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UB receives $2 million in SUNY investment and performance funding

By JOHN DELLACONTRADA

Published January 14, 2016 This content is archived.

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“These awards are a remarkable sample of what SUNY campuses are prepared to do in order to help more students complete their degree. ”
SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher

UB has received $2 million from SUNY to develop two new programs designed to help students complete their degrees and obtain successful employment upon graduation.

The new programs are part of an $18 million investment awarded to SUNY campuses throughout New York State. The awards were announced on Jan. 11 by Chancellor Nancy Zimpher during her annual State of the University Address.   

The awards will support SUNY’s Completion Agenda, which aims to boost the number of SUNY degrees awarded annually to 150,000 by the year 2020 by bringing evidence-based programs to scale.  

Through the SUNY Investment and Performance Fund:

  • UB will receive $1.75 million to develop innovative skills-based, experiential and interdisciplinary advanced certificate and master’s degree programs that complement the degrees and skills acquired in arts and humanities study. The new certificate and graduate degree programs will provide liberal arts students with pathways to employment.
  • UB, the University at Albany, Binghamton University and Stony Brook University will receive $1 million ($250,000 each) to build common student-learning outcomes and assessments to increase students’ completion of high-demand/high-impact gateway undergraduate courses in STEM and non-STEM disciplines.

President Satish K. Tripathi said UB was very pleased the proposed programs were selected by SUNY for funding.

“Over the years, UB has invested significantly in enhancing the educational experience so that we ensure our undergraduate, graduate and professional students are prepared to be global leaders in their fields,” Tripathi said. “And these investments are showing real outcomes.

“Regionally, nationally and globally, top employers tell us they love to hire UB grads because they know they bring with them the experience, expertise and global perspective that are so valuable in the 21st century — from business and industry to arts and the public sector. These new programs will enable us to build even further on these efforts and expand their benefits across the system” he said. 

“I applaud Gov. Cuomo and our elected leadership in New York State for investing in students and campuses throughout SUNY, and we look forward to collaborating with our SUNY partners in advancing the goals of the SUNY Completion Agenda.”

UB’s new Professional Pathways for the Arts and Humanities program will provide arts and humanities students with more direct routes to employment, increasing student success while also increasing the number of degrees awarded. UB will develop new advanced certificates, interdisciplinary master’s and combined bachelor’s-master’s degree programs that combine professional training with liberal arts education, as well as online training modules and workshops for advanced undergraduate and graduate students aimed at developing targeted professional skills.

Planned degree programs include “Speech, Language and Hearing Science,” “Social Media” and “Addiction Studies,” to provide a few examples. Online modules and workshops are planned in Professional and Technical Communication, Leadership and Entrepreneurship, and Digital Literacy.

These programs will emphasize applied learning and professional training. To ensure the increased potential for career success, these new programs link the core competencies that students will learn to employer needs and employment opportunities determined though market analysis.

The partnership between UB and the three other university centers at Albany, Binghamton and Stony Brook will leverage best-practice teaching, digitally enhanced learning technology and supplemental digital materials to increase student learning and success in STEM and other high-demand/high-impact gateway courses and improve student retention, degree progress and success in later courses.

For important high-demand/high-impact gateway courses, the four university centers within five years will adopt common learning outcomes and assessment measures, develop diagnostic tools to identify areas where individual students need to develop to succeed in gateway courses, and build a collection of digital, open education resources to enhance instruction and student learning.

The university centers plan to first adopt and implement the program across their four campuses and then ultimately across all SUNY campuses.

In all, 32 program proposals involving 22 SUNY campuses and collaborations with nine community colleges were selected to receive SUNY investment and performance funding. Campus proposals were evaluated by a distinguished panel of external reviewers, including leaders in higher education, finance, policy and research.

“These awards are a remarkable sample of what SUNY campuses are prepared to do in order to help more students complete their degree,” Zimpher said. “Whether it’s working with area high schools to get students ready for college, supporting students at risk of falling behind or providing an applied-learning opportunity to ensure career success, SUNY is committed to improving student outcomes at every stage.”