, Instructional Design, and Learner Success
(course change/update)
B. EDCI 561 : Language Acquisition: Decoding and Encoding
C. EDCI 563 : Language and Literacy Teaching and Assessment
4. ENGL 565: Literary Landscapes
A. Multiple approaches to literature. Fills a gap in MLL. Builds on
the strengths of faculty in department
5. LRES 539: Restoration Ecology and Applications
A. Request for hard number for a previous special topics course
6. PSPP 522: Insect-ology for Teachers
A. part of MSSE program.
7. Please look at these courses. Look for overlap or any red flags you may
see.
b. Data Science Minor
1. 30 credits: computer sciences, math and stats
2. 21 credits of required coursework, 9 credits of electives
3. At the “top edge” of the number of credits needed for a minor.
4. Learning outcomes were reworked based on CPC’s feedback
5. Overlap with the Financial engineering Major
A. Additional 15 credits overlap-right now there is no university policy
on the credits that overlap
B. Proposal does not break with policy
C. Has the department been in touch with Bill Schell. Yes.
D. Would like to see some of their smaller programs grown into bigger
ones, Minors to Majors, Majors to PhD, etc.
E. Adjusted requirements based on the abilities of the department to
teach the required courses.
6. Please look this over, especially if you are from an area that may be
effected by this minor or the courses it requires.
c. Faculty Committee Member on Service – election
1. Committee on Service member needed to be elected by the faculty (MUS
BOR Policy 710-2-2)
2. Committee makeup
A. Three tenured faculty
B. One appointed by the President
C. One appointed by the Commissioner of Higher Ed
D. One elected by the faculty
3. Nominations
A. Leila Sterman nominates George Haynes. Michael Brody/Dave Roberts
second.
i. Does the person have to be nominated or can they volunteer?
You can nominate yourself.
None opposed. No abstentions. Approved.
VI. Public Comment
a. No public comment
VII. Adjournment
Kara Hurt Avila moves to adjourn. Seconded. Meeting is adjourned at 4:30pm.
Next Faculty Senate Meeting Feb 13, 2019 at 3:10-4:30pm in SUB 233