Annual Report 2014-2015 - The Council of Independent Colleges
Transcription
Annual Report 2014-2015 - The Council of Independent Colleges
2014 –2015 ANNUAL REPORT THE COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES THE COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT The Council of Independent Colleges (CIC) is an association of 750 nonprofit independent colleges and universities and higher education affiliates and organizations that has worked since 1956 to support college and university leadership, advance institutional excellence, and enhance public understanding of private higher education’s contributions to society. CIC is the major national organization that focuses on providing services to leaders of independent colleges and universities as well as conferences, seminars, and other programs that help institutions improve educational quality, administrative and financial performance, and institutional visibility. CIC conducts the largest annual conferences of college and university presidents as well as chief academic officers. CIC also provides support to state fundraising associations that organize programs and generate contributions for private colleges and universities. The Council is headquartered at One Dupont Circle in Washington, DC. For more information, visit www.cic.edu. 2 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES TABLE OF CONTENTS MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 DEVELOPING LEADERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 IMPROVING EDUCATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 MAKING THE CASE FOR INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 EXPLORING THE FUTURE OF INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 PROMOTING DATA-INFORMED DECISION MAKING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 OFFERING GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 COLLABORATING WITH PARTNERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 2014–2015 CIC AWARDEES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 FINANCIAL STATEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 BOARD OF DIRECTORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND TASK FORCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 2014–2015 CIC INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS PROFILE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 MEMBERS OF CIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 CIC STAFF AND SENIOR ADVISORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 CONNECTING CAMPUSES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 APPENDIX (PARTICIPANT LISTS). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR As cultivators of countless innovations in higher education, our independent colleges and universities are vital to America’s future. They have a remarkable track record of preparing engaged citizens. And compared with public and for-profit institutions, America’s independent colleges and universities prepare STEM professionals more efficiently and graduate low-income and first-generation students at higher rates. These high graduation rates contribute significantly to the national goal of expanding access to higher education. The financial, demographic, technological, and cultural challenges that independent colleges and universities face today require imaginative leadership to find practical answers to questions such as: Which innovative approaches to higher education are most promising? Do newer business models respect the integrity of the characteristics that have made our institutions successful? How can we convincingly demonstrate that the liberal arts remain essential to students’ preparation for rewarding careers and meaningful lives? Which of the time-honored characteristics of independent colleges are still crucial to their continued superior performance and to the rigor and quality of the education they provide? Over the past year, CIC has worked with its member institutions to explore fresh approaches to higher education, new business models, and societal changes that are potentially disruptive to higher education. CIC’s Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education also examines the distinctive characteristics and missions of independent colleges and universities. The project has already produced several research reports and briefs that provide in-depth analyses of student outcomes and institutional effectiveness. The reports exemplify initiatives and innovations that smaller private colleges have implemented in response to financial pressures, rising costs, and increased competition. The reports also document the superior record of these institutions in providing effective college learning and 2 living environments and ensuring positive educational outcomes including for students from first-generation and low-income family backgrounds. The research briefs explore recent innovations in competency-based education, interdisciplinary education, and career preparation at independent colleges and universities. Also in the last year, CIC fully implemented its national, multi-pronged public information campaign—Securing America’s Future: The Power of Liberal Arts Education. The award-winning campaign’s “myth-busting” reports; media toolkit; multi-media websites; Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube platforms; alumni testimonials; articles, speeches, and meetings; and the “Liberal Arts in Action” symposium made the campaign stronger with each passing month. These activities have helped make a difference in the public discourse about the societal importance and cost-effectiveness of independent colleges and liberal arts education. But the job is not done, and CIC will continue to work with college leaders to promote independent higher education and the liberal arts. As chair of the Board of Directors, I look forward to working with my fellow Board members, the campus leaders of CIC member colleges and universities, and the CIC staff to explore the future of independent higher education and promote the benefits of independent colleges and universities and liberal arts education. Sincerely, Chris Kimball President, California Lutheran University Chair, CIC Board of Directors COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE Last year was a productive year for CIC, a year filled with renewed enthusiasm for addressing both challenges and opportunities that face private higher education. Many of CIC’s current initiatives look to the future of independent higher education while others aim to fulfill long-standing needs of member colleges and universities. • The 26th annual Conversation between Foundation Officers and College and University Presidents attracted a record number of executives and officers from national and regional foundations who provided a deeper understanding of how their foundations’ priorities are determined and implemented. In the 2014–2015 period, CIC advanced several new initiatives: • The third national conference of CIC’s Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education was the largest to date with more than 500 participants representing 149 institutions. • The Consortium for Online Humanities Instruction, which enables 21 CIC member institutions to build their capacity for upper-level online humanities instruction and to share their successes with other colleges and universities; • The Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education, which explores innovative approaches to higher education and new college business models in light of potentially disruptive changes in American society. With the guidance of a steering committee of member presidents, CIC released several research reports and briefs on key topics throughout the year; • The Consortium on Digital Resources for Teaching and Research, an initiative to pilot new and cost-effective ways to increase the utility and availability of resources for teaching and research at CIC member institutions. The Consortium will benefit 42 colleges and universities and make their special collections of materials available to the world; • The Presidents Governance Academy—two-day intensive and participatory workshops designed to help member presidents strengthen governance policies and practices and their leadership in effective president-board relations; and • The multidisciplinary Teaching Interfaith Understanding seminars, organized in partnership with the Interfaith Youth Core and designed to help CIC faculty members improve the teaching of interfaith understanding in the classroom. During the year, CIC also enhanced established programs and services: • The 2015 Presidents Institute drew a record number of presidents and continued to be by far the largest annual conference of college and university presidents in the country. The Institute also welcomed an increasing number of campus leaders from international institutions, including a delegation of 16 private university rectors and the leaders of our sister higher education associations in Mexico. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT • The 2014 Institute for Chief Academic and Chief Financial Officers drew strong participation by CAOs, CFOs, and deans, vice presidents, and provosts. The Institute remains the largest annual conference of chief academic officers of all higher education associations. • Participation in CIC’s 2015 Workshops for Department and Division Chairs was the highest since 2010. At the four spring workshops, department chairs explored how to support colleagues, advocate for their departments from an institutional perspective, and work effectively with other administrators. • A record number of State Fund Member executives participated in their Annual Conference. With the theme, “New Perspectives for a New Era,” the conference explored trends and issues in private higher education. In addition to these programmatic successes, CIC’s roster of Institutional Members climbed to a record 633 members—and membership is continuing to increase in the current membership year. CIC owes its record of achievement during 2014–2015 to its supportive and engaged members; foundations and sponsors who provide expertise, innovative ideas, and generous support for programs and initiatives; and many other partners dedicated to advancing the cause of independent higher education. Gratitude is especially due to the members of the CIC Board of Directors for guiding CIC’s efforts to support college and university leadership, advance institutional excellence, and enhance public understanding of private higher education’s contributions to society. My staff colleagues and I look forward to another productive year in 2015–2016. Sincerely yours, Richard Ekman President Council of Independent Colleges 3 DEVELOPING LEADERS The Council of Independent Colleges provides opportunities—through conferences, meetings, confidential consultations, and online networking—for campus leaders to learn from experts, share ideas, and support one another. Among these programs and services are the following. 4 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES PROGRAMS FOR PRESIDENTS 2015 PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE KEYNOTE ADDRESS PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE “EDUCATING STUDENTS TO THINK IN THE DIGITAL AGE” CIC’s premier annual event—and the largest annual gathering of college and university presidents in the country—provides presidents with ideas, professional support, and networking opportunities. The 35th annual Presidents Institute addressed the theme, “Power of Independent Colleges: Better Education, Better Outcomes,” and other issues of presidential leadership. The Institute, which took place in San Diego, California, January 4–7, 2015, drew a record number of presidents—372—as well as 184 spouses and a total of 836 participants. The Institute welcomed leaders from several International Member institutions, including from Bulgaria, Canada, Costa Rica, Greece, Lithuania, Morocco, and Switzerland, and for the first time hosted a delegation of 16 private university rectors and higher education leaders from Mexico. Plenary speakers included Cathy N. Davidson, Distinguished Professor of English in the PhD program and director of the Futures Initiative at the Graduate Center, City University of New York, who addressed how to educate students to think in the digital age; and Michael T. Nettles, senior vice president and Edmund W. Gordon Chair of the Policy Evaluation and Research Center at Educational Testing Service, who discussed the importance of improving educational opportunities and outcomes for underrepresented students. A plenary session on “Lessons from the Past for Leadership Today” featured David W. Blight, Class of 1954 Professor of American History and director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at Yale University; Gregory Nagy, Francis Jones Professor of Classical Greek Literature and professor of comparative literature at Harvard University; and Rebecca S. Chopp, chancellor of the University of Denver. The closing plenary session on “Presidential Strategies for Effective Governance” featured Thomas F. Flynn, president of Alvernia University; Lee Pelton, president of Emerson 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT 1. P ractice digital literacy “You can’t teach students about the web—they have to do the web. The web is about interaction.” Davidson suggested that instead of writing for the teacher, instructors should have their students publish online. 2. Think critically, contribute creatively and publicly “I would never underestimate the importance of critical thinking, but if you only teach students how to find flaws, then you’re disempowering them from going forward and actually doing something.” Davidson recommended that students learn how to critique an idea in the context of group projects. 3. Rethink liberal arts for resilient global citizens In her keynote address on educating students to think in the digital age, Cathy N. Davidson discussed how colleges can educate students to become professionally successful and personally enriched in a globally networked world. Davidson is Distinguished Professor of English in the PhD program and director of the Futures Initiative at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She also is a cofounder of HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Alliance and Collaboratory), a virtual network of more than 14,000 innovators worldwide dedicated to “Changing the Way We Teach and Learn.” Davidson asked Institute participants to discuss in pairs ways their colleges currently prepare students to address the challenges of the digital age as well as what additional activities their colleges could do to encourage their students further. She then summarized eight ways colleges can approach the challenges: “We haven’t done a very good job of connecting all of the ways in which the liberal arts empower people in everyday life.” She said that students should be involved in community projects that empower both the students and members of the community and that involve many academic disciplines. 4. Let students take the lead Davidson said teachers should encourage students to become leaders in the classroom and stimulate students to invent and explore solutions to problems. 5. Make sure we value what we count She stated that higher education has to change what it values or K–12 cannot change. For example, if colleges still require SAT scores for admissions, then K–12 administrators will prioritize preparation for the SAT. (Continued on next page) 5 2015 PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE KEYNOTE ADDRESS (CONTINUED) 6. Have empathy Davidson remarked, “Having empathy for our faculty, our students, and ourselves is very important. Most of us in this room were born before the internet was invented and we learned many skills that aren’t terribly relevant today. We might feel like we are doing the same great job we used to do [but are no longer being rewarded]. Having empathy and managed expectations is hugely important.” 7. M ake alliances with other change makers She said it is crucial to build alliances with other higher education change makers to move forward, and participating in conferences such as the Presidents Institute can help. 8. Just do it College; Susan Resneck Pierce, president emerita of the University of Puget Sound; and William E. Troutt, president of Rhodes College. NEW PRESIDENTS PROGRAM Held in conjunction with the annual Presidents Institute, CIC’s New Presidents Program provides the tools and counsel needed to lay the groundwork for a successful presidency. In 2015, 45 new presidents participated in the program, which featured experienced presidents and their spouses—many of whom are alumni of the program—as presenters and provided each new president with a seasoned presidential colleague to serve in an informal advisory capacity. Sessions covered topics such as assessing the changed environment for presidential leadership, examining the president’s role in enrollment management, learning financial fundamentals, setting institutional advancement goals, and working with the board. Mary Pat Seurkamp, president emerita of Notre Dame of Maryland University, directed the New Presidents Program for a third year. PRESIDENTIAL VOCATION AND INSTITUTIONAL MISSION PROGRAM This year-long program of readings, consultations, and seminars assists current presidents and prospective presidents (in separate programs), along with their spouses or partners, to reflect on their sense of calling as it relates to the missions of the institutions they lead or might lead. Launched in 2005 with generous support from Lilly Endowment Inc., to date 63 presidents, most with spouses, have participated in the presidents’ program; and 119 senior administrators, many with their spouses, have participated in the parallel program for prospective presidents. In September 2009, Lilly Endowment Inc. awarded CIC a renewal grant to extend the Presidential Vocation and Institutional Mission program through 2015, including three programs for prospective presidents in 2011–2012, 2012–2013, and 2014–2015, and one for current presidents in 2013–2014. Lilly Endowment Inc. also funded an evaluation project to assess the program’s impact through a series of interviews with participants. A book, The American College Presidency as Vocation—Easing the Burden, Enhancing the Joy, Davidson noted that inspiring change and innovating are naturally perceived as difficult. Therefore students should be exposed to examples of people who have succeeded at achieving the near impossible. For the video of Davidson’s address, visit www.cic.edu/2015PresidentsInstituteResources. CIC’s New Presidents Program addresses practical and strategic questions for success in leading independent colleges and universities. 6 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES PRESIDENTIAL VOCATION AND INSTITUTIONAL MISSION PROGRAM SUCCESS Since participating in the program, 37 participants in the seminars for prospective presidents—or one-third—have been appointed as presidents. Scott Flanagan, vice president for enrollment and planning, Edgewood College, to president of that College Janet H. Robinson, provost, Lourdes University, to interim president of that university Robin E. Baker, provost, George Fox University, to Michael Frandsen, vice president for finance and University, to chancellor, Trinity College of Nursing and Health Science president of that university J. Blair Blackburn, executive vice president, Dallas Baptist University, to president-elect, East Texas Baptist University Nancy H. Blattner, vice president and dean for academic affairs, Fontbonne University, to president, Caldwell University Grant H. Cornwell, vice president of the university and dean of academic affairs, St. Lawrence University, to president, The College of Wooster administration, Albion College, to interim president of that college Bryon Grigsby, senior vice president and vice president for academic affairs, Shenandoah University, to president, Moravian College Rock Jones, executive vice president and dean of advancement, Hendrix College, to president, Ohio Wesleyan University Richard Jurasek, executive vice president, Antioch College, to president, Medaille College Lori Rodrigues-Fisher, provost, St. Ambrose Gerard J. Rooney, executive vice president for enrollment, advancement and planning, St. John Fisher College, to president of that college B. David Rowe, vice president for advancement, LaGrange College, to president, Centenary College of Louisiana Suzanne Shipley, vice president for academic affairs, Notre Dame of Maryland University, to president, Shepherd University Christine De Vinne, vice president for academic affairs, Notre Dame of Maryland University, to president, Ursuline College Chris Kimball, provost and vice president for academic Jay K. Simmons, vice president for academic affairs and dean, LaGrange College, to president, Iowa Wesleyan College James S. Dlugos, vice president and dean for academic affairs, College of Saint Elizabeth, to president, Saint Joseph’s College of Maine David A. King, provost, Eastern University, to president, Malone University Carolyn Stefanco, vice president for academic affairs Roger Drake, vice president of administration and Mercyhurst College, to president, Lourdes University finance, Lindsey Wilson College, to president, Central Methodist University Sherilyn Emberton, provost and vice president for academic affairs, East Texas Baptist University, to president, Huntington University David R. Evans, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the faculty, Buena Vista University, to president, Southern Vermont College Barbara A. Farley, vice president of academic affairs and dean of the college, Augsburg College, to president, Illinois College Tracy Fitzsimmons, vice president for academic affairs, Shenandoah University, to president of that university 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT affairs, California Lutheran University, to president of that university David Livingston, vice president for advancement, James P. Loftus, vice president of enrollment management and student services, St. Ambrose University, to president, Cardinal Stritch University Michael Looney, chief academic officer, Schreiner University, to president, University of Pikeville Susan Pauly, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the college, Mount Mercy University, to president, Salem College and dean of the college, Agnes Scott College, to president, The College of Saint Rose Donald B. Taylor, provost and vice president for academic affairs, Benedictine University, to president, Cabrini College Keith Taylor, provost and vice president for academic affairs, Gannon University, to president of Gannon Marion Terenzio, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the faculty, Bloomfield College, to president, State University of New York at Cobleskill Kelly M. Thompson, vice president for external Brian Ralph, vice president for enrollment relations and interim provost, Barton College, to president, Culver-Stockton College James Reynolds, vice president for academic affairs, Jann Rudd Weitzel, provost and vice president for academic affairs, Lindenwood University, to president, Cottey College management, Queens University of Charlotte, to president, William Peace University dean of the faculty, and interim president, Wilmington College (OH), to president of that college Cynthia Zane, chief academic officer and dean of the faculty, Mount St. Joseph University, to president, Hilbert College 7 based on this evaluation and written by CIC senior advisor William V. Frame, was published by Abilene Christian University Press in 2013. In December 2013, Lilly Endowment provided an additional $700,000 in funding for the Vocation and Mission program, enabling CIC to offer three more seminar series for prospective presidents. “I walk away with wonderful practical information about what it takes to pursue a presidency. But I also walk away with tools to further explore my calling, and I have found a community of friends, mentors, and advisors to seek counsel, advice, encouragement, and balance.” —Kimberly P. Blair, Vice President for Institutional Advancement, Ferrum College The 2014–2015 program included 19 senior administrators, 18 with participating spouses or partners. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 57.) The program year included a seminar held July 13–16, 2014, in Stowe, Vermont, and a follow-up seminar February 23–24, 2015, in Atlanta, Georgia. The program will resume in 2016–2017 when Frederik Ohles, president of Nebraska Wesleyan University, will succeed William Frame as senior advisor. PRESIDENTS GOVERNANCE ACADEMY CIC’s Presidents Governance Academy is a two-day intensive and highly participatory workshop series to help CIC member presidents strengthen governance policies and practices and sustain effective president-board relations. Launched in 2014, the program is distinctive in that it focuses exclusively on the perspective of the independent college president and, while it respects the division of authority on which shared governance depends, the program starts with the premise that the president must have both the tools and the mandate to exercise effective leadership. Presidents of 21 CIC member colleges and universities participated in the first Presidents Governance Academy, which took place January 3–4, immediately 8 preceding the 2015 Presidents Institute, in San Diego, California. Fourteen presidents of CIC member institutions participated in the second Academy, which was held July 27–28, 2015, in Napa, California. (For the participant lists, see the Appendix, pages 57 and 58.) Richard T. (Tom) Ingram, CIC senior advisor for president-board relations and former president of the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, and Richard J. Cook, president emeritus of Allegheny College, led the program. The Presidents Governance Academy is made possible through the generous support of the Henry Luce Foundation. CONVERSATION BETWEEN FOUNDATION OFFICERS AND COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY PRESIDENTS This annual meeting provides an opportunity for member presidents and foundation officers to discuss topics of emerging importance for private colleges and universities. Addressing the theme, “Meeting the Needs of Independent Colleges: National and Regional, Private and Public Perspectives,” the 2014 Foundation Conversation took place October 14 at the TIAA-CREF headquarters in New York City. Eighty-eight presidents, 21 foundation officers, and three State Fund executives participated. Plenary speakers included Ryan LaHurd, president and executive director of the James S. Kemper Foundation; P. Russell Hardin, president of the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation, Joseph B. Whitehead Foundation, Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation, and Lettie Pate Evans Foundation; Nancy J. Cable, president of the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations; Holiday Hart McKiernan, chief of staff and legal counsel of the Lumina Foundation for Education; Susan Singer, director of the Division of Undergraduate Education at the National Science Foundation; Lisa Marsh Ryerson, president of the AARP Foundation; and Hilary Pennington, vice president for the Ford Foundation’s Education, Creativity and Free Expression program. PROGRAMS FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS INSTITUTE FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS With the theme “Fostering CAO-CFO Partnerships for Institutional Success,” the 2014 Institute for Chief Academic and Chief Financial Officers provided a framework for learning about solutions to pressing issues of mutual concern, exploring the collaborative efforts of these two senior administrators and the challenges they face. Cosponsored by CIC and the National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO), the 42nd annual Institute took place November 1–4 in Portland, Oregon. The Institute drew a total of 571 participants, including some from Greece, Canada, Hawaii, Alaska, and across the continental United States. The Institute is the largest annual conference of chief academic officers of all the higher education associations. Plenary speakers included Arthur Levine, president of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation; Diana G. Oblinger, president and CEO of EDUCAUSE; and Caroline M. Hoxby, Scott and Donya Bommer Professor of Economics at Stanford University, director of the Economics of Education Program at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a senior fellow of the Hoover Institution and the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. A plenary panel discussion chaired by John D. Walda, president of NACUBO, featured Donald J. Farish, president of Roger Williams University; Elizabeth A. Fleming, president of Converse College; and John M. McCardell, Jr., vice-chancellor and president of Sewanee: The University of the South. Sessions throughout the Institute featured practical advice on effective collaboration between CAOs and CFOs to improve retention, plan for programs and facilities, and allocate financial aid, among other important campus issues. Several workshops and an “open mike” session moderated by a CAO-CFO team allowed deeper exploration of challenges and opportunities independent colleges and universities face. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES COLLOQUIUM ON LEADERSHIP FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS: CLASSIC AND CONTEMPORARY READINGS With support from the Henry Luce Foundation, CIC offered a leadership development program for chief academic officers that centered on the proposition that deliberative reflection on power, ethics, and responsibility are essential ingredients of educational leadership in the 21st century. The seminar participants studied a selection of cases drawn from classical and contemporary thought and brought them into discussion of the situations faced by today’s CAOs. The Colloquium was designed to help CAOs prepare for challenges in the decades ahead, understand complex and unprecedented situations, and use strategic wisdom. Sixteen CAOs participated in the 2014 Colloquium, which took place July 28–August 1 in Annapolis, Maryland. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 58.) John Churchill, secretary of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, led discussions on such topics as creating oneself as a leader, the interaction between human nature and society and its effects on leadership, and the interplay between personal and political power that shapes the nature of leadership. Readings included the works of ancient Greek tragedians Aeschylus and Sophocles, social contract theorists Thomas Hobbes and John Locke, political theorist Niccolo Machiavelli, civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., and philosopher Martha Nussbaum. OTHER PROGRAMS FOR CAMPUS LEADERS EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP ACADEMY CIC, in partnership with the American Academic Leadership Institute (AALI) and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), offers the Executive Leadership Academy (ELA) to prepare college and university leaders in 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT 2014 INSTITUTE FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERS KEYNOTE ADDRESS “BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN DIGITAL NATIVES AND DIGITAL IMMIGRANTS” Today’s college students are the first generation of “digital natives,” having been around digital technologies all their lives. But their colleges remain mostly analog, and their professors are digital-immigrants, having been born before digital technology became omnipresent. In his keynote address, Arthur Levine, president of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, shared his analysis of the current generation of college students and what their behavior and attitudes mean for colleges and universities. Levine’s discussion focused on research that he and Diane Dean, associate professor of higher education administration and policy at Illinois State University, conducted for their book, Generation on a Tightrope: A Portrait of Today’s College Student (2012). For the extensive study of undergraduates, Levine and Dean conducted interviews at 33 campuses and conducted national surveys of 5,000 undergraduates and 270 chief student affairs officers. Levine said five differences make today’s college students stand out from the previous generation: Today’s students are the first generation of digital natives; technology makes them more connected, yet more isolated; they are more immature and dependent yet they feel entitled; they are products of the worst economy since the Great Depression; and they are more diverse and more global in orientation. Because of these differences, today’s students prefer a very different education and learning environment from the environment that previous students preferred, Levine said. Levine discussed five main implications for higher education. First, he said, “Students today are living in an era of profound economic and social change, and it’s going to accelerate.... We need these students to help shape those changes. They are going to need an education that develops three specific skills: critical thinking, creativity, and the ability to learn continuously.” Second, he said, “We’re educating them for a time in which life in a digital society means more than us putting more technology into the curriculum…. Technology needs to supplement, not to replace. Faceto-face interaction is a distinct advantage that those of us at such [traditional liberal arts] colleges have, and we need to take real advantage of it.” (Continued on next page) 9 2014 INSTITUTE FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERS KEYNOTE ADDRESS (CONTINUED) Third, Levine said that students need to develop a deep, global multicultural understanding because the world is shrinking. “We need students to be socially adept and cross-culturally fluent. They need the ability to interact effectively with each other, and they don’t have that now.” Fourth, Levine emphasized that colleges need to prepare students for careers. He remarked, “Career services…need to be put on steroids.” He also said that colleges can design courses to become more career-oriented, such as by combining writing courses with science courses, and colleges should encourage internships. Last, Levine said that because we have a shared culture and shared world, “we need to give students a general education that focuses on the human heritage, natural environment, human-made institutions, and individual roles and responsibilities we all share. The world has changed profoundly, but this isn’t the first time it has happened…. No generation has had a greater chance to put its stamp on the future of our institutions than today’s generation.” For the podcast of Levine’s address, visit www.cic.edu/2014CAOIresources. vice presidential positions to move into presidencies. The year-long program is open, by nomination of the president, to vice presidents or cabinet-level administrators of all divisions of a college or university including enrollment management, academic affairs, finance, student affairs, administration, and advancement. The program consists of two seminars, ongoing webinars and reading exercises, experiential programs and activities focused on specific areas of presidential responsibility, and mentoring. Thomas R. Kepple, Jr., president of AALI, is director of the program. The ELA is generously supported by AALI. Nineteen administrators from CIC member institutions participated in the 2014–2015 ELA, which began with a seminar in Washington, DC, on July 20–22, 2014, and concluded with a seminar on June 21–23, 2015, also in Washington. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 59.) CIC selected the 2015–2016 ELA cohort of CIC participants— 24 administrators—in February 2015. The opening seminar took place July 16–18, 2015, in Washington, DC. CIC, AASCU, and AALI piloted the ELA (then called “Provost to President”) in 2009–2010. Of the 41 participants in that pilot program, 14 have since been appointed as president or chancellor. Of the 42 participants in the 2011–2012 ELA cohort, 16 have since been appointed president or chancellor. In the 2012–2013 cohort of 40 participants, six have been appointed to presidencies. In the 2013–2014 cohort of 37 participants, eight have earned presidential appointments. Among the 29 participants in the 2014–2015 cohort that completed the Academy in June, three already have assumed presidencies. In addition to the professional advancement of participants, successful outcomes also are obtained when participants’ leadership in their current positions is strengthened or when they realize that they do not want to pursue a presidency. SENIOR LEADERSHIP ACADEMY CIC and AALI cosponsor a year-long leadership development program for mid-level administrators in the divisions of academic affairs, student affairs, finance and administration, enrollment management, and advancement who aspire to a senior leadership position at an independent college or university. The Senior Leadership Academy (SLA) aims to broaden the pathways to senior leadership positions in higher education and to help participants develop institutional perspectives on higher education administration. The program consists of two seminars conducted by current and former presidents and vice presidents, readings and case studies on college and university leadership, experiential activities developed by the participant, and mentoring by the nominator The year-long Senior Leadership Academy prepares mid-level administrators and faculty leaders for vice presidencies. 10 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES and program director. Thomas R. Kepple, Jr., president of AALI, directs the program. The SLA is generously supported by AALI. Thirty-two administrators participated in the 2014–2015 SLA. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 59.) The opening seminar was held October 31–November 2, 2014, in Portland, Oregon, prior to the Institute for Chief Academic and Chief Financial Officers. The closing seminar took place June 24–26, 2015, in Washington, DC. CIC selected the 2015–2016 SLA cohort—28 participants—in February 2015. The opening seminar took place in Baltimore, Maryland, November 6–8, 2015, prior to the Institute for Chief Academic and Chief Advancement Officers. To date, CIC and AALI have offered programs for five cohorts of mid-level administrators who are interested in becoming provosts and vice presidents. In the 2010–2011 cohort, 61 percent of the 41 participants have advanced to more responsible positions, including 11 provosts and vice presidents. While the number of participants has been reduced for later classes to increase interaction among participants, the 2011–2012 cohort of 25 participants included ten who have earned promotions, for an upward mobility rate of 40 percent. Six of the 22 participants in 2012–2013 have moved up, for a mobility rate of 27 percent; and five of the 26 participants in 2013–2014 have advanced, for a 19 percent mobility rate. Already five have been promoted in the 2014–2015 cohort, for a current advancement rate of 16 percent. WORKSHOPS FOR DEPARTMENT AND DIVISION CHAIRS The 14th annual series of professional development workshops for new and experienced department and division chairs took place in four cities in spring 2015. Featuring the theme, “Balancing Multiple Priorities,” the 2015 Workshops for Department and Division Chairs examined how chairs can support colleagues, advocate for their departments from an institutional perspective, and interact effectively with other administrators. A total of 350 department and division chairs—from colleges in 38 states—participated in the workshops. Supported by AALI, Academic Search, and AcademicKeys, the workshops took place April 9–11 in Greenville, South Carolina; May 12–14 in Cleveland, Ohio; May 19–21 in Providence, Rhode Island; and June 2–4 in San Diego, California. AMERICAN HISTORY SEMINAR FOR FACULTY MEMBERS To strengthen teaching in history at CIC institutions, CIC and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History cosponsored for the 14th year a seminar for faculty members. Twenty-six participants, selected from 83 nominations, took part in the June 21–25, 2015, seminar on “Slave Narratives.” (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 60.) The seminar took place at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, with generous support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. David W. Blight, Class of 1954 Professor of American History at Yale, led the seminar for the sixth time, advancing participants’ understanding of the place of slavery and abolition in American culture and history. Throughout the week, participants discussed both antebellum and postbellum narratives including Frederick Douglass’s Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass; Harriet Jacobs’s, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl; William Grimes’s Life of William Grimes, the Runaway Slave; Blight’s recently published A Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom, Including Their Narratives of Emancipation; and Benjamin Drew’s A North-Side View of Slavery. ANCIENT GREECE IN THE MODERN COLLEGE CLASSROOM SEMINAR Department and division chairs brainstormed about handling personnel issues with workshop leaders in Greenville, South Carolina. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT CIC and the Center for Hellenic Studies, a research institute of Harvard University in Washington, DC, cosponsor a seminar series on Ancient Greece in the Modern College Classroom that strengthens the use of classical texts in undergraduate general education. Made possible through the generous support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the ninth seminar in the series took place July 22–26, 2014, at the Center for Hellenic Studies. Interest in the program remained high—CIC selected 20 participants from 66 nominations for the seminar, which focused on the Odyssey. Gregory Nagy, Francis Jones Professor of Classical Greek Literature and professor of comparative literature at Harvard University, and Kenneth Scott Morrell, associate professor of Greek and Roman studies at Rhodes College, co-led the 11 seminar. Participants examined the many dimensions of the Odyssey in its various historical contexts; explored how the poem can be studied in courses that address a variety of literatures and disciplines; and studied diverse topics that ranged from the exchange of luxury goods to the adjudication of disputes arising from athletic contests. In 2015, the seminar focused on “Song Culture of Athenian Drama.” Eighteen faculty members participated in the July 20–26 seminar, which again took place at the Center for Hellenic Studies and was made possible through the support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 61.) Directed by Nagy and Morrell, the seminar examined the work of Euripides, a playwright from the fifth century BCE. Participants discussed the performative aspects of his plays and the ways he drew upon, adapted, and transformed a range of lyric traditions. Participants also compared the choral song making of Euripides to the approaches of other contemporary composers of tragedy (and comedy) and situated it within the parallel forms of song making that survive from sixth century Lesbos and elsewhere. TEACHING EUROPEAN ART IN CONTEXT SEMINAR This program, launched in 2010 and supported by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, is designed to strengthen the teaching of art history at CIC member institutions. The fifth year of the program focused on “The Uses of Antiquity” in European art circa 1300–1800. Held at the University of Chicago’s Smart Museum of Art, July 13–18, 2014, CIC selected 21 faculty members to participate in the seminar. Rebecca Zorach, professor of art history and the college at the University of Chicago, led the program. The seminar took as its starting point European objects spanning the years 1300–1800 at the Smart Museum and enabled participants to examine prints and rare printed books in the Regenstein Library’s Special Collections Research Center to consider the role of prints, books, and other small objects in disseminating and popularizing classical styles and imagery. Pedagogical discussions addressed the concept of “close looking,” the relationship of texts to objects, and ways faculty members can help students think critically about the texture of history and the practices and decisions of artists. The sixth seminar of the program, which took place July 20–24, 2015, explored “The Art of Storytelling in French Painting and Sculpture 1600–1850.” The seminar was held at the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon, and organized around a special traveling exhibition, Gods and Heroes: Masterpieces from the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris, which included Old Master prints used for teaching at the renowned school, as well as paintings, sculptures, and drawings by Nicholas Poussin, Jean-Antoine Watteau, Jacques-Louis David, and Jean-AugusteDominique Ingres. CIC selected 23 faculty members to participate in the seminar. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 62.) Dawson Carr, the Janet and Richard Geary Curator of European Art at the museum, led the seminar with Mary Tavener Holmes, an independent scholar specializing in French art of the 17th and 18th centuries. Participants discussed the development and aims of the Paris academy, the role of allegory, and the official hierarchies of genre in art during the period as well as visual analysis and learning strategies. TEACHING INTERFAITH UNDERSTANDING SEMINARS As the religious diversity of many campus communities increases and as interfaith cooperation becomes more important in American colleges and universities, there has been a corresponding increase in interest among college presidents, deans of academic and student affairs, and faculty members in offering courses and programs on interfaith subjects. In partnership with the Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC) and with funding from the Henry Luce Foundation, CIC offered two seminars in 2014 and two in 2015 for faculty members who are teaching and developing related courses. The seminars are designed to help faculty members engage interfaith issues in the classroom and reach a broad understanding of what students in interfaith programs should learn. In addition, a resource base of teaching materials for use by faculty members and an online community for faculty members to share best practices, curricula, and pedagogies will be developed. Participants explored “The Uses of Antiquity” during a seminar held at the University of Chicago’s Smart Museum of Art. 12 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES the June seminar; Stephen Prothero, professor of religion at Boston University, was a special guest speaker. Patel and Patton led the August seminar. PROGRAMS FOR SPOUSES AND PARTNERS OF PRESIDENTS AND CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS CIC provides special programming for spouses and partners of presidents and chief academic officers at its two annual institutes. Spouses of 186 college and university presidents participated in CIC’s 2015 Presidents Institute, and 26 spouses engaged in the 2014 Institute for Chief Academic and Chief Financial Officers. The Presidents Institute Spouses Program featured Ellen Cole, professor of practice at the Sage Colleges and a former presidential spouse, who discussed “Presidential Spouses and Partners: Identity, Privacy, and Relationships.” STATE FUND MEMBERS ANNUAL CONFERENCE Developed by an advisory group of presidential spouses, the Program for Presidential Spouses and Partners—the oldest and largest of its kind in the country—runs concurrently with the program for presidents and provides opportunities to share information and advice. “Being in a sea of theological discourse was exceptionally helpful for me. Diana [Eck] and Catherine [Cornille] generated a lot of conversation that teased out issues I never hear discussed in my own world, and the breadth of their knowledge and experience was exciting. The diversity of experiences among my colleagues was certainly important as well—especially having the chance to learn about different courses, approaches, and student assignments.” —Kristen Urban, Professor of Political Science, Mount St. Mary’s University CIC selected 25 participants for the June 15–19, 2014, seminar that was held at Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and 25 participants for the August 3–7, 2014, seminar that took place at DePaul 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT University in Chicago, Illinois. The June seminar was led by Catherine Cornille, Newton College Alumnae Chair of Western Culture at Boston College, where she also is chair of the department of theology and professor of comparative theology, and Diana Eck, professor of comparative religion and Indian studies and Frederic Wertham Professor of Law and Psychiatry in Society at Harvard University. Eboo Patel, founder and president of the Interfaith Youth Core, and Laurie Patton, president of Middlebury College (then dean of Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and Robert F. Durden Professor of Religion at Duke University), led the August seminar. Twenty-five faculty members participated in each of the 2015 seminars, which took place at Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, June 21–25, and at DePaul University in Chicago, August 2–6. (For the participant lists, see the Appendix, pages 62 and 63.) Cornille and Noah Silverman, director of faculty partnerships at IFYC, led CIC actively supports the advancement of State Fund Members—fundraising consortia of independent colleges and universities, currently in 32 states. CIC provides services, consulting, professional development opportunities, collaborative programming, and grant support to State Fund Members and organizes conferences, webinars, and “best practices” workshops. The 2015 CIC State Fund Members Annual Conference took place April 26–28 in Nashville, Tennessee. Focusing on the theme, “New Perspectives for a New Era,” speakers explored future trends and issues in private higher education and encouraged state executives to consider realignment of their fundraising and programmatic strategies. Plenary speakers included Paul Conn, president of Lee University; Rand Park, senior lecturer of strategic management and entrepreneurship at the University of Minnesota; Susan Hart, founder and president of Hart Public Relations and Communications; Andrea Simon, founder of Simon Associates Management Consultants; Paul Chewning, senior associate at Trek Advancement; and Kenneth Garren, president of Lynchburg College. 13 IMPROVING EDUCATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS CIC supports practical, sustainable, and cost-effective ways to improve the quality of independent higher education. The variety of initiatives and programs that CIC offered in 2014–2015 strengthened programs for first-generation and low-income college students; worked to increase the number of community college graduates who transfer to private four-year colleges; evaluated the effectiveness of online instruction; strengthened information fluency in the disciplines; brought distinguished visiting fellows to campuses; and promoted vocational exploration in undergraduate education, among other outcomes. 14 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES CIC/WALMART COLLEGE SUCCESS AWARDS Funded by the Walmart Foundation, the CIC/ Walmart College Success Awards initiative supported 50 competitively selected CIC member colleges and universities to extend, deepen, or strengthen efforts to help first-generation students succeed in college through first-generation programs on their campuses. Beyond their own campus programs, the institutions worked together to learn from each other and serve as models for other colleges and universities. The CIC/ Walmart College Success Awards program began in 2008 and concluded in 2014 with a culminating symposium to celebrate the accomplishments of the CIC/Walmart College Success Award recipients and to disseminate best practices developed during the project. The CIC/Walmart Foundation Symposium on First-Generation College Students took place in Baltimore, Maryland, July 7–9, 2014. Representatives of the 50 CIC/Walmart College Success Award recipients presented the results of their programs to nearly 200 faculty and staff members from other CIC member institutions. Plenary addresses by leading national experts provided additional perspectives on the nature of first-generation students, the importance of student engagement and support beyond the initial year of enrollment, and the social and economic impact of completing a bachelor’s degree. The initiative’s capstone report, Making Sure They Make It! Best Practices for Ensuring the Academic Success of First-Generation College Students, and related resources can be accessed on the CIC website: www.cic.edu/CollegeSuccess. heads of consortia and associations that are actively engaged in student transfer and degree-completion efforts. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 64.) The planning group reviewed relevant trends in community college transfer and baccalaureate degree attainment, identified proven strategies and best practices for enrolling and supporting community college transfer students at private institutions, and identified significant barriers to student transfer and success. The planning group also recommended specific actions that could be taken over the course of three to five years to strengthen and extend the scale of current efforts by individual colleges, small consortia of colleges and universities, and allied organizations. CIC is seeking additional funding to expand this project. CONSORTIUM FOR ONLINE HUMANITIES INSTRUCTION CIC received a substantial grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in November 2013 to assess the effectiveness of online teaching in upper-level humanities courses at liberal arts colleges. The three-year project has three main goals: to explore whether online humanities instruction can improve student learning outcomes; to determine whether smaller, independent liberal arts institutions can make more effective use of their instructional resources and reduce costs through online humanities instruction; and to provide an opportunity for all CIC member institutions to build their capacity for online humanities instruction. Ithaka S+R, CIC’s partner organization and a leading research and consulting service for academic innovation in the digital environment, advises participating institutional teams and evaluates the effectiveness of the project. In spring 2014, CIC received applications from 96 member institutions and selected 20 teams to participate in the consortium. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 65.) The teams met for a national workshop July 23–24, 2014, in Washington, DC. In October 2014, teams met for three regional workshops, which took place in Providence, Rhode Island; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The first courses developed as part of the consortium were offered in spring 2015. Ithaka S+R collected extensive data on student outcomes, student and faculty experiences, and instructional costs. A preliminary analysis of the data was presented COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER PROJECT The Kresge Foundation awarded CIC a grant in March 2013 to plan a national initiative to increase the number of community college graduates who transfer to private four-year colleges and universities and to assure the students’ academic success once they transfer. A project planning meeting took place in Alexandria, Virginia, on March 21–22, 2014. The participants included leaders of two-year and four-year colleges who have had success in this arena, researchers, policy analysts, foundation officers, and 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Bellarmine University, KY 15 and make cataloging and use of digital images and other materials for research and instruction more cost-effective. CIC announced the project to CIC member presidents, chief academic officers, and library directors in January 2015, and CIC and Artstor staff held three informational webinars in February and March in advance of the March 30 application deadline. Forty-two applications were accepted following a project feasibility review by CIC and Artstor staff. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 65.) Artstor staff began working with participating institutions on digitizing and setting up their projects in May. The first annual workshop for consortium participants took place September 10–12 in Washington, DC. Johnson C. Smith University, NC at a second national workshop August 10–12, 2015, in Washington, DC. The workshop provided an opportunity for consortium participants to advance their plans for institutional collaboration and begin revisions to the online courses. Students from all participating institutions will be able to enroll in the revised courses in spring 2016. CONSORTIUM ON DIGITAL RESOURCES FOR TEACHING AND RESEARCH In December 2014, CIC received a $2.2 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to be used over four years to provide subsidized access for consortium participants to Artstor’s Shared Shelf application and service—a means to organize, preserve, and share unique collections of digital artifacts. The project provides participating CIC member institutions the opportunity to participate in a users’ consortium and to use Shared Shelf to store and manage media in support of teaching, learning, and student and faculty research. The goals of the project are to improve teaching and learning at liberal arts colleges; allow faculty members at small institutions to collaborate in scholarship and teaching through the use of their research and teaching resource collections; 16 INFORMATION FLUENCY IN THE DISCIPLINES CIC launched in 2010 a series of workshops on Information Fluency in the Disciplines. Supported by grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the workshops help independent colleges and universities move beyond teaching basic information “literacy” in the general education curriculum to infusing information “fluency” into majors in the humanities. Participants include teams of faculty members, librarians, and chief academic officers from CIC member colleges and universities. The first four workshops focused on literature (2010 and 2011), history (2011), and ancient studies (2012) and were endorsed by the American Historical Association, American Philological Association, Appalachian College Association, Association of College and Research Libraries, Modern Language Association, and the United Negro College Fund. With additional support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, CIC began a second series of four workshops. The first workshop in the new series covered information fluency in foreign languages, literatures, and cultures and took place February 2013 in Charleston, South Carolina. The second workshop focused on philosophy, religion, and the history of ideas and took place in Baltimore, Maryland, March 5–7, 2015, after being postponed in 2014 due to severe winter weather. Nineteen of the 21 teams that were originally selected for the postponed workshop participated in March. (For the participant list, see the Appendix, page 66.) Planning is underway for the 2016 workshop that will take place in Louisville, Kentucky, and address English and American language and literature. The workshops are cosponsored by the Association of College and Research Libraries and the Council on Library and Information Resources and are endorsed by the Appalachian College Association and the United Negro College Fund. Depending on the topic, they also have been endorsed by the relevant disciplinary organizations, such as the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature. WOODROW WILSON VISITING FELLOWS For 40 years, the Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellows program has brought prominent artists, diplomats, journalists, business leaders, and other nonacademic professionals to campuses across the United States for substantive week-long exchanges with students and faculty members. Now in its eighth year of operation under CIC management, the Visiting Fellows program continues to bring high-quality academic programming to campuses nationwide. In the 2014–2015 academic year, CIC arranged 50 campus visits across the country, and it has arranged 55 visits for the 2015–2016 academic year thus far. Campuses participating in the program find significant value in the visits, and many bring Fellows to campus “We followed the Presidential State of the Union in which [political reporter and Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow] Eleanor Clift offered her commentary and interpretations of the rituals involved in such an event. The discussion gave our students insights they would otherwise not have had. Clift is energetic and open…. She has a talent for creating an atmosphere that facilitates discussion. When she met with classes she demonstrated respect for their ideas and questions.” —Meg Upchurch, Campus Coordinator and Professor of Psychology, Transylvania University COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES every year. (For the list of host campuses, see the Appendix, page 66.) The roster of Fellows is constantly evolving. Among the new luminaries to join the program’s 120 Fellows this past year were Ernesto Nieto, president and founder of the National Hispanic Institute, Inc.; Amber Tamblyn, author and actor; and Nasrina Bargzie, civil rights litigator. The Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellows program is directed by senior advisor Roger Bowen. (For more information on the Visiting Fellows program, see www.cic.edu/VisitingFellows.) NETWORK FOR VOCATION IN UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION Established in 2009 through a generous grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., CIC’s Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education (NetVUE) is a nationwide campus-supported network whose purpose is to foster the intellectual and theological exploration of vocation among college and university students. Activities of NetVUE include a national conference held every other year, regional gatherings and multi-campus collaborations held in off-years, a campus visit and consulting service, and online resources and networking. In addition, a number of grant opportunities are available to NetVUE member institutions to support the development of vocational exploration programming on their campuses. In June 2015, the network included a total of 190 colleges and universities and five organizational members. With the theme “Sustaining the Theological Exploration of Vocation,” the third national NetVUE Conference took place March 26–28, 2015, in St. Louis, Missouri. The largest NetVUE Conference to date, the event attracted 503 participants from 158 institutions. Participants included many presidents and chief academic officers from NetVUE campuses along with vocation program directors, faculty members, chaplains, and leaders from student life and career advising programs. Participating institutions represented a broad spectrum of religious affiliations as well as colleges not associated with a religious tradition. NetVUE member institutions hosted 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT five regional gatherings in the 2013–2014 academic year and will offer six more regional gatherings in 2015–2016. To expand NetVUE, Lilly Endowment awarded CIC a grant of nearly $6.9 million—the largest grant ever received by CIC—in September 2011. The grant supports three initiatives for approximately five years: a new Scholarly Resources Project for vocational exploration; a program to strengthen the college chaplaincy at NetVUE member institutions; and a series of Program Development Grants for NetVUE member institutions. In December 2013, Lilly Endowment awarded CIC an additional grant to continue the NetVUE program through 2019, after which membership dues will fully sustain the organization. A portion of the 2013 funding also provides the NetVUE Professional Development Awards. In November 2014, Lilly Endowment extended its funding to support additional initiatives, including the NetVUE Chaplaincy Implementation Grants, and to supplement NetVUE core operations and programs through 2019. (For information on the NetVUE Program Development Grants, Professional Development Awards, and the Chaplaincy Implementation Grants, see Offering Grants and Scholarships, page 29.) A portion of the 2011 Lilly Endowment funding supports the creation of new scholarly resources for teaching and research on the theological exploration of vocation. A series of three structured seminar programs offered between 2013 and 2017 bring together scholars to collaborate on booklength publications on three topics: how colleges and universities can best educate undergraduates about vocation; how vocational considerations can be integrated into diverse fields of study; and how vocational discernment and practices can be advanced in a multi-religious world. Scholars in the first seminar, “Vocational Discernment as Pedagogy: Theory, Analysis, and Practice,” met in 2013–2014. Oxford University Press published a volume by the first seminar’s participants—At This Time and In This Place: Vocation and Higher Education—in September 2015. Scholars in the second seminar, “Integrating Vocation across Diverse Fields of Study,” met in Holland, Michigan, June 16–20, 2014; in Atlanta, Georgia, January 29–February 1, 2015; and in Grand Rapids, Michigan, July 30–August 2, 2015. David S. Cunningham, director of the CrossRoads Project and professor of religion at Hope College, directs the project. (For the list of scholars in the first and second seminars, see the Appendix, pages 66 and 67.) Another portion of the 2011 Lilly Endowment funding supported a program to strengthen the college chaplaincy at NetVUE member institutions. Featuring the theme, “Strengthening Campus Chaplaincy: New Models of Leadership and Practice,” two Chaplaincy Conferences took place March 28–29, 2014, in Chicago, Illinois, and September 26–27, 2014, in Atlanta, Georgia. A total of 68 NetVUE member institutions participated in one of the two conferences. Michael G. Cartwright, special assistant to the president for mission and dean of ecumenical and interfaith programs at the University of Indianapolis, directed the conferences. Since its inception in 2009, Lilly Endowment Inc. has generously provided to CIC more than $17 million in grant funding for the support of NetVUE, with more than $11 million designated for re-grants to NetVUE member colleges and universities. NetVUE is on track to become completely self-supported by membership dues beginning in 2020. NetVUE is supported by a small office located at Calvin College and is directed by senior advisor Shirley J. Roels. (For more information on NetVUE, visit www.cic.edu/NetVUE.) 17 MAKING THE CASE FOR INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION CIC serves as a national voice for independent higher education and promotes the distinctive qualities of liberal arts education offered by small and mid-sized, teaching-oriented, private colleges and universities. 18 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES PROMOTING THE VALUE OF LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION SECURING AMERICA’S FUTURE: THE POWER OF LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION CIC directs a multipronged national public information initiative to promote the effectiveness of independent higher education, the liberal arts, and liberal arts colleges. The campaign, Securing America’s Future: The Power of Liberal Arts Education, has expanded rapidly since it was announced in November 2012. S. Georgia Nugent, CIC senior fellow, interim president of the College of Wooster, and president emerita of Kenyon College, has led the effort. The campaign’s advisory committee is composed of member presidents, chief enrollment officers, and chief public relations officers. (For the list of advisory committee members, see page 45.) As part of the campaign, CIC disseminated a media toolkit for member institutions in 2014. The brochure contains key messages, data, and talking points for advocacy efforts; infographics; fact sheets about private colleges and the benefits of a liberal arts education; and sample alumni testimonials. CIC also released a related informational poster and postcard set as well as a pocket reference booklet that lists CIC’s member colleges. During a collaboration with the National Association for College Admission Counseling and CIC in fall 2014, many high school counselors requested copies of the campaign materials. Information and materials produced for the campaign—especially the media toolkit, poster, and infographics—continue to be used by CIC members in their publications and social media outreach. CIC has launched several research projects designed to establish useful and compelling information about liberal arts education and independent colleges 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT and universities, particularly in response to widely held misinformation. In March 2014, CIC published Strengthening the STEM Pipeline: The Contributions of Small and Mid-Sized Independent Colleges. In 2015, CIC released Expanding Access and Opportunity: How Small and Mid-Sized Independent Colleges Serve First-Generation and Low-Income Students (April); Independent Colleges and Student Engagement: Descriptive Analysis by Institutional Type (June); and Mission-Driven Innovation: An Empirical Study of Adaptation and Change among Independent Colleges (July). Some of the research briefs created for the Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education also serve as useful material for the campaign, including Career Preparation and the Liberal Arts, released in July 2015. Additional research projects are underway. (For more information, see Exploring the Future of Independent Higher Education, page 23.) CIC has invited all of its member campuses to nominate alumni to serve as “ambassadors” for the campaign by providing written or video testimonials. More than 100 testimonials from about 60 member institutions feature both notable alumni and recent graduates who connect their educational experiences in the liberal arts with their careers and personal lives. The testimonials are highlighted on campaign websites and social media platforms. Active use of the social media platforms and campaign websites has significantly broadened the reach of the key campaign messages. CIC launched the campaign Twitter feed (@SmartColleges), Facebook page (www.facebook.com/SmartColleges), and YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/user/LiberalArtsPower) in 2014. By summer 2015 the Twitter feed had more than 4,000 followers, the Facebook page had nearly 800 “fans,” and videos on the YouTube channel altogether had been viewed more than 1,700 times. After the 2013 launch of a campaign website that provides in-depth information about the liberal arts to CIC member presidents, PR directors, researchers, and journalists, CIC created a new “public” website (www.LiberalArtsPower.org) aimed at students, families, guidance counselors, and the general public. The interactive website went live in September 2014 and received more than 39,000 page views from over 18,000 users by July 2015. LIBERAL ARTS CAMPAIGN TAKES HOME GOLD CIC’s Power of Liberal Arts campaign was recognized with two gold EXCEL Awards from the Association of Media & Publishing in June 2015. The EXCEL Awards competition is the largest and most prestigious award program that exclusively recognizes excellence and leadership in nonprofit association media, publishing, marketing, and communications. The gold awards (the highest honor) were for “Innovation and Strategy in Social Media” and “Integrated Mixed-Media Campaign”—essentially recognizing all of the campaign’s print and digital materials. The social media award honored the campaign’s Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube digital platforms. The category description was, “Best overall interactivity and functionality in one or more social media channel(s) to promote and build brand and community.” Entries were judged on “excellence in the utilization of media to connect with audiences in new and innovative ways” and sought to “recognize organizations that are connecting with their audiences through video, social media, multimedia presentations, and other new media technology.” The integrated mixed-media campaign award was for the “best campaign launched in 2014 consisting of at least three communication vehicles, such as print publication, social media, website, and/or video with a common message, mission and/or theme.” The campaign was recognized for its media kit, poster, campaign website, Twitter feed, and member booklet in this category. 19 CIC hosted a symposium, “The Liberal Arts in Action,” that served as the culmination of the campaign’s main activities. The symposium took place at the Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, on September 17, 2015, and explored, through presentations by distinguished graduates of CIC member institutions, what a liberal arts education means in the lived experience of individuals with a liberal arts degree. The invitation-only event attracted nearly 200 participants—including CIC member presidents, policy makers, journalists, heads of learned societies and higher education associations, foundation leaders, and high school counselors, among others. All presentations were videotaped and transcribed—and will be followed by print and digital publications. CIC raised more than $1 million to carry out the majority of campaign activities over two years. Funders include the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Endeavor Foundation, Jessie Ball duPont Fund, Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, and Teagle Foundation. INCREASING VISIBILITY IN THE NATIONAL MEDIA COLLEGE MEDIA CONFERENCE FOR CAMPUS PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTORS The 29th College Media Conference took place June 29–July 1, 2015, in Washington, DC. The conference explored the theme, “New Media, Innovative Strategies, Important Connections,” and featured as presenters representatives from the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, ABC News, CNN, National Public Radio, Forbes, Time, Money, Washington Monthly, U.S. News & World Report, Hechinger Report, Science News, Science, Nature, Bloomberg News, Vox, Politico Pro, Chronicle of Higher 20 Education, Inside Higher Ed, University Business, and Diverse: Issues In Higher Education, among others. College and university public relations professionals and other PR experts shared best practices and new ideas. An evening program sponsored by the Chronicle featured a panel discussion about the coverage of the announced closing of Sweet Briar College and implications for other small private colleges. Other special events included small group visits to the newsrooms of C-SPAN, Chronicle of Higher Education, Inside Higher Ed, and National Public Radio; a breakfast meeting with Diverse: Issues In Higher Education reporters; and a tour of the Newseum. The conference is cohosted by CIC and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. CIC is planning special events to celebrate the conference’s 30th anniversary in June 2016. ARTICLES, OP-EDS, AND COVERAGE OF CIC PROGRAMS AND SERVICES CIC continues to expand its role as a national voice for independent higher education through an increasing number of interviews, opinion pieces, and articles. These efforts resulted not only in more coverage of CIC conferences, programs, and services, but CIC member institutions also were highlighted more often in stories by reporters who otherwise might not have focused on small or mid-sized private colleges or universities. Among the news organizations that featured CIC news were the following: • National publications: U.S. News and World Report, Forbes, Money Magazine, and Fast Company; • Higher education trade publications: Chronicle of Higher Education, Inside Higher Ed, University Business, Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, Hechinger Report, the Presidency, and the New England Journal of Higher Education; • Numerous regional newspapers, including: Chicago Tribune (IL), Buffalo News (NY), Buffalo Business Journal (NY), Orlando Business Journal (FL), Daily Californian, Simi Valley Acorn (CA), Daily Hampshire Gazette (NH), Morning Call (PA), Grand Rapids Press (MI), Star Tribune (MN), the Blade (OH), State Journal (WV), Hartsville News Journal (SC), and Salisbury Post (SC); • Broadcast news outlets: National Public Radio (including for the Diane Rehm Show), Marketplace Radio, Colorado Public Radio, WAMU (DC), WCTV (FL), and WDBJ7 (VA); and • Digital publications: Huffington Post, Examiner.com (MD), and Tricities.com (VA). In addition, after airing on KQED 88.5 FM in San Francisco, a Commonwealth Club discussion on “What’s the Value of a College Education?” featuring CIC President Richard Ekman was broadcast on hundreds of radio stations nationally. For a highlighted selection of stories by and about CIC and its members, see box on next page. All news stories featuring CIC are available at www.cic.edu/CICin-the-News. DOCUMENTING THE INDEPENDENT SECTOR OF HIGHER EDUCATION MAKING THE CASE WEBSITE CIC’s Making the Case website (www.cic.edu/ MakingTheCase) is the central source for evidence of the quality and effectiveness of independent higher education. The site consists of six sections: Search and General Information, Charts and Data, Books and Reports, Speeches and Addresses, Media Activity, and Student Debt Resources. Organized around six key messages, comparative data and resources show that independent institutions are affordable for students and families; provide access and success for diverse students; provide personal attention to students; facilitate student success; engender alumni satisfaction with their college education; and encourage students and alumni to contribute to the public good. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES In the past year CIC has updated many of the charts from the Making the Case website, drawing on the most recent data available, and added additional charts. CIC also distributed to member institutions a set of “infographics” that highlight graphically the benefits of a private liberal arts education. The Making the Case website has been used by CIC in presentations about the independent sector and has assisted presidents and other institutional leaders in preparing articles and speeches and in compiling comparative data for institutional purposes. The Making the Case website initially was developed in 2005 with support from the William Randolph Hearst Foundations and has been updated and expanded by CIC. USING CAMPUS ARCHITECTURE TO TEACH AND TO PROMOTE CIC COLLEGES HISTORIC CAMPUS ARCHITECTURE PROJECT The Historic Campus Architecture Project (HCAP) was created by CIC with support from the Getty Foundation and now consists of a website that features more than 4,000 images of 2,100 buildings and sites of historical significance from 389 participating colleges and universities. HCAP content is featured in Artstor, a nonprofit organization that offers (through a subscription service) a vast digital library of scholarly images to 1,730 institutions worldwide. HCAP data became available in Artstor’s new Built Works Registry (BWR)—an online registry of architectural works. BWR is a joint initiative among Artstor, the Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library at Columbia University, and the Getty Research Institute, and it is funded by an Institute for Museum and Library Services grant. Previously, no central authority or registry was available to assist with the identification of a built work. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT SELECTED NEWS ARTICLES During 2014–2015, many news organizations published articles of importance to CIC, its members, and the independent sector of higher education. Selected articles follow: Carnegie Reporter NACAC Bulletin Change Magazine “What Prospective Students Need to Know about College Debt” by S. Georgia Nugent (November 2014) “A 21st Century Education: What Do Students Need to Know?” by Richard Ekman, CIC president (Winter 2014) “The Future Favors Smaller Private Liberal Arts Colleges” by Richard Ekman (November–December 2014) Huffington Post “What Do We Talk about When We Talk about College Debt?” by S. Georgia Nugent, CIC senior fellow (October 2014) “What Students Interested in STEM Fields Need to Know” by S. Georgia Nugent (September 2014) The Presidency “Small Private Colleges Are Viable—and Vital” by Richard Ekman (Summer 2015) University Business “New Year’s Resolutions for Higher Education” by Scott Miller, president, Bethany College (WV) (January 2015) “Collaboration Strengthens Programs and Lowers Costs” by Richard Wylie, president, Endicott College (July 2014) “Contemporary Challenges Facing American Higher Education” by Kevin Manning, president, Stevenson University (March 2015) “Higher Education on Trial: The Questions of the Cross-Examination” by Shirley Mullen, president, Houghton College (August 2014) “No Equal in the World: Leadership Advice for New College Presidents” by L. Jay Lemons, president, Susquehanna University (June 2015) OTHER PUBLICATION OF NOTE Journal of College Admission “Myths vs. Facts: What High School Counselors Need to Know about Private Colleges and a Liberal Arts Education” by S. Georgia Nugent (Winter 2015) “Professional Development Programs for Chief Academic Officers: A Key to Effective Leadership” by Richard Ekman, in The Provost’s Handbook, published by Johns Hopkins University Press (April 2015) 21 EXPLORING THE FUTURE OF INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION CIC continues to expand its research activities to serve its member institutions. In 2014–2015, CIC launched research initiatives to document the distinctive strengths of smaller independent colleges and help college and university presidents make informed choices about future directions of their institutions. 22 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES PROJECT ON THE FUTURE OF INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION 2015 RESEARCH REPORTS The Lumina Foundation awarded CIC a grant in November 2013 to support an exploration of the future of independent higher education. The project explores fresh approaches to private higher education, new college business models, and changes in American society that are potentially disruptive to higher education. The project also works to identify the distinctive characteristics of independent colleges that have enabled them to offer a high-quality education for so many years and that must be preserved. CIC identified 22 college and university presidents who have initiated bold innovations at their own institutions and have explored new models of finance and operations to serve on the project’s steering committee. (For the list of committee members, see the Appendix, page 68.) During the initial steering committee meeting, which took place in Washington, DC, September 16–17, 2014, the members worked to develop a year-long research agenda to inform planning for the project. A grant from the TIAA-CREF Institute supported some of the research. In spring and summer 2015, CIC published three research reports and three research briefs. Additional reports on the cost effectiveness of undergraduate education at private colleges, changes in faculty roles and composition, and the success of underrepresented students and women in STEM are scheduled for publication in fall 2015 and winter 2016. The final steering committee meeting took place in Washington, DC, October 27–28, 2015, to develop an action plan to help CIC member institutions revitalize their missions, refocus their long-term strategic plans, and consider new business models that retain the student-centered nature of independent colleges. As part of two complementary initiatives, the Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education and the Securing America’s Future: The Power of Liberal Arts Education public information campaign, CIC began to produce a series of research reports that provide in-depth analyses of student outcomes and institutional effectiveness. The publications are accessible on the CIC website: www.cic.edu/ ResearchFuture. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT EXPANDING ACCESS AND OPPORTUNITY Published in April, Expanding Access and Opportunity: How Small and Mid-Sized Independent Colleges Serve First-Generation and Low-Income Students documents the superior record of these institutions in providing effective college learning and living environments and ensuring positive educational outcomes for firstgeneration and low-income students. Contrary to the prevalent stereotype that smaller private colleges are elite institutions accessible only to high-achieving students of means, the report findings demonstrate that independent institutions enroll students from a wide range of family educational and economic backgrounds. In fact, smaller independent colleges offer a pathway to upward social mobility by creating access for students who are underserved by other higher education sectors. Perhaps most noteworthy, the success of smaller independent colleges in serving low-income and first-generation undergraduates extends beyond mere access to college attainment; report findings indicate that these students are more likely to graduate in four years from a smaller private college than from a public college or university. This exemplary track record can be attributed to the focus of smaller private colleges on providing personalized academic experiences, rigorous educational programs, and high levels of extracurricular engagement. As a sector, private nondoctoral colleges and universities perform better than other types of postsecondary institutions on many dimensions. Highlights from the report’s key findings follow: • Private colleges serve a higher proportion of first-generation and low-income students than public and private doctoral universities. • The first year of college is critical to student persistence and success, and during this time, first-generation and low-income students at private colleges are more likely to be taught by a faculty member and to experience classroom environments more conducive to learning than students at any other type of institution. • First-generation and low-income students at independent colleges are more likely than their peers at public doctoral and nondoctoral universities to report meeting with an academic advisor in their first year and having informal discussions of academic matters with faculty members outside of the classroom by their junior year. • First-generation and low-income students who attend smaller independent colleges are more likely to participate in a range of extracurricular activities such as athletics, school clubs, and fine arts performances; such activities have been found to strengthen student success and persistence. • First-generation and low-income students who attend private colleges are far more likely to graduate—and to do so on time—than their peers at larger public universities. • A higher proportion of first-generation and low-income students graduate with no student loan debt from private colleges than from public doctoral universities. This report was written by CIC staff and prepared as a component of CIC’s liberal arts campaign and the Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education. 23 INDEPENDENT COLLEGES AND STUDENT ENGAGEMENT Issued in June, Independent Colleges and Student Engagement: Descriptive Analysis by Institutional Type reaffirms that traditional, residential private colleges and universities provide a more effective learning environment for today’s students than other types of institutions. Drawing on the most recent data from the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), the report documents that students who enroll at smaller private colleges and universities are more likely to engage in educationally effective experiences than their peers at large public research universities and regional public institutions. Key findings of the report emphasize the following aspects of student engagement: •C ompared with students at public universities, students at private colleges are more likely to experience courses that emphasize higher-order learning and reflective and integrative learning experiences as well as courses that require more effort in studying, writing, and reading. •F irst-year and senior students at private colleges are more likely to engage with faculty members about their academic performance, co- and extra-curricular activities, and career plans after graduation. •S tudents at smaller independent colleges report greater satisfaction with their professors’ course organization, lectures, and feedback on assignments. • Private college students experience more of the high-impact educational practices that result in greater gains in student learning and higher levels of persistence. These include service learning, research conducted with 24 a faculty member, internships and field experiences, study abroad, and culminating senior projects. • Students enrolled at private colleges are more likely to report that their institutions provide support that helps them succeed and that they attend events that address important social, economic, or political issues. • Both first-year students and seniors enrolled in private colleges are more likely to perceive that they have made strides in developing or clarifying a personal code of values and ethics. The authors of the report are noted scholars from the Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research: Robert M. Gonyea, associate director of research and data analysis, and Jillian Kinzie, associate director of the Center and of the NSSE Institute. The report was prepared as a component of CIC’s liberal arts campaign and the Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education. MISSION-DRIVEN INNOVATION Published in July, Mission-Driven Innovation: An Empirical Study of Adaptation and Change among Independent Colleges documents the initiatives and innovations that smaller private colleges have implemented in response to economic pressures, rising costs, and increased competition. The report shows that leaders of the nation’s independent colleges see significant challenges, but they are engaged in varied and aggressive change efforts on many fronts. Survey data collected from CIC presidents reveal that almost all colleges have been engaged in at least one project focused on either optimizing campus revenue or controlling costs in the past five years, with nine out of ten pursuing initiatives that concentrate on both. Twothirds of presidents say they are “aggressively” focused on mission-driven innovations. Among the major findings of the study are the following: •P opular strategies for revenue enhancement and diversification included opening new undergraduate (83 percent) and graduate (74 percent) programs and expanding online courses and programs (65 percent). •T he most frequent cost-control measures taken by independent college presidents included leaving open faculty positions unfilled (64 percent), freezing salaries (61 percent), reducing other staff (61 percent), restructuring or closing academic programs (57 percent each), and outsourcing operations (49 percent). •C ollege presidents also indicated a wide range of other initiatives and innovations, including changes to admissions strategies (77 percent), financial aid practices (71 percent), and fundraising approaches (70 percent); expansion of athletics programs and facilities (62 percent); increased international-student recruitment (58 percent); and reforms to resourceallocation systems (47 percent). Responding presidents predominantly viewed these innovations as congruent with institutional missions and reported largely favorable acceptance of those innovations by campus constituents. The study was conducted by James C. Hearn, professor and associate director of the Institute of Higher Education at the University of Georgia, and his colleague Jarrett B. Warshaw, with support from the TIAA-CREF Institute. This report was prepared as a component of CIC’s Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education, which is supported by the Lumina Foundation. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES 2015 RESEARCH BRIEFS Along with research reports, the research agenda for the Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education called for five short reports, focused on innovations in teaching and learning at independent colleges and universities, to be prepared by CIC staff. The individual research briefs are designed as practical resources for institutions that are considering new challenges and new opportunities. Collectively, they aim to help the project’s steering committee and CIC members reflect on the distinctive pedagogy of independent higher education. Each brief includes a review of recent research, identifies examples of proven and promising innovations at CIC member institutions, and poses questions for further discussion. In spring and summer 2015, CIC released the first three briefs, which are accessible on the CIC website at www.cic.edu/ResearchFuture. Piedmont College, GA COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION Competency-Based Education, issued in April, is devoted to competency-based education (CBE), an approach to pedagogy that emphasizes the mastery of skills and concepts rather than credit hours or seat time. Independent institutions generally have been more reluctant to embrace CBE than public institutions or for-profit education providers. But, as the brief shows, CIC members have introduced innovations that integrate CBE with residential undergraduate programs; use broad-based initiatives to subsidize traditional, campus-based programs; or use CBE programs only for specific populations such as adult students and nonresidential graduate students. INTERDISCIPLINARY UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION The Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Education research brief, released in May, notes that smaller independent colleges and universities are both innovators in developing new approaches to interdisciplinary 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT education and strong guardians of traditional academic disciplines, despite the false dichotomy that some outside observers draw between “narrow” liberal arts fields and the multiple perspectives necessary for employment in a complex world. Some characteristics of these institutions—especially their size, flexibility, and commitment to teaching—make it easier for them to introduce new interdisciplinary programs, though campus leaders may need to promote policies that explicitly reward faculty members and departments for interdisciplinary teaching. The report provides many examples of interdisciplinary innovation at CIC member institutions, including the development of new majors, interdisciplinary centers, and general education curricula. CAREER PREPARATION AND THE LIBERAL ARTS Issued in July, Career Preparation and the Liberal Arts explores the central question: How does the independent sector of higher education balance expectations for job preparation with the preparation of students for full lives as educated citizens? Debates about the role of liberal arts institutions in preparing students for careers often ignore the demonstrated success of smaller independent colleges and universities with a liberal arts focus in preparing students for careers. Graduates of such institutions are at least as likely to find jobs in the first six months, will earn about as much in their lifetimes, and will enjoy a higher level of career satisfaction than their peers who graduate from other institutions. This brief shows that smaller private institutions achieve these outcomes through undergraduate programs with a professional emphasis that incorporate substantial liberal arts content; liberal arts degree programs that integrate career preparation; experiential learning opportunities, especially internships; and innovative career preparation activities that supplement the liberal arts curriculum. Career centers play an important role. 25 PROMOTING DATA-INFORMED DECISION MAKING Through its own initiatives and partnerships with other organizations, CIC helps strengthen the capacity of member colleges and universities to use comparative data to improve institutional effectiveness, planning, and decision making. 26 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES KEY INDICATORS TOOL CIC’s Key Indicators Tool (KIT), developed in 2004, provides each CIC institutional member president with an annual confidential, customized benchmarking report prepared by the Austen Group at no cost to the institution. The KIT report contains comparative data on 20 performance indicators in the areas of student enrollment and progression, faculty composition and compensation, tuition and financial aid, and institutional revenue and expenditures. Drawing from a database of more than 800 nondoctoral independent colleges and universities, the KIT provides comparisons of institutional performance over a five-year period by region of the country, enrollment size, institutional financial resources, and Carnegie classification. The KIT is based on the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Education’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). The 11th annual KIT report was released to institutional member presidents in March 2015. Originally developed with support from the William Randolph Hearst Foundations, TIAA-CREF has supported the KIT since 2008. A sample report is available at www.cic.edu/KIT. was released to institutional member presidents in July 2015. Following initial funding by the William Randolph Hearst Foundations, TIAA-CREF has supported the FIT since 2008. A sample report is available at www.cic.edu/FIT. OTHER BENCHMARKING SERVICES In partnership with the Austen Group, CIC provides additional benchmarking services to augment the KIT and FIT benchmarking reports. The added services include enabling a CIC member institution to select two sets of comparison institutions for more refined benchmarking analysis and to schedule an online consultation with the president of the Austen Group, Michael Williams. The benchmarking services are available to CIC member institutions for a modest fee. As of June 2015, 69 CIC member institutions had requested 189 of these services: 87 comparison group KITs, 78 comparison group FITs, 11 comparison group selection services, 11 online consultations, and two international benchmarking reports. In addition, CIC provides Organizational and Gift Income Benchmarking Reports to State Fund Members. The benchmarking service provides comparative data that reflect each State Fund’s fundraising results with those of a peer group and the entire network. State Fund Members use the service as a planning and management information tool. OTHER DATA INITIATIVES CIC continues to expand its capacity to collect and analyze data for quick responses to requests from news media and funding agencies for data about the independent sector of higher education. CIC also regularly updates its liberal arts campaign and Making the Case web pages. In support of its Project on the Future of Independent Higher Education and liberal arts campaign, CIC released several research reports and research briefs in spring and summer 2015. (For more information, see Exploring the Future of Independent Higher Education, page 23.) Additional research reports are scheduled for publication in fall 2015. FINANCIAL INDICATORS TOOL CIC’s Financial Indicators Tool (FIT), developed in 2005, provides each CIC institutional member president with an annual confidential, customized, financial benchmarking report to complement the KIT report at no cost to the institution. The FIT measures institutional financial health using four core financial ratios along with a combined index score. It is designed to provide a succinct indication of an institution’s financial performance over six years with comparisons similar to those in the KIT. With the assistance of the Austen Group, CIC collects a unique, proprietary dataset of more than 700 baccalaureate and master’slevel private colleges and universities, using data from IPEDS and from IRS Form 990s acquired through GuideStar. The FIT was the first benchmarking report to apply this methodology to a national group of colleges and universities. The ninth annual FIT 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Berry College, GA 27 OFFERING GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS CIC administers a range of grant and scholarship programs to benefit member institutions and State Fund Members. CIC is grateful to the foundations and corporations that provide generous support for programs such as the Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education, Davies-Jackson Scholarship, and UPS Scholarships. 28 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES STATE FUND GRANT PROGRAMS CAPACITY-BUILDING GRANTS Funded through an annual drawdown from the CIC State Funds Endowment, CIC awarded $5,000 grants to State Fund Members in Arkansas, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, and Texas in November 2014 to enhance their capacity to raise funds on behalf of their member institutions. These grants supported a variety of projects such as hosting a forum on higher education-related issues, developing a website to support advancement and outreach efforts, and launching a marketing campaign to integrate an innovative fundraising strategy. FIRST OPPORTUNITY PARTNERS GRANTS This long-standing grant program funded by annual grants from the UPS Foundation is designed to support multi-college collaborations to enhance access and success for first-generation, minority, and low-income students at independent colleges and universities. During 2014–2015, CIC approved project proposals from the Associated Colleges of Illinois, Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and Universities, Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas Foundation, Independent Colleges of Washington, and Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges. The grants are distributed to each State Fund Member after they raise matching funds for their projects. Since its founding in 2005, this grant program has distributed 32 grants totaling more than $1 million to State Funds Members, who in turn have raised nearly $1.4 million in matching funds. Nebraska’s Independent Colleges and Universities”; the Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges will create “OFIC-Ohio Connect,” a progressive new website that will enable major corporations to connect with member colleges and their students for internships and job openings; and the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges will begin the “Collective Achievement Program” to provide the 14 member institutions with a common survey tool to gather current valid data on career paths taken by graduates. The grants are funded through an annual drawdown from the CIC State Funds Endowment and must be matched by the State Fund Members through outside gifts and grants. NATIONAL VENTURE FUND GRANTS SCHOLARSHIP CHALLENGE GRANTS In February 2015, CIC approved three National Venture Fund grants totaling $80,000 to support multi-college collaborations for innovative programs to advance the interests of member institutions. The Nebraska Independent College Foundation will begin a marketing campaign, “Making the Case for Four State Fund Members—South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities, Independent College Fund of New Jersey, North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities, and Georgia Independent College Association—completed campaigns to raise funds to meet $25,000 challenge grants provided by CIC as leverage for them to secure additional gifts and grants for student scholarships. The grants are funded through an annual drawdown from the CIC State Funds Endowment. In the first five years of the Challenge Grant initiative, the program has generated $1.5 million in new scholarships for students at member colleges in the participating states. NETVUE GRANT PROGRAMS PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT GRANTS Roanoke College, VA 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Supported by Lilly Endowment Inc., Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education (NetVUE) Program Development Grants may be used to develop or expand campus programs that are already underway and supported by the institution itself and may be requested in amounts ranging from $25,000 to $50,000 for use over approximately two years. The third round of grants 29 was awarded in November 2014, and 24 proposals were funded. (For the list of recipients, see the Appendix, page 67.) CIC invited applications for a fourth round in March 2015 with proposals due in September 2015; recipients will be announced in November 2015, and funds will be awarded in May 2016. members to apply for the next round of grants, with proposals due May 1; CIC granted awards to 21 projects. (For the list of recipients, see the Appendix, page 67.) Three additional cycles of awards are planned with approximately 25 awards to be granted in the remaining cycles. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AWARDS CHAPLAINCY IMPLEMENTATION GRANTS Funded by Lilly Endowment Inc., NetVUE Professional Development Awards support activities that enhance the knowledge, skills, and expertise of faculty and staff members involved in undergraduate vocational exploration initiatives. The awards may be requested in an amount ranging from $5,000 to $10,000 for use over a one-year period. All NetVUE member colleges and universities that meet certain criteria are eligible to apply for funding. In 2014, awards were made to 12 NetVUE member institutions. In 2015, CIC invited NetVUE Supported by Lilly Endowment Inc., NetVUE Chaplaincy Implementation Grants were offered to NetVUE members that participated in one of the two 2014 NetVUE Chaplaincy Conferences. These awards provide up to $20,000 for use over one academic year to support programmatic efforts to strengthen campus chaplaincy in the 2015–2016 academic year. The application deadline for this onetime opportunity was May 1, 2015; 25 recipients were selected for awards made in July 2015. (For the list of recipients, see the Appendix, page 67.) SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS AMERICAN GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS The American Graduate Fellowships program, which operated from spring 2006 to spring 2015, advanced two primary purposes: to encourage the best students at small and mid-sized independent colleges to apply for PhD work in the humanities at top-tier private research institutions in the United States and United Kingdom; and to raise awareness at leading graduate schools that small colleges are a rich source of talented future doctoral students in the humanities. “Eight years ago, the American Graduate Fellowship gave me the support and encouragement necessary to make the successful transition from a small liberal arts college to one of the most prestigious universities in the country…. Receiving the Fellowship gave me the freedom to develop my research early in my graduate studies and the confidence to see that work as important and valuable. Now, as I leave Columbia for a career as a tenure-track professor, I appreciate that early support more than ever.” —Adam Spry, Pacific Lutheran University (2007), Columbia University (2014), Assistant Professor of English, Florida Atlantic University A total of eight fellowships of $50,000 (renewable for a second year) were awarded. Eligible fields of study were history, philosophy, literature and languages, and the fine arts (not including studio art or performance). The American Graduate Fellowships program was funded by the Wichita Falls Area Community Foundation of Wichita Falls, Texas. Established in 1990, the Davies-Jackson Scholarship provides a unique opportunity for graduating college seniors with exceptional academic records, and who are among the first in their families to graduate from college, to study at renowned St. John’s College. 30 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES DAVIES-JACKSON SCHOLARSHIP CIC administers a scholarship program for graduates of private colleges and universities who possess exceptional academic records and are among the first generation in their families to graduate from college. Funded by an anonymous donor, the scholarship provides recipients a full two-year scholarship to St. John’s College, University of Cambridge, England. The list of 560 eligible institutions established by the donor and a U.S. selection committee from which students are eligible to apply has increased over time and now includes 500 CIC member institutions. “The Davies-Jackson Scholarship has helped me grow both as a student and an individual. It provided me with the opportunity to gain research experience under the tutelage of some of the best scholars in the world and the chance to travel through Europe and a part of Africa…. Working in a different cultural setting than my own has taught me that being able to adapt is a fundamental skill in today’s globalizing world, and this scholarship has provided me with lived experiences so that I can learn and work with versatility and understanding.” —Kai Yin Ho, Augustana College (2013), Davies-Jackson Scholar (2013–2015) Applications are accepted for study in the following subjects: classics; economics; education; English; geography; history; history of art; human, social, and political sciences; modern and medieval languages; music; philosophy; and psychological and behavioral sciences. In January 2015, for the first time in the history of the program, three finalist applicants were selected to receive the scholarship: Briana Britton, a senior at Aurora University who will continue her studies in education with a focus on history; Alex Kraemer, a senior at Lewis & Clark College who will read in history; and Caitlin Ray, a senior at Huntingdon College (AL) who will read in English. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT After speaking at a luncheon program on “Opportunities for the First-Generation Student,” Frank Romeo (right), vice president of the UPS Foundation, and UPS Scholar Dwante Jones (center), a student at Trinity Christian College, celebrated the UPS Scholarships with Steven Timmermans (left), president of Trinity Christian College, a member of the Associated Colleges of Illinois. UPS SCHOLARSHIPS During 2014–2015, CIC provided $1,486,525 in grants to State Fund Members to distribute to their member colleges as scholarships for students from underserved populations, such as first-generation, minority, or low-income families. Honoring the benefactor that created the endowment that funds the program, CIC provides the scholarships in the name of UPS. Students at 613 independent colleges and universities benefitted from this program, with each student receiving a $2,425 UPS Scholarship. Over the life of the program, $51,637,485 has been given to State Fund Members to distribute as scholarship support for their member colleges, benefitting more than 18,000 students. “The UPS Scholarship has helped make college affordable and allowed me to focus on my studies. Post-graduation, I hope to study law; I am passionate about social justice and want to pursue a career in human rights law. This scholarship is a microcosm of the great things to come for me.… Words cannot express my gratitude, and one day I hope to pay it forward to college students like me.” —Dwante Jones, Trinity Christian College UPS Scholarship Recipient 31 COLLABORATING WITH PARTNERS Through collaboration among private colleges and universities and by partnering with other organizations, CIC offers cost-effective and efficient programs and services to its members. 32 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES DEVELOPING LEADERS CIC AND THE AMERICAN ACADEMIC LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE CIC continues its relationship with AALI, an organization formed in 2007 after a reorganization of the Academic Search Consultation Service produced AALI and a subsidiary, Academic Search, Inc. Under the arrangement, CIC and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) became “supported organizations” (in Internal Revenue Service terms) of AALI, and AALI became a “supporting organization.” Proceeds from Academic Search, Inc. enable AALI to support CIC’s, AASCU’s, and its own leadership development initiatives. The alliance serves higher education leaders by working together to identify future leaders, prepare them to move into the next level of leadership, and help institutions match leaders with institutional needs. Thomas R. Kepple, Jr. is president of AALI and director of CIC’s Executive and Senior Leadership Academies. HELPING STUDENTS THROUGH TUITION EXCHANGE CIC TUITION EXCHANGE PROGRAM A key benefit of CIC membership, the CIC Tuition Exchange Program (CIC-TEP) consists of a network of member colleges and universities willing to accept, tuition free, students from families of full-time employees of other CIC-TEP institutions. CIC-TEP is the largest international tuition exchange program for private institutions, and participation continues to increase. As of June 30, 2015, 428 of CIC’s 662 member colleges and universities were participating in CIC-TEP. Fifteen colleges and universities joined the program in 2014–2015, and to date, 13 institutions have joined for the 2015–2016 period. In May 2015, CIC offered an informational webinar for institutions interested in participating in the program. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT “The CIC Tuition Exchange Program is a remarkable program and an invaluable resource for our employees, their children, and their spouses. It complements one of the institution’s most important priorities—to broaden access to higher education and, at the same time, to give real meaning to the ideal of ‘affordability.’” —Haywood L. Strickland, President and CEO, Wiley College ENCOURAGING STUDENT JOURNALISTS CIC/NEW YORK TIMES PARTNERSHIP IN EDUCATION The CIC/New York Times Partnership in Education, launched in 2003, offers members discounted subscriptions, advertising rates, and rights and permissions site licenses for the Times archives; programs and events on campus sponsored by the Times; and priority in securing reporters and editors for speaking engagements on campus. More than 60 CIC member institutions belong to the Partnership. (For the list of participating institutions, see the Appendix, page 68.) Presidents of 25 CIC member colleges and universities participated in the 11th annual CIC/New York Times Partnership’s Presidents Council meeting— the only such meeting of college and university presidents hosted by the Times. During the October 13, 2014, lunch meeting at the Times offices in New York City, participants engaged in a wide-ranging and candid discussion with Times higher education correspondents Tamar Lewin and Richard Peréz-Peña. Also at the meeting, Marcia Hawkins, president of Union College (KY), was elected 2015 chair of the Partnership, succeeding Roger Casey, president of McDaniel College. The New York Times Student News Editors Workshop on April 16, 2015, included 13 student news editors from seven CIC member institutions. The annual workshop enables student news editors to explore the role of a newspaper in society, meet with Times correspondents and editors, and develop their journalistic skills. 33 STRENGTHENING INSTITUTIONAL OPERATIONS ASSESSMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY CIC has long been a national leader in voluntary efforts to improve the quality of student learning and a strong advocate of institutional autonomy in accountability efforts. The CIC Statement on Assessment: Leadership for Student Learning Assessment and Accountability, which traces CIC’s leadership in efforts to improve the quality of undergraduate education and describes CIC’s approach to assessment and accountability efforts, is available online at www.cic.edu/Assessment. In 2001, CIC was the first national presidential association to urge its members to use the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) as a means of gauging student involvement in educationally purposeful activities that are highly correlated with academic success. Approximately 535 CIC colleges and universities (85 percent of CIC’s institutional members) have used NSSE to assess student engagement in the first and senior years. Many CIC institutions make their NSSE scores available to the public on their institutional websites. Beginning in 2003, CIC collaborated with the Council for Aid to Education to develop and implement the Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA), one of the first standardized instruments to measure directly an institution’s contribution to student learning. CIC published reports on the work of the CIC/CLA Consortium, which was generously supported by the Teagle Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York, in 2008, 2011, 2012, and 2013. Working with the Teagle Foundation and other higher education associations, CIC also helped draft and disseminate a statement of principles, New Leadership on Student Learning and Assessment. As a founding sponsor of the New Leadership Alliance for Student Learning and Accountability, CIC partnered with other higher education associations to harness and direct collective, sustained, strategic— and voluntary—action to improve student learning in American colleges and universities. In addition, CIC is one of the national associations that endorsed Committing to Quality: Guidelines for Assessment and Accountability in Higher Education. CIC continues to advise the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment in its efforts to help institutions document and promote promising practices for assessing college student learning outcomes. CIC is involved in other national discussions of assessment and accountability. Two of CIC’s recent efforts—the CIC/Degree Qualifications Profile Consortium, with support from the Lumina Foundation, and the Engaging Evidence Consortium, with support from the Teagle Foundation—directly addressed these issues. In 2011, CIC was one of three initial groups—and the only membership association— to test the Lumina Foundation’s Degree Qualifications Profile concept. BUILDING BLOCKS TO 2020 Guilford College, NC 34 CIC and the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities (NAICU) cooperate on a national initiative to increase college completion rates. The central component of Building Blocks to 2020 is a website launched in September 2010 that highlights and supports efforts by nonprofit private colleges and universities to increase the number of at-risk students they enroll and boost the retention and graduation rates of those student populations. A two-year progress report was issued in 2012. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Juniata College, Millikin University, North Central College (IL), Presbyterian College, St. Catherine University, University of Evansville, University of the Incarnate Word, and Utica College. PROFESSORS OF THE YEAR CIC sponsors the U.S. Professors of the Year awards program organized by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. In 2014, five of the state-level award winners were faculty members from CIC member institutions: Connecticut College, Roanoke College, Samford University, Ursinus College, and Wittenberg University. STUDENT AID ALLIANCE CIC works with NAICU, the American Council on Education, and other associations to increase federal aid for students. VOTER REGISTRATION INITIATIVE CIC, in cooperation with NAICU and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, supports the “Your Vote, Your Voice” project, a nonpartisan, nationwide campaign to engage college students in the electoral process. Eckerd College, FL INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION CIC announced a new partnership with the American Councils for International Education in September 2013. Through the partnership, CIC member colleges and universities are eligible for a range of services that can increase an institution’s presence abroad and advance internationalization of the campus. These opportunities include academic exchanges, overseas language immersion, and educational development programs. For the fifth year, CIC publicized a program administered by World Learning, Inc. on behalf of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Educational and Cultural Affairs. The Global Undergraduate Exchange Program (UGRAD) locates appropriate undergraduate colleges and universities for students from African, Asian, European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern countries who wish to spend a semester or a year in the United States. The program provides partial tuition and fees and the full cost of room, board, books, and health insurance. In the 2014–2015 academic year, 12 CIC member institutions hosted a total of 41 UGRAD students. The institutions included Augustana University (SD), Chatham University, DePauw University, Endicott College, 35 2014–2015 CIC AWARDEES 36 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES 2015 AWARD FOR PHILANTHROPY (INDIVIDUAL) Roger Mudd received CIC’s 2015 Award for Philanthropy (Individual). In 2010, the highlyacclaimed broadcast journalist presented a $4 million gift to his alma mater, Washington and Lee University, to establish a new center for the study of ethics. Today, the Roger Mudd Center for Ethics advances dialogue, teaching, and research about issues of public and professional ethics. In addition, the endowed Roger Mudd Professorship in Ethics supports a distinguished senior scholar. Mudd is a member of the board of trustees of the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges (VFIC) and previously was a trustee of RandolphMacon Woman’s College (now Randolph College). Upon joining the VFIC board in 1997, he co-chaired the committee that created the organization’s Ethics Bowl, which aims to enrich and enliven the discussion of ethical issues among students at VFIC’s 15 member colleges. Since its creation, Mudd has been actively involved in all aspects of the planning and implementation of the Ethics Bowl; he continues to serve as its co-chair. Mudd donated papers documenting his work at CBS, NBC, the History Channel, and PBS Newshour to Washington and Lee’s Leyburn Library. In 2011, Washington and Lee awarded Mudd its Washington Award in recognition of his distinguished leadership and service to the nation and “extraordinary acts of philanthropy” in support of Washington and Lee and other institutions. Mudd has had a long, successful career in journalism. He co-anchored the NBC Nightly News 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT and Meet the Press, followed by the McNeill-Lehrer Newshour on PBS. Mudd also was a primary anchor for the History Channel and taught as a visiting professor at Princeton and Washington and Lee Universities. His memoir, The Place to Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News, was published in 2008. A 1950 graduate of Washington and Lee, Mudd received his master of arts degree from the University of North Carolina. 2015 AWARD FOR PHILANTHROPY (ORGANIZATION) The James S. Kemper Foundation received CIC’s 2015 Award for Philanthropy (Organization). The Foundation actively works to promote the philosophy upon which it was founded in 1948: A college-level education in the liberal arts, complemented by experiential education, is the ideal preparation for life and work. Although grantmaking was originally the foundation’s main function, today its primary focus is the Kemper Scholars Program. This 65-year-old initiative provides support, internship experiences, and networking opportunities to students at 16 liberal arts colleges and universities across the nation. It seeks to foster future leaders who are active on their campuses and in their local communities. In addition, the Kemper Fellows Program helps undergraduates prepare for careers in arts administration by collaborating with Chicago-area arts organizations to provide mentored internships in arts management. Accepting the award on behalf of the Kemper Foundation was Ryan LaHurd, president and executive director of the Foundation since 2009, following 14 years as president of Lenoir-Rhyne University. Previously, he was vice president for academic affairs and dean at Augsburg College and professor of English at Thiel College. 2014 CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICER AWARD Mark J. Braun, provost and dean of the college at Gustavus Adolphus College, received CIC’s 2014 Chief Academic Officer Award in recognition of his contributions to colleagues at independent colleges and universities. Prior to assuming the CAO role at Gustavus Adolphus, Braun served as senior vice president for academic affairs and dean of the college at Augustana University (SD) from 2007 to 2011. He has made numerous presentations at CIC’s Institute for Chief Academic Officers and the Workshops for Department and Division Chairs, and he has served as one of the coordinators of the Mentor Program for New CAOs since 2011. Braun is currently a member of the board of the American Conference of Academic Deans, has served on assessment and planning teams for the Association of American Colleges and Universities, and has been a member of the board of directors of the Broadcast Education Association. His research interests include technology policy making, gender and mass media organizations, and communication studies pedagogy. In 1994, he received the Outstanding Citizen Award from the city of Mankato for his many contributions to that community. Braun holds a doctorate in speech communication from the University of Minnesota and a master’s degree from Minnesota State University, Mankato. 37 Senator Morris Mills (center) received the Charles Foreman Award at the 2015 State Funds Annual Conference. With Mills are CIC President Richard Ekman (left) and Independent Colleges of Indiana President Richard Ludwick (right). 2015 CHARLES W. L. FOREMAN AWARD Morris Mills received the CIC State Funds 2015 Charles W. L. Foreman Award, which recognizes a college president or trustee who has demonstrated an outstanding record of service in support of the mission and work of the State Funds. Mills is a longtime trustee of the Independent Colleges of Indiana (ICI) and a 32-year veteran of the Indiana State House and Senate. His leadership on the ICI board has included service on the executive committee and the spearheading of a wide range of programs, including the innovative ICI STEM Teach Initiative. A graduate of Earlham College, with an MBA from Harvard Business School, Mills has had a notable career in business and in state politics. Throughout his tenure in the legislative branch, Mills was known for his 38 advocacy of education and sponsored a wide array of programs of benefit to the independent college sector. Of particular note was his groundbreaking legislation to provide state financial aid for needy students who attend private colleges and universities—the Freedom of Choice grant program. To date, more than 660,000 state grants have been awarded to ICI students through this program. Because of Mills’s leadership through ICI and the state legislature, Hoosiers often cite the senator as the state’s single most-effective advocate for the independent college sector in Indiana. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES RECOGNITION FOR CONSECUTIVE YEARS OF SPONSORSHIP CIC RECOGNIZED FIVE COMPANIES FOR THEIR SPONSORSHIP OF THE PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE FOR TEN YEARS: 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT CIC RECOGNIZED TWO COMPANIES FOR THEIR SPONSORSHIP OF THE PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE FOR 20 YEARS: 39 ABOUT CIC With rising membership levels, strong sponsor and foundation support, an engaged Board of Directors, active advisory committees and task forces, and supportive staff, CIC is in strong organizational health. 40 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT CIC’s fundraising efforts generate three types of revenue—restricted grants for programs and projects; restricted grants for annual events and conferences; and grants for general operating support. CIC received financial support between July 1, 2014, and June 30, 2015, from the following donors and sponsors: Academic Keys Academic Search, Inc. American Academic Leadership Institute American Council of Learned Societies Aramark Art & Science Group Austen Group, a Division of Ruffalo Noel Levitz BCWH Bentz Whaley Flessner Bon Appétit Management Company CAF American Donor Fund Campus Labs CampusWorks, Inc. Capital Education Capture Higher Ed Carnegie Corporation of New York Casagrande Consulting Celli-Flynn Brennan Architects and Planners Collegis Education Creative Communication Associates Credo Derck & Edson Dick Jones Communications Diverse: Issues In Higher Education Dynamic Campus EFL Associates Ellucian Endeavor Foundation eProcurement Services Eugene M. Lang Foundation ExpertFile GDA Integrated Services, LLC Gehrung Associates Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Gonser Gerber LLP Hardwick Day Hastings+Chivetta Architects, Inc. HigherEdJobs 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Hyatt-Fennell, Executive Search IDEA iDesignEDU Inside Higher Ed Interfolio J. Davis Public Relations Jenzabar Jessie Ball duPont Fund Johnson, Grossnickle and Associates Kaludis Consulting Keypath Education Lilly Endowment Inc. Lumina Foundation for Education, Inc. Maguire Associates, Inc. Mason Jay Blacher & Associates Metz Culinary Management Miller/Cook & Associates, Inc. Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, PC Mobile Commons mStoner, Inc. National Management Resources Corporation News Generation, Inc. Newswise, Inc. Noel Levitz Noelker and Hull Associates, Inc. Online Consortium of Independent Colleges & Universities Pioneer College Caterers R. H. Perry & Associates Rafter Registry for College and University Presidents RHB Royall & Company Royall & Company - Advancement RPA Inc. RuffaloCODY SAGE Dining Services Samuel H. Kress Foundation Scannell & Kurz Socle Education, Inc. Sodexo Stamats Stantec Architecture Inc. Starfish Retention Solutions Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Stevens Strategy, LLC The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations The Chronicle of Higher Education The Collaborative The Dysart Group The Henry Luce Foundation, Inc. The Kresge Foundation The Lawlor Group, Inc. The Learning House, Inc. The Spelman & Johnson Group The Teagle Foundation TIAA-CREF TIAA-CREF Institute TVP Communications UPS Foundation, Inc. Walmart Foundation Williams & Company Witt/Kieffer Yaffe & Company, Inc. 41 FINANCIAL STATEMENT Statement of revenues, expenses, and change in unrestricted net assets for the year ended June 30, 2015. REVENUES Membership Dues Participant Registration Fees Foundation Grants and Corporate Support Endowment Distribution Interest, Dividends, and Other Income REVENUES 3,878,974 1,745,641 5,156,160 1,870,875 472,257 Revenues Net Realized and Unrealized Gains/Losses on Investments $13,123,907 Total Revenues $12,634,686 MEMBERSHIP DUES 3.6% 14.3% PARTICIPANT REGISTRATION FEES 29.6% FOUNDATION GRANTS AND CORPORATE SUPORT (489,221) 39.3% 13.3% ENDOWMENT DISTRIBUTION INTEREST, DIVIDENDS, AND OTHER INCOME EXPENSES Programs, Projects, and Services Grants/Scholarships to Colleges, Universities, and State Fund Members Administrative and Supporting Services Total Expenses 5,816,912 3,460,945 3,279,779 EXPENSES $12,557,636 PROGRAMS, PROJECTS, AND SERVICES NET ASSETS Change in Unrestricted Net Assets (Net of Realized and Unrealized Gains and Losses on Investments) A copy of the audited financial statements will be provided upon request. 42 $77,050 $566,271 26.1% 46.3% 27.6% GRANTS/SCHOLARSHIPS TO COLLEGES, UNIVERSITIES, AND STATE FUND MEMBERS ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPPORTING SERVICES COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES BOARD OF DIRECTORS (NOVEMBER 2015) EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE CHAIR Chris Kimball President, California Lutheran University VICE CHAIR FOR PROGRAMS Thomas L. Hellie DIRECTORS William T. Abare Juan Olivarez President, Flagler College President, Aquinas College Richard B. Artman Jerold Panas President, Viterbo University David L. Beckley President, Linfield College President, Rust College ACTING SECRETARY AND VICE CHAIR FOR MEMBERSHIP Jennifer L. Braaten Billy C. Hawkins President, Talladega College TREASURER William T. Luckey, Jr. President, Ferrum College Nancy J. Cable President, The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Christina R. Cutlip Executive Partner and CEO, Jerold Panas, Linzy & Partners Lynn Pasquerella President, Mount Holyoke College M. Lee Pelton President, Emerson College Fred P. Pestello President, Saint Louis University Managing Director and Head of Plan Sponsor Services: Institutional Relationships, TIAA-CREF Kim Phipps Marjorie Hass Robert A. Gervasi Kenneth P. Ruscio President, Austin College President, Quincy University President, Washington and Lee University VICE CHAIR FOR PUBLIC INFORMATION Michael F. Gilligan Lisa Marsh Ryerson President, Henry Luce Foundation President, AARP Foundation Pamela J. Gunter-Smith Beck A. Taylor President, York College of Pennsylvania President, Whitworth University Robert C. Helmer A. Hope Williams President, Lindsey Wilson College VICE CHAIR FOR RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT Michele D. Perkins President, New England College VICE CHAIR FOR INVESTMENT Kurt Kuehn Chief Financial Officer, UPS (Retired) PAST CHAIR George E. Martin President, St. Edward’s University EX OFFICIO Richard Ekman President, Council of Independent Colleges President, Baldwin Wallace University David G. Horner President, American College of Greece Robert R. Lindgren President, Randolph-Macon College President, Messiah College President, North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities J.B. Wilson President, Independent College Fund of New Jersey Cynthia Zane President, Hilbert College Michael Lomax President and CEO, United Negro College Fund 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT 43 ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND TASK FORCES 2015 PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE Mary B. Marcy Carole L. Williams PRESIDENTS INSTITUTE SPOUSES AND PARTNERS TASK FORCE 2014 INSTITUTE FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICERS TASK FORCE President, Dominican University of California PROGRAMS COMMITTEE OF THE CIC BOARD OF DIRECTORS Thomas L. Hellie (Chair) President, Linfield College Steven C. Bahls President, Augustana College (IL) David L. Beckley President, Rust College Christina R. Cutlip Managing Director and Head of Plan Sponsor Services: Institutional Relationships, TIAA-CREF Michael F. Gilligan President, Henry Luce Foundation Robert C. Helmer President, Baldwin Wallace University Lex O. McMillan III President, Albright College Cynthia Zane President, Hilbert College NEW PRESIDENTS PROGRAM ADVISORY COMMITTEE Scott D. Miller (Chair) President, Bethany College (WV) Carol A. Leary President, Bay Path University William T. Luckey, Jr. Presidential Spouse, Fisk University Terry Aretz (Chair) Presidential Spouse, Mount St. Joseph University B. Connie Allen (Chair) Provost, Saint Augustine’s University Traci Corey Dominic Aquila Presidential Spouse, Olivet College Michelle Dorsey Presidential Spouse, Texas Lutheran University Roger Fell Presidential Spouse, The University of Findlay Vice President for Academic Affairs, University of St. Thomas (TX) F. Robert Huth Vice President for Business and Chief Financial Officer, Stetson University Amy Jessen-Marshall Sheila J. Garren Presidential Spouse, Lynchburg College Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty, Sweet Briar College Robert Haring-Smith John Kolander Presidential Spouse, Washington & Jefferson College Provost, Wisconsin Lutheran College Sharon Kazee Pareena Lawrence Presidential Spouse, University of Evansville Norman E. Knight Presidential Spouse, Pacific Union College Cheryl E. Perkins Presidential Spouse, Virginia Union University John Przybylski Presidential Spouse, Regis College (MA) Mary L. Trettin Presidential Spouse, Northland College Provost and Dean of the College, Augustana College (IL) Chris K. McAlary Vice President for Administration and Finance, Mount Saint Mary’s University (CA) Marlene Moore Dean of the College and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Willamette University Sue Palmer Vice President for Finance and Administration, College of Saint Benedict President, Lindsey Wilson College 44 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Elizabeth L. Paul Tracy Wenger Sadd R. Richard Ray Paul J. Wadell Stephany Schlachter Provost, Lewis University THE POWER OF LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEMBERS Eileen B. Wilson-Oyelaran NETWORK FOR VOCATION IN UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION (NETVUE) ADVISORY COUNCIL S. Georgia Nugent (Chair) Senior Fellow, Council of Independent Colleges, and Interim President, The College of Wooster STATE FUND MEMBERS ADVISORY COUNCIL Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Stetson University Provost, Hope College Stephen R. Briggs President, Berry College Donna M. Carroll President, Dominican University (IL) Chaplain and Executive Director for Purposeful Life Work and Ethical Leadership, Elizabethtown College Professor of Religious Studies, St. Norbert College Gregory Carroll Vice President for University Marketing, Stetson University Brian Eckert Haywood Strickland President, Wiley College Karl Stumo Vice President for Enrollment Management and Marketing, Dominican University (IL) President, Kalamazoo College Ned Moore (Chair) Executive Director, State Fund Programs and Vice President, Council of Independent Colleges Mike Backer President, Missouri Colleges Fund President, Wartburg College Executive Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Washington and Lee University Robert Bartlett Joel L. Cunningham Brad Harsha Kenneth R. Garren Darrel D. Colson Vice Chancellor and President Emeritus, Sewanee: The University of the South Director of Admissions, Defiance College David S. Guthrie President, California Lutheran University Professor of Higher Education, Geneva College Marianne E. Inman President Emerita, Central Methodist University Leanne M. Neilson Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, California Lutheran University Lisa D. Rhodes Dean of Sisters Chapel and Director of Sisters Center for WISDOM, Spelman College 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Chris Kimball L. Jay Lemons President, Susquehanna University Tom Morris President, Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges Michele D. Perkins President, New England College Carolyn J. Stefanco President, The College of Saint Rose President, Michigan Colleges Alliance President, Lynchburg College Jack Jones President, Iowa College Foundation Richard Ludwick President, Independent Colleges of Indiana Brent Wilder Vice President, Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and Universities A. Hope Williams (Ex Officio) President, North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities Richard Ekman (Ex Officio) President, Council of Independent Colleges 45 2014–2015 CIC INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS PROFILE INSTITUTION SIZE BY STUDENT ENROLLMENT 23% 18% ADMISSIONS SELECTIVITY <1,000 1,000–2,000 11% HIGHLY SELECTIVE (<50% ADMITTED) 13% 36% CIC INSTITUTIONS 3% 15% ASIAN 12% VERY SELECTIVE (50–75% ADMITTED) 17% 8% >3,000 59% SELECTIVE (76–85% ADMITTED) WHITE 62% LESS SELECTIVE (>85% ADMITTED) CARNEGIE CLASSIFICATION UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT BY AGE GROUP OTHER TOTAL ENROLLMENT BY RACE AND ETHNICITY PUBLIC FOUR-YEAR 6% 2% 5% DOCTORAL/ RESEARCH 10% UNDER 22 11% 41% 53% OTHER 13% 12% 22–24 MASTER’S BACCALAUREATE BLACK OR AFRICAN AMERICAN HISPANIC 2,001–3,000 23% TOTAL ENROLLMENT BY RACE AND ETHNICITY 65% ASIAN 11% 13% 25–34 35 AND OVER BLACK OR AFRICAN AMERICAN HISPANIC WHITE 58% OTHER Data sources: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, 2012–2013. 46 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES CORE REVENUES PER STUDENT FTE CORE EXPENSES PER STUDENT FTE CIC INSTITUTIONS 19% 15% 52% TUITION AND FEES PRIVATE GIFTS STATE AND LOCAL APPROPRIATIONS INVESTMENT RETURN CIC INSTITUTIONS 17% 37% 18% OTHER GOVERNMENT GRANTS AND CONTRACTS 9% 16% 10% 1% 1% INSTRUCTION STUDENT SERVICES RESEARCH INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT PUBLIC SERVICE OTHER ACADEMIC SUPPORT 3% 0% CORE REVENUES PER STUDENT FTE CORE EXPENSES PER STUDENT FTE PUBLIC FOUR-YEAR 23% TUITION AND FEES PRIVATE GIFTS STATE AND LOCAL APPROPRIATIONS INVESTMENT RETURN 36% 18% 3% 3% 17% 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT OTHER GOVERNMENT GRANTS AND CONTRACTS PUBLIC FOUR-YEAR 27% 8% 5% INSTRUCTION STUDENT SERVICES RESEARCH INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT PUBLIC SERVICE OTHER 31% 15% 9% ACADEMIC SUPPORT 5% 47 MEMBERS OF CIC (JUNE 2015) CIC continues its steady membership growth and serves 662 independent colleges and universities, including liberal arts, comprehensive, four-year, two-year, and international institutions. In addition, 88 national, state, and regional organizations are Affiliate or State Fund Members. INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS ALABAMA Birmingham-Southern College Huntingdon College Oakwood University Samford University Spring Hill College Stillman College Talladega College Tuskegee University ALASKA Alaska Pacific University ARIZONA Prescott College ARKANSAS Holy Names University La Sierra University Marymount California University Mills College Mount Saint Mary’s University National University Notre Dame de Namur University Pacific Oaks College Pacific Union College Point Loma Nazarene University Scripps College Simpson University Thomas Aquinas College University of La Verne University of Redlands Westmont College Whittier College William Jessup University Woodbury University Central Baptist College Hendrix College John Brown University Lyon College Philander Smith College University of the Ozarks COLORADO CALIFORNIA CONNECTICUT Azusa Pacific University Biola University California Baptist University California Lutheran University Chapman University Concordia University Irvine Dominican University of California Fresno Pacific University Golden Gate University Albertus Magnus College Connecticut College Goodwin College Mitchell College Sacred Heart University Trinity College University of Bridgeport University of Saint Joseph 48 Colorado Christian University Colorado College Naropa University Regis University University of Denver DELAWARE HAWAII Wesley College Wilmington University Chaminade University of Honolulu FLORIDA Northwest Nazarene University The College of Idaho Beacon College Bethune-Cookman University Clearwater Christian College Eckerd College Flagler College Florida Memorial University Jacksonville University Lynn University Palm Beach Atlantic University Rollins College Saint Leo University Southeastern University St. Thomas University Stetson University Warner University GEORGIA Agnes Scott College Berry College Brenau University Clark Atlanta University Covenant College LaGrange College Morehouse College Oglethorpe University Piedmont College Spelman College Thomas University Wesleyan College Young Harris College IDAHO ILLINOIS Augustana College Aurora University Benedictine University Blackburn College Columbia College Chicago Concordia University Chicago DePaul University Dominican University Elmhurst College Eureka College Greenville College Illinois College Illinois Wesleyan University Judson University Knox College Lewis University Lincoln College MacMurray College McKendree University Millikin University Monmouth College National-Louis University North Central College North Park University Principia College Quincy University Rockford University Saint Xavier University COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Shimer College Trinity Christian College University of St. Francis Wheaton College INDIANA Anderson University Bethel College Butler University Calumet College of St. Joseph DePauw University Earlham College Franklin College Goshen College Grace College and Seminary Hanover College Holy Cross College Huntington University Indiana Wesleyan University Manchester University Marian University Saint Joseph’s College Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College Saint Mary’s College Taylor University Trine University University of Evansville University of Indianapolis University of Saint Francis Valparaiso University Wabash College IOWA Briar Cliff University Buena Vista University Central College 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Clarke University Coe College Cornell College Dordt College Drake University Graceland University Grand View University Grinnell College Iowa Wesleyan College Loras College Luther College Morningside College Mount Mercy University Northwestern College Simpson College St. Ambrose University University of Dubuque Upper Iowa University Wartburg College William Penn University KANSAS Baker University Benedictine College Bethany College Bethel College Friends University Kansas Wesleyan University McPherson College MidAmerica Nazarene University Newman University Ottawa University Southwestern College Sterling College Tabor College University of Saint Mary KENTUCKY Alice Lloyd College Bellarmine University Berea College Brescia University Campbellsville University Centre College Georgetown College Kentucky Wesleyan College Lindsey Wilson College Midway University Saint Catharine College Spalding University Thomas More College Transylvania University Union College University of Pikeville University of the Cumberlands LOUISIANA Centenary College of Louisiana Dillard University Loyola University New Orleans Our Lady of the Lake College MAINE Husson University Saint Joseph’s College of Maine Thomas College Unity College University of New England MARYLAND Capitol Technology University Goucher College Hood College Loyola University Maryland McDaniel College Mount St. Mary’s University Notre Dame of Maryland University St. John’s College Stevenson University Washington Adventist University MASSACHUSETTS American International College Anna Maria College Assumption College Bard College at Simon’s Rock Bay Path University Becker College Cambridge College Curry College Elms College Emerson College Emmanuel College Endicott College Fisher College Gordon College Hampshire College Lasell College Lesley University Merrimack College Mount Holyoke College Mount Ida College Nichols College Pine Manor College Regis College Simmons College Springfield College Stonehill College Suffolk University 49 Western New England University Wheaton College Wheelock College MICHIGAN Adrian College Albion College Alma College Andrews University Aquinas College Calvin College Cornerstone University Finlandia University Hillsdale College Hope College Kalamazoo College Madonna University Marygrove College Olivet College Siena Heights University Spring Arbor University MINNESOTA Augsburg College Bethany Lutheran College Bethel University College of Saint Benedict Concordia College Concordia University-St. Paul Crown College Gustavus Adolphus College Hamline University Saint John’s University Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota St. Catherine University St. Olaf College The College of St. Scholastica University of Northwestern-St. Paul University of St. Thomas MISSISSIPPI Millsaps College Rust College Tougaloo College MISSOURI Avila University Central Methodist University Columbia College Culver-Stockton College Fontbonne University Kansas City Art Institute Lindenwood University Maryville University of Saint Louis Missouri Baptist University Missouri Valley College Park University Rockhurst University Saint Louis University Stephens College Webster University Westminster College William Jewell College William Woods University MONTANA Carroll College Rocky Mountain College University of Great Falls NEBRASKA Bellevue University College of Saint Mary Doane College Hastings College Midland University Nebraska Methodist College Nebraska Wesleyan University Union College NEVADA Sierra Nevada College NEW HAMPSHIRE Colby-Sawyer College Franklin Pierce University New England College Rivier University Saint Anselm College Southern New Hampshire University NEW JERSEY Augustana University, SD 50 Bloomfield College Caldwell University COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Centenary College College of Saint Elizabeth Drew University Felician University Georgian Court University Monmouth University Rider University Saint Peter’s University NEW MEXICO St. John’s College University of the Southwest NEW YORK Cazenovia College College of Mount Saint Vincent Concordia College Daemen College Dominican College Dowling College D’Youville College Elmira College Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts Hartwick College Hilbert College Houghton College Ithaca College Keuka College Le Moyne College Manhattanville College Marymount Manhattan College Medaille College Mercy College Molloy College Mount Saint Mary College Nyack College Pace University Paul Smith’s College Roberts Wesleyan College Siena College St. Bonaventure University St. John Fisher College St. Joseph’s College 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT OHIO OREGON Corban University George Fox University Lewis & Clark College Linfield College Marylhurst University Northwest Christian University Pacific University Warner Pacific College Willamette University Barton College Belmont Abbey College Bennett College Brevard College Catawba College Chowan University Gardner-Webb University Greensboro College Guilford College High Point University Johnson C. Smith University Lenoir-Rhyne University Livingstone College Mars Hill University Meredith College Methodist University Montreat College North Carolina Wesleyan College Pfeiffer University Queens University of Charlotte Saint Augustine’s University Salem College Shaw University St. Andrews University University of Mount Olive Warren Wilson College William Peace University Wingate University Antioch College Ashland University Baldwin Wallace University Bluffton University Capital University Cedarville University Defiance College Denison University Franciscan University of Steubenville Franklin University Heidelberg University Hiram College John Carroll University Kenyon College Lake Erie College Lourdes University Malone University Marietta College Mount St. Joseph University Mount Vernon Nazarene University Muskingum University Notre Dame College Oberlin College Ohio Dominican University Ohio Northern University Ohio Wesleyan University Otterbein University The College of Wooster The University of Findlay Tiffin University University of Mount Union University of Rio Grande Urbana University Ursuline College Walsh University Wilberforce University Wilmington College Wittenberg University NORTH DAKOTA OKLAHOMA University of Jamestown University of Mary Oklahoma City University Oral Roberts University St. Lawrence University St. Thomas Aquinas College The College of New Rochelle The College of Saint Rose The King’s College The Sage Colleges Utica College Wagner College Wells College NORTH CAROLINA PENNSYLVANIA Albright College Allegheny College Alvernia University Arcadia University Bryn Athyn College Bucknell University Cabrini College Carlow University Cedar Crest College Chatham University Chestnut Hill College Delaware Valley University DeSales University Duquesne University Eastern University Elizabethtown College Gannon University Geneva College Gettysburg College Grove City College Gwynedd Mercy University Haverford College Holy Family University Immaculata University Juniata College Keystone College King’s College La Roche College Lafayette College Lebanon Valley College Lycoming College Marywood University 51 Mercyhurst University Messiah College Misericordia University Moravian College Mount Aloysius College Muhlenberg College Neumann University Point Park University Robert Morris University Rosemont College Saint Francis University Saint Vincent College Seton Hill University Susquehanna University Swarthmore College Thiel College University of Scranton Ursinus College Washington & Jefferson College Waynesburg University Westminster College Widener University Wilkes University Wilson College York College of Pennsylvania RHODE ISLAND Roger Williams University Salve Regina University Southern Wesleyan University Wofford College SOUTH DAKOTA Augustana University Dakota Wesleyan University Mount Marty College University of Sioux Falls TENNESSEE Aquinas College Bethel University Carson-Newman University Christian Brothers University Fisk University Freed-Hardeman University King University Lane College Lee University Lincoln Memorial University Martin Methodist College Maryville College Milligan College Rhodes College Sewanee: The University of the South Southern Adventist University Tennessee Wesleyan College Trevecca Nazarene University Tusculum College SOUTH CAROLINA TEXAS Anderson University Charleston Southern University Claflin University Coker College Columbia College Converse College Erskine College Furman University Limestone College Morris College Newberry College Presbyterian College Austin College Baylor University Concordia University Texas Dallas Baptist University East Texas Baptist University Hardin-Simmons University Huston-Tillotson University Jarvis Christian College McMurry University Our Lady of the Lake University Saint Mary’s University Schreiner University 52 Southwestern Adventist University Southwestern University St. Edward’s University Texas Christian University Texas College Texas Lutheran University Texas Wesleyan University University of Dallas University of St. Thomas University of the Incarnate Word Wayland Baptist University Wiley College UTAH Westminster College VERMONT Bennington College Burlington College Champlain College College of Saint Joseph Goddard College Landmark College Marlboro College Norwich University Saint Michael’s College Southern Vermont College VIRGINIA Averett University Bluefield College Bridgewater College Eastern Mennonite University Emory & Henry College Ferrum College Hampden-Sydney College Hollins University Lynchburg College Mary Baldwin College Randolph College Randolph-Macon College Regent University Roanoke College Shenandoah University Southern Virginia University Sweet Briar College University of Richmond Virginia Union University Virginia Wesleyan College Washington and Lee University WASHINGTON City University of Seattle Gonzaga University Heritage University Pacific Lutheran University Saint Martin’s University Seattle Pacific University University of Puget Sound Whitman College Whitworth University WEST VIRGINIA Alderson Broaddus University Bethany College Davis & Elkins College Ohio Valley University University of Charleston West Virginia Wesleyan College Wheeling Jesuit University WISCONSIN Alverno College Cardinal Stritch University Carroll University Carthage College Concordia University Wisconsin Edgewood College Lakeland College Marian University Mount Mary University Northland College Ripon College Silver Lake College of the Holy Family St. Norbert College Viterbo University Wisconsin Lutheran College COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES ASSOCIATE MEMBERS AFFILIATE MEMBERS Ancilla College, IN Cox College, MO Dean College, MA Hesston College, KS Jacksonville College, TX Louisburg College, NC Maria College, NY St. Augustine College, IL Trocaire College, NY Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs, KS American Academy of Religion, GA American Council of Learned Societies, NY American Councils for International Education, DC American Historical Association, DC American Student Assistance, MA Appalachian College Association, KY Associated Colleges of the Midwest, IL Associated Colleges of the South, GA Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities, MN Association of Advanced Rabbinical and Talmudic Schools, NY Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities, DC Association of Independent California Colleges and Universities Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Nebraska Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio Association of Presbyterian Colleges and Universities, KY Association of Reformed Colleges and Universities, SD Christian College Consortium, MA Coalition for College Cost Savings, SC Colleges of the Fenway, MA Concordia University System, MO Conference for Mercy Higher Education, MD Council for Advancement and Support of Education, DC Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, DC Council of American Overseas Research Centers, DC Council of Colleges and Universities of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), IL Council of Independent Colleges in Virginia Educational & Institutional Insurance Administrators, Inc., IL INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS Al Akhawayn University, Morocco American College of Greece American College of Thessaloniki, Greece American University in Bulgaria American University of Beirut, Lebanon American University of Iraq American University of Kuwait American University of Nigeria American University of Paris, France American University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates Booth University College, Canada European Humanities University, Lithuania Forman Christian College, Pakistan Franklin University Switzerland John Cabot University, Italy Lebanese American University, Lebanon Newbold College of Higher Education, United Kingdom Philadelphia University-Jordan Saint Monica University, Cameroon Sistema CETYS Universidad, Mexico 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT EDUCAUSE, DC Evangelical Lutheran Church In America, IL Federation of Independent Illinois Colleges & Universities, IL Fielding Graduate University, CA Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, NY Hollings Center for International Dialogue, DC IDEA, KS Iowa Association of Independent Colleges and Universities Lehigh Valley Association of Independent Colleges, Inc., PA Lutheran Educational Conference of North America, SD Mennonite Education Agency, IN Modern Language Association, NY National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, DC National Humanities Alliance, DC National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education, TX National Student Clearinghouse, VA Nazarene Colleges Council of Education, KS New American Colleges and Universities, MA North American Coalition for Christian Admissions Professionals, IN Online Consortium of Independent Colleges & Universities, CO Society for Classical Studies, PA Society of Biblical Literature, GA The Great Lakes Colleges Association, MI The Phi Beta Kappa Society, DC Tuition Plan Consortium/Private College 529 Plan, MO United Methodist Church/General Board of Higher Education and Ministry, TN Women’s College Coalition, GA Yes We Must Coalition, MA 53 NEW MEMBERS IN 2014–2015 INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS Antioch College, OH Baylor University, TX Bennett College, NC Biola University, CA College of Saint Joseph, VT La Sierra University, CA Landmark College, VT Saint Catharine College, KY Saint Louis University, MO Suffolk University, MA University of Denver, CO University of Redlands, CA Wheaton College, IL Whitman College, WA Wilberforce University, OH Booth University College, Canada European Humanities University, Lithuania AFFILIATE MEMBERS Educational and Institutional Insurance Administrators, Inc., IL Lehigh Valley Association of Independent Colleges, Inc., PA NEW MEMBERS IN 2015–2016 (AS OF NOVEMBER 2015) INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS Campbell University, NC College of the Ozarks, MO Goldey-Beacom College, DE LeTourneau University, TX Life Pacific College, CA Life University, GA Newbury College, MA Reinhardt University, GA Saint Mary’s College of California St. Louis College of Pharmacy, MO Union University, TN Universidad del Sagrado Corazón, PR University of the Pacific, CA American University Duhok Kurdistan, Iraq Universidad de Monterrey, Mexico Universidad de Tijuana, Mexico Universidad Latina de América, Mexico 54 AFFILIATE MEMBERS Council on Library and Information Resources, DC Council on Undergraduate Research, DC Project Pericles, NY Tennessee Independent Colleges and Universities Association STATE FUND MEMBERS Alabama Association of Independent Colleges and Universities Arkansas’ Independent Colleges and Universities Associated Colleges of Illinois Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Pennsylvania Association of Independent Kentucky Colleges and Universities Florida Independent College Fund Georgia Independent College Association Independent College Fund of Maryland Independent College Fund of New Jersey Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas Foundation Independent Colleges of Indiana Independent Colleges of Washington Independent Higher Education of Colorado Fund Iowa College Foundation Kansas Independent College Fund Louisiana Independent College Foundation Michigan Colleges Alliance Minnesota Private College Fund Missouri Colleges Fund Nebraska Independent College Foundation New Mexico Independent College Fund North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities North Dakota Independent College Fund Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges Oklahoma Independent Colleges and Universities Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and Universities South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities South Dakota Foundation of Independent Colleges Tennessee Independent Colleges and Universities Association Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges West Virginia Independent Colleges and Universities Wisconsin Association of Independent Colleges and Universities COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES CIC STAFF AND SENIOR ADVISORS (NOVEMBER 2015) CIC STAFF Christoph M. Kunkel Sherita C. Ashmon Conference and Program Coordinator Chief of Staff and Vice President for Operations Allison Blackburn Lilia M. LaGesse Director of Conferences Sheila Cooper Office Manager Jacalyn Cox Director of State Fund Programs Christopher Dodds Director of Digital Communications and Strategy Richard Ekman President Michelle L. Friedman Director of Programs Cecily Garber Communications Officer and ACLS Public Fellow Stephen Gibson Director of Programs Harold V. Hartley III Senior Vice President Barbara Hetrick Senior Vice President Philip M. Katz Director of Projects 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Director of Print and Digital Publications Erin Mezgar Development Manager Paula M. Miller Editor and Communications Manager Ned Moore Kathy Whatley S. Georgia Nugent Laura Wilcox Frederik Ohles Vice President for Annual Programs Vice President for Communications CIC ADVISORS Roger Bowen Senior Advisor and Director, Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellows Program Michael G. Cartwright Assistant Director, NetVUE Executive Director of State Fund Programs and CIC Vice President Myrvin F. Christopherson Cynthia Page Edward J. Clark Director of Finance Leslie A. Rogers-Brown Conference Manager Kelsey A. Sherman Staff Assistant to the President and the Senior Vice President Vanessa Taylor Conference and Program Coordinator Keith A. Wallace Director of Administration Kate Webber Director of Membership Services Senior Advisor, State Fund Programs Senior Advisor and Director, Tuition Exchange Program David S. Cunningham Director, NetVUE Scholarly Resources Project Senior Fellow Senior Advisor, Presidential Vocation and Institutional Mission Program Judith T. Phair Senior Advisor, Communications Shirley J. Roels Senior Advisor and Director, NetVUE Mary Pat Seurkamp Senior Advisor and Director, New Presidents Program Allen P. Splete President Emeritus Sanford J. Ungar Senior Advisor, Seminar for New Senior Leaders Susan Barnes Whyte Marylouise Fennell, RSM Senior Counsel Senior Advisor and Director, Consortium on Digital Resources for Teaching and Research Barbara Gombach Susanne Woods Program Evaluator, NetVUE Jonnie G. Guerra Senior Advisor, Information Fluency Workshops Senior Advisor, Annual Programs Richard T. Ingram Senior Advisor, President-Board Relations 55 CONNECTING CAMPUSES CIC connects campus leaders in various ways, including listservs, online communities, and task forces. There also are several ways to reach CIC. COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS NETVUE One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 320 Washington, DC 20036-1142 Phone: (202) 466-7230 • Fax: (202) 466-7238 Email: [email protected] • Twitter: @CICnotes Open only to chief academic officers at CIC member institutions. Open only to members of the Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education. ADVANCEMENT PRESIDENTIAL ASSISTANTS Open to development officers and staff at CIC member institutions. Open to the presidential assistant at each CIC member institution. CHAIRS PRESIDENTIAL SPOUSES Open to department and division chairs from CIC member institutions. Open to spouses and partners of current presidents of CIC member institutions. DATA PUBLIC RELATIONS Open to those at CIC member institutions interested in discussing issues of data and institutional research. Open to public relations officers and staff at CIC member institutions. DEANS STUDENT AFFAIRS Open to deans, associate provosts, and other academic officers at CIC member institutions. Open to student affairs officers and staff at CIC member institutions. FINANCE TEP Open to chief financial officers of CIC member institutions. Open only to Tuition Exchange Program liaisons at CIC-TEP participating institutions. WEBSITE CIC’s website—www.cic.edu—is a rich resource of information that draws substantial traffic each year. Visit the site for news about CIC conferences and programs, to view data and resources on the effectiveness of independent higher education, to download and order CIC publications, and for links to member institutions and other sites on higher education. CIC LISTSERVS Through listservs, CIC links a national network of people who lead and staff private colleges and universities. The service is free, and the listservs are reserved exclusively for CIC member institutions. In addition, several listservs are archived and offer online document libraries. To join the discussion groups, visit www.cic.edu/Listservs. PRESIDENTS Open only to current presidents of CIC member institutions. 56 COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES APPENDIX PRESIDENTIAL VOCATION AND INSTITUTIONAL MISSION 2014–2015 PARTICIPANTS J. Blair Blackburn Executive Vice President, Dallas Baptist University Kimberly P. Blair Vice President for Institutional Advancement, Ferrum College Carol M. Bresnahan Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Rollins College Scott Edward Bryant University Chaplain and Vice President for Spiritual Development, East Texas Baptist University Melinda Cook Vice President for Strategy and Planning and Chief of Staff, Fisher College Trina Dobberstein Vice President for Student Affairs, Baldwin Wallace University Patricia Draves Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the University, University of Mount Union Gigi A. Fansler Vice President for Academic Affairs, Lincoln College Carl A. Girelli Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College, Randolph College Shah M. Hasan Provost, Urbana University 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Participants in the 2014–2015 Presidential Vocation and Institutional Mission program for prospective presidents and their spouses or partners met for seminars in Stowe, Vermont (pictured), and in Peachtree City, Georgia. Charlie T. McCormick Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Schreiner University James H. Smith Provost, University of the Southwest David M. Timmerman Vice President and General Counsel, Linfield College Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty, Monmouth College (IL) Catharine O’Connell Burton J. Webb Gerard J. Rooney 2015 PRESIDENTS GOVERNANCE ACADEMY SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, PARTICIPANTS John N. McKeegan Vice President for Academic Affairs, Mary Baldwin College Executive Vice President for Enrollment, Advancement, and Planning, St. John Fisher College Reed Sheard Vice President for College Advancement and Chief Information Officer, Westmont College Gail Simmons Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Manhattanville College Vice President for Academic Affairs, Northwest Nazarene University Jeff Abernathy President, Alma College Roslyn Clark Artis President, Florida Memorial University Nancy H. Blattner President, Caldwell University 57 Francesco C. Cesareo Mary Eileen O’Brien, OP Lester C. Newman Richard A. Creehan Frederik Ohles Robert A. Pastoor President, Assumption College President, Alderson Broaddus University William C. Crothers Interim President, Ashland University Steven R. DiSalvo President, Saint Anselm College Sherilyn Emberton President, Dominican College President, Nebraska Wesleyan University Kevin P. Quinn, SJ President, University of Scranton Steven E. Titus President, Iowa Wesleyan College President, Jarvis Christian College President, Saint Joseph’s College (IN) Melody Rose President, Marylhurst University Ed L. Schrader President, Brenau University Elizabeth J. Stroble President, Huntington University 2015 PRESIDENTS GOVERNANCE ACADEMY NAPA, CALIFORNIA, PARTICIPANTS Judith Maxwell Greig Niels-Erik A. Andreasen President, Notre Dame de Namur University President, Andrews University COLLOQUIUM ON LEADERSHIP FOR CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICERS 2014 PARTICIPANTS Douglas N. Hastad Gordon Bietz President, Southern Adventist University Barbara Anderson President, Carroll University William J. Hynes Steven M. Corey President, Holy Names University President, Olivet College Lea A. Johnson John Denning, CSC President, Maria College President, Stonehill College Laurie M. Joyner Pamela J. Gunter-Smith President, Wittenberg University President, York College of Pennsylvania Howard Keim Troy D. Hammond President, Hesston College President, North Central College Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, North Carolina Wesleyan College John C. Knapp Logan C. Hampton President, Lane College J. Bradley Creed President, Hope College Richard Kriegbaum Chris Kimball President, Fresno Pacific University President, California Lutheran University Suzanne Mellon Terry Kimbrow President, Carlow University 58 President, Central Baptist College President, Webster University Associate Dean of Academics, Central Methodist University Richard Ashbrook Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Capital University Allen Bedford Dean of Academics and Faculty, Bryn Athyn College Michael Brown Provost and Executive Vice President, Samford University Elizabeth “Betsy” Fuller Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College, Becker College Karen Kaivola Provost and Chief Academic Officer, Augsburg College COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Paula McNutt Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College, Carroll College Rick Ostrander Provost, Cornerstone University R. Richard Ray Provost, Hope College Caroline Simon Provost and Chief Academic Officer, Whitworth University Mary Elizabeth Stivers Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Grand View University Michael Tannenbaum Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Hartwick College Sandra Cassady Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College of Health and Human Services, Saint Ambrose University Leslie Frere Vice President for Student Development, Saint Joseph’s College (TN) Robert Graham Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Grove City College Bobby Hall Executive Vice President and Provost, Wayland Baptist University Daniel Helwig Dean of College Advancement, York College of Pennsylvania Stuart Jones Paul Savory Vice President for Academic Affairs, Nebraska Methodist College Cheryl Smith General Counsel for the University, Western New England University Beth Triplett Vice President for Enrollment Management, Clarke University Rachel Van Cleave Dean of the School of Law, Golden Gate University Scott Van Loo Vice President for Enrollment Management and Marketing, Ashland University Wayne Webster Vice President for Advancement, Ripon College Provost, Chaminade University of Honolulu Vice President for Enrollment Management, Trine University SENIOR LEADERSHIP ACADEMY 2014–2015 PARTICIPANTS Jane Wood Lee King Erik Ankerberg Vice President for Institutional Advancement, Hampden-Sydney College Assistant Provost and Professor of English, Wisconsin Lutheran College Daniel Wubah Stefanie Niles Krispin Barr Vice President for Enrollment and Marketing, Hollins University Dean of Students, Salem College EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP ACADEMY 2014–2015 PARTICIPANTS Scott Ochander Associate Vice President for Finance, Kenyon College Helen Whippy Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College, Westminster College (PA) Provost, Washington and Lee University Dominic Aquila Vice President for Academic Affairs, University of St. Thomas (TX) Paul Bennion Vice President for Academic Affairs and Special Assistant to the President, The College of Idaho 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Vice President for Enrollment and Marketing, Manchester University Kenneth Paulli Vice President and Chief of Staff, Siena College Brenda Porter Poggendorf Todd Burson Adrienne Cooper Associate Provost, Bethune-Cookman University Katrina D’Aquin Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty, Bethany College (WV) Vice President for Enrollment and Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid, Roanoke College 59 Interim Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Huntington University Associate Professor and Department Chair of Theater, Albright College Julia Matthews Carl Trovall Anne Ehrlich Kathy Ogren Peter Ubertaccio Nathan Phinney Timothy Ward Del Doughty Dean of Students, Woodbury University Maria Garriga (Cari) Professor and Department Chair of Foreign Languages, Thomas More College Luke Goble Department Chair of Humanities, Warner Pacific College Corday Goddard Associate Dean for Student Development, St. Norbert College Darrin Good Associate Provost and Dean of Sciences and Education, Gustavus Adolphus College Stacy Hammons Associate Dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences and Business, Indiana Wesleyan University Lisa Kirkpatrick Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, University of Redlands Dean of the College of Theology, Arts, and Sciences, Malone University William Polik Professor and Department Chair of Chemistry, Hope College Nakia Pope Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning and Quality Enhancement, Texas Wesleyan University Adam Porter Associate Dean of the College, Illinois College Peter Powers Dean of the School of the Humanities, Messiah College Associate Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students, St. Edward’s University Beth Schwartz Brooke Knight Carmen Sidbury Assistant Dean, Randolph College Associate Professor and Department Chair of Visual and Media Arts, Emerson College Associate Provost for Research, Spelman College Sunil Kukreja Dean, College of Business, Butler University Associate Academic Dean and Dean of Graduate Studies, University of Puget Sound Julie Luetschwager Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs, Director of Institutional Effectiveness, and Director of Nursing, Marian University (WI) 60 Stephen Standifird Mimi Steadman Associate Vice President for Institutional Effectiveness, Daemen College Mark Stewart Interim Dean, Graduate School of Education and Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts, Willamette University Dean, College of Liberal Arts, Concordia University Texas Associate Professor and Department Chair of Political Science, Stonehill College Associate Dean of Sciences, Millsaps College Sally Welch Special Assistant to the President for New Program Development, Marygrove College AMERICAN HISTORY SEMINAR 2015 PARTICIPANTS Thomas Carty Associate Professor of Social Sciences, Springfield College Daphne Chamberlain Assistant Professor of History, Tougaloo College Wilson Chen Associate Professor of Languages and Literature, Benedictine University Kevin Cole Professor of English, University of Sioux Falls Rhonda Collier Associate Professor of English, Tuskegee University Seth Cotlar Professor of History, Willamette University Ann Denkler Associate Professor of History, Shenandoah University Brian Dirck Professor of History, Anderson University (IN) COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Martha Eads Yvette Piggush Carina Evans Hoffpauir Debra Rosenthal Professor of Language and Literature, Eastern Mennonite University Assistant Professor of English, College of Saint Benedict/Saint John’s University Amanda Ogden Kellogg Assistant Professor of English, LaGrange College Alan Litsey Associate Professor of English, John Carroll University Professor of Theatre Arts, Birmingham-Southern College Jonathan Sarris Judy Myers Professor of History, DePaul University Associate Professor of History, North Carolina Wesleyan College Associate Professor of Theatre and Dance, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Jonathan Gates Jené Schoenfeld William Nesbitt Assistant Professor of English, Southwestern University Thomas Foster Professor of English, Nyack College Rusty Hawkins Associate Professor, John Wesley Honors College, Indiana Wesleyan University Reshmi Hebbar Assistant Professor of English, Oglethorpe University Andrea Hilkovitz Assistant Professor of English, Mount Mary University Jessie Janeshek Assistant Professor of English, Bethany College (WV) Lynne Jefferson Associate Professor and Department Chair of English, Saint Augustine’s University Jennie Joiner Associate Professor of English, Keuka College Mary Alice Kirkpatrick Assistant Professor of English, Furman University Associate Professor of English, Kenyon College Kelly Selby Associate Professor of Humanities, Walsh University Paul Robertson ANCIENT GREECE IN THE MODERN CLASSROOM SEMINAR 2015 PARTICIPANTS Irina Rodimtseva Patricia Bart Associate Professor of English, Hillsdale College Megan Burnett Assistant Professor of Theatre, Bellarmine University Kristin Czarnecki Associate Professor of English, Georgetown College Travis Derico Visiting Assistant Professor of Bible and Religion, Huntington University (IN) Assistant Professor of English, Alderson Broaddus University Carrie Rohman Associate Professor of English, Lafayette College Robert Holschuh Simmons Assistant Professor of Classics, Monmouth College (IL) W. Lee Templeton Associate Professor of English, North Carolina Wesleyan College Kathleen Walkner Instructor of Humanities, Silver Lake College of the Holy Family Sheila Gordon Richard Wolf-Spencer Kevin McGruder Assistant Professor of History, Antioch College Tracy McKenzie Mitchell Harris 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Assistant Professor of Humanities, Colby-Sawyer College Associate Professor of English, Berea College Kate Egerton Associate Professor of Performing Arts, St. Edward’s University Professor of History, Wheaton College (IL) Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Beacon College Associate Professor of Fine and Performing Arts, Elizabethtown College Associate Professor of English, Augustana University (SD) 61 TEACHING EUROPEAN ART IN CONTEXT SEMINAR 2015 PARTICIPANTS Sherman Reed Anderson Associate Professor of Liberal Arts, Kansas City Art Institute Christiane Andersson Professor of Art and Art History, Bucknell University Karen Bowdoin Assistant Professor of Art and Design, George Fox University Allison Connolly Associate Professor of French, Centre College Matt Drissell Associate Professor of Art and Design, Dordt College Kate Elliott Assistant Professor of Visual and Performing Arts, Luther College Eduardo Febles Associate Professor of Modern Languages and Literatures, Simmons College Preston Lawing Associate Professor of Art and Design, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Susan Lee Associate Professor of Art, Concordia College (MN) Michael Mackenzie Associate Professor of Art and Art History, DePauw University Rachel Merrill-Schwaller Assistant Professor of Art, Grand View University Christina Penn-Goetsch Professor of Art History, Cornell College (IA) Mary Robinson Associate Professor of History, Geography, and Political Science, Lourdes University Peter Schmunk T.R. Garrison Professor of Humanities, Department of Art History, Wofford College Stephen Shapiro Faculty of the Isabelle Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures, Bennington College Tim Smith Professor of Art, Lindsey Wilson College Laura Watts Sommer Associate Professor of Visual and Performing Arts, Daemen College Abigail Susik Assistant Professor of Art History, Willamette University Jessica Thurlow Associate Professor of Art History, Aurora University Maria Traub Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Neumann University Kayla Walker Edin Assistant Professor of Humane Learning, Milligan College Candace Weddle Assistant Professor of Art and Design, Anderson University (SC) Leanne Zalewski Assistant Professor of Art, Randolph College 62 TEACHING INTERFAITH UNDERSTANDING SEMINAR 2015 CHESTNUT HILL PARTICIPANTS Paul Anders Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Philosophy, Mount Marty College Rose Aslan Assistant Professor of Religion, California Lutheran University Elliott Bazzano Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Le Moyne College Clifford Cain Professor of Classics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, Westminster College (MO) John Foster Associate Professor of Communication, Language, and Literature, Coker College June-Ann Greeley Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, Sacred Heart University Hans Gustafson Associate Director, Jay Phillips Center for Interfaith Learning, College of Saint Benedict/Saint John’s University Suzanne Henderson Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Queens University of Charlotte Jeremy Hustwit Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy, Methodist University Slavica Jakelic Assistant Professor of Humanities and Social Thought, Valparaiso University COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Justin Klassen Adam Pryor Janice Thompson Timothy Parker Nicholas Rademacher Craig Tyson Annette Pelletier Nathan Rein Jennifer Veninga Martha Stortz David von Schlichten Assistant Professor of Theology, Bellarmine University Assistant Professor of Architecture and Art, Norwich University Instructor of Theology, Immaculata University John Pennington Professor of Music, Augustana University (SD) Louise Prochaska Professor of Theology, Philosophy, and Women’s Studies, Notre Dame College (OH) Assistant Professor of Religion, Bethany College (KS) Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Cabrini College Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Ursinus College Professor of Religion, Augsburg College Margarita Suarez Associate Professor of Religious and Ethical Studies, Meredith College Associate Professor of Theology, King’s College Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, D’Youville College Assistant Professor of Theological and Religious Studies, St. Edward’s University Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Theology, Seton Hill University Victoria Williams Associate Professor of Political Science, Alvernia University TEACHING INTERFAITH UNDERSTANDING SEMINAR 2015 CHICAGO PARTICIPANTS Adrienne Ambrose Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, University of the Incarnate Word Michael Bathgate Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Saint Xavier University Maeve Callan Assistant Professor of Religion, Simpson College Karen Chaney Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Ethics, Olivet College Melissa Chastain Associate Professor of Social Sciences and Humanities, Spalding University Amy Cottrill CIC and Interfaith Youth Core’s multidisciplinary Teaching Interfaith Understanding seminars help faculty members strengthen and develop related courses and resources. 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Associate Professor of Religion, Birmingham-Southern College 63 Sarita E. Brown Joan Crist Caryn Riswold Giovanna Czander Ami Shah Mark Hanshaw Judith Thorn Professor of Biological Sciences, Knox College Vice President and Senior Advisor to CEO, Lumina Foundation for Education Michael Utzinger Michelle Asha Cooper David Vila Ron Filipowicz Maureen Walsh David Finegold Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Calumet College of St. Joseph Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Dominican College (NY) Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Texas Wesleyan University Andrew Hill Professor of Biblical and Theological Studies, Wheaton College (IL) Joshua Hollmann Assistant Professor of Religion, Concordia College (NY) Anita Houck Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Saint Mary’s College (IN) Melinda Krokus Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Marywood University Michael Latzer Associate Professor of Philosophy, Gannon University Jason Mahn Associate Professor of Religion, Augustana University (IL) Rebecca Meier-Rao Lecturer of Religious Studies, Edgewood College Kevin Minister Professor of Religion and Gender and Women’s Studies, Illinois College Assistant Professor of Global Studies, Pacific Lutheran University Professor of Religion, Hampden-Sydney College Professor of Religion and Philosophy, John Brown University Visiting Assistant Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, Rockhurst University President, Excelencia in Education Cathy Burack Senior Fellow for Higher Education, Brandeis University Samuel Cargile President, Institute for Higher Education Policy Director of Senior College Relations, Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society Chief Academic Officer, American Honors, Inc. Emily R. Froimson Jane Webster Vice President of Programs, Jack Kent Cooke Foundation COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER PROJECT PLANNING MEETING PARTICIPANTS Karen Gross Thomas Bailey Alfred Herrera Professor of Humanities, Barton College Director of the Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University David Baime Senior Vice President for Government Relations and Policy Analysis, American Association of Community Colleges President, Southern Vermont College Assistant Vice Provost of Academic Partnerships and Director of the Center for Community College Partnerships, University of California at Los Angeles Sharon D. Herzberger President, Whittier College Amanda R. Hodges Assistant Professor of Religion, Shenandoah University Susanna L. Baxter President, Georgia Independent College Association Assistant Dean of Student Success and Enrollment Management, College of the Albemarle Sara Patterson George Boggs Katherine Hughes Associate Professor of Theological Studies, Hanover College 64 President Emeritus, American Association of Community Colleges Executive Director, Community College and Higher Education Initiatives, The College Board COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES Bonita Jacobs Chera D. Reid Stan Jones Rod Risley President, University of North Georgia President, Complete College America Pamela Lee Kadirifu Program Officer, Kresge Foundation Executive Director and CEO, Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society Director of Transfer Admission and the Adult Enrollment Center, DePaul University Arthur J. Rothkopf Richard Kahlenberg Eileen Strempel Senior Fellow, The Century Foundation Marcus Kolb Chair, Edvance Foundation Assistant Vice President for Academic Advancement, Syracuse University Assistant Vice President of Academic Policy and Assessment, Ivy Tech Community College Carl J. Strikwerda Janet L. Marling Pamela Tate Brian C. Mitchell Robert G. Templin, Jr. Joseph B. Moore A. Hope Williams Executive Director, National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students Director, Edvance Foundation President, Lesley University Gloria Nemerowicz Founder and President, Yes We Must Coalition Lawrence A. Nespoli President, New Jersey Council of County Colleges Becky Wai-Ling Packard Associate Dean of Faculty and Professor of Psychology and Education, Mount Holyoke College Lynn Pasquerella President, Mount Holyoke College Claude O. Pressnell President, Tennessee Independent Colleges and Universities Association 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT President, Elizabethtown College President and CEO, Council for Adult and Experiential Learning President, Northern Virginia Community College President, North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities J.B. Wilson President, Independent College Fund of New Jersey CONSORTIUM FOR ONLINE HUMANITIES INSTRUCTION PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS Augustana University (SD) Bethune-Cookman University Bucknell University Concordia College (MN) Connecticut College/Trinity College Elizabethtown College Gordon College Grand View University Hiram College Lesley University McDaniel College Moravian College Otterbein University Park University Saint Michael’s College Saint Vincent College Susquehanna University Sweet Briar College University of St. Francis (IL) Wartburg College CONSORTIUM ON DIGITAL RESOURCES FOR TEACHING AND RESEARCH PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS Albright College Allegheny College Bellarmine University Bennington College Caldwell University Campbellsville University Central Methodist University Chatham University Coker College Elmhurst College Gannon University Gettysburg College Guilford College Hampden-Sydney College Hartwick College Hollins University Hope College Illinois College Keuka College Limestone College Linfield College Manhattanville College Martin Methodist College Misericordia University Moravian College Muhlenberg College Nebraska Wesleyan University Ottawa University Presbyterian College 65 Roanoke College Rosemont College Saint Mary’s College (IN) St. Lawrence University St. Thomas University (FL) Tuskegee University University of Dubuque University of Puget Sound University of Saint Mary (KS) Washington and Lee University Wheaton College (MA) Wilson College Wofford College INFORMATION FLUENCY IN THE DISCIPLINES 2015 PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS Alvernia University Anderson University Barton College Bellarmine University Bethany College (WV) Bridgewater College Buena Vista University Butler University Doane College Ferrum College Gannon University Judson University (IL) Mount Saint Mary’s University (CA) Saint Joseph’s College of Maine Tusculum College University of Dubuque University of the Incarnate Word Ursinus College Viterbo University Whitworth University WOODROW WILSON VISITING FELLOWS 2014–2015 HOST INSTITUTIONS Albright College Art Center College of Design Benedictine University (IL) Carleton College 66 Carthage College Centenary College of Louisiana Cleveland Institute of Art College of the Atlantic Concordia University Irvine Edgewood College Elizabethtown College Elon University Furman University Gannon University Hampden-Sydney College Illinois College Lafayette College Lebanon Valley College Lindsey Wilson College Linfield College McKendree University Mitchell College Mount Ida College Mount St. Joseph University Muhlenberg College Notre Dame College Ohio Northern University Radford University Saint Leo University Samford University Scripps College Southwestern College St. Ambrose University St. Edward’s University St. Lawrence University Stonehill College The University of Findlay Transylvania University Troy University University of Redlands University of Saint Joseph University of Saint Mary (KS) Washington & Jefferson College Webster University Whitworth University Wingate University Wofford College NETVUE SCHOLARLY RESOURCES PROJECT SEMINAR ONE PARTICIPANTS Quincy D. Brown Vice President for Spiritual Life and Church Relations, LaGrange College William T. Cavanaugh Senior Research Professor, DePaul University Douglas V. Henry Associate Professor of Philosophy, Baylor University Thomas Albert Howard Director of the Center for Faith and Inquiry and Professor of History, Gordon College Kathryn A. Kleinhans Professor of Religion, Wartburg College Charles R. Pinches Professor and Chair of the Department of Theology, University of Scranton Darby K. Ray Donald W. and Ann M. Howard Professor of Civic Engagement, Bates College Caryn D. Riswold Associate Professor of Religion and Chair of Gender and Women’s Studies, Illinois College C. Hannah Schell Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Monmouth College (IL) Paul J. Wadell Professor of Religious Studies, St. Norbert College Stephen H. Webb Professor of Religion and Philosophy, Wabash College Cynthia A. Wells Assistant Professor of Higher Education and Director of the Ernest L. Boyer Center, Messiah College COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES NETVUE SCHOLARLY RESOURCES PROJECT SEMINAR TWO PARTICIPANTS Jeff Brown Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University Shirley H. Showalter President Emerita, Goshen College NETVUE PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT GRANTS ROUND THREE RECIPIENTS Jason Mahn Aurora University Barton College Centenary College of Louisiana Concordia University Chicago Davis & Elkins College Eureka College Hiram College King University (TN) LaGrange College Le Moyne College Mount Mercy University North Central College Notre Dame College (OH) Ohio Northern University Regis University (CO) Roberts Wesleyan College Saint Peter’s University Southern Adventist University Spring Hill College Stillman College Wagner College Westmont College Wheaton College (IL) Wittenberg University Margaret E. Mohrmann NETVUE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AWARDS 2015 RECIPIENTS Michael E. Cafferky Professor of Business and Management, Southern Adventist University Celia Deane-Drummond Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame (IN) Mark U. Edwards, Jr. Advisory Member of the Faculty of Divinity and Senior Advisor to the Dean, Harvard University Divinity School Christine M. Fletcher Associate Professor of Theology, Benedictine University (IL) Catherine Fobes Associate Professor of Sociology, Alma College David Fuentes Professor of Music, Calvin College Associate Professor in Religion, Augustana College (IL) Professor of Biomedical Ethics and Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia Jerome M. Organ Professor of Law, University of St. Thomas (MN) Mark R. Schwehn Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor of Humanities, Valparaiso University 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT Avila University Bethany College (KS) Bluffton University Calvin College Carthage College Catawba College Columbia College (SC) Earlham College Edgewood College Elmhurst College Grand View University Lindsey Wilson College Malone University Northwest Christian University Pacific Lutheran University Pfeiffer University Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Trinity Christian College University of Saint Francis (IN) Warren Wilson College Wartburg College NETVUE CHAPLAINCY IMPLEMENTATION GRANT RECIPIENTS Allegheny College Alvernia University Ashland University Assumption College Augsburg College Augustana College (IL) Augustana University (SD) Benedictine University (IL) Capital University (OH) Concordia College (MN) Davis & Elkins College Fairfield University Georgian Court University Hope College Luther College Marian University (IN) Messiah College Monmouth College (IL) Occidental College Ohio Wesleyan University Schreiner University University of Indianapolis Ursinus College Wesleyan College (GA) Westminster College (PA) 67 PROJECT ON THE FUTURE OF INDEPENDENT HIGHER EDUCATION STEERING COMMITTEE Chris Kimball (Chair) President, California Lutheran University Steven C. Bahls President, Augustana College (IL) Ronald L. Carter President, Johnson C. Smith University Roger N. Casey President, McDaniel College Jeffrey R. Docking President, Adrian College Margaret L. Drugovich President, Hartwick College Elizabeth A. Fleming President, Converse College John McCardell President and Vice Chancellor, Sewanee: The University of the South Kevin M. Ross President, Lynn University Ed L. Schrader President, Brenau University Elizabeth J. Stroble President, Webster University Henry N. Tisdale President, Claflin University Edwin H. Welch President, University of Charleston (WV) John S. Wilson President, Morehouse College Cynthia Zane Thomas F. Flynn President, Hilbert College Christopher B. Howard CIC/NEW YORK TIMES PARTNERSHIP IN EDUCATION 2015 PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS President, Alvernia University President, Hampden-Sydney College Todd S. Hutton President, Utica College Walter M. Kimbrough President, Dillard University Larry D. Large President, Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and Universities Paul J. LeBlanc President, Southern New Hampshire University Mary B. Marcy President, Dominican University of California 68 Allegheny College Alma College American International College Assumption College Baldwin Wallace University Bay Path University Bellarmine University Berry College Birmingham-Southern College Burlington College Capital University Central College Chapman University Colby-Sawyer College Curry College Drake University Duquesne University Edgewood College Elms College Fisher College Franklin Pierce University Fresno Pacific University George Fox University Gettysburg College Goddard College Goucher College Heidelberg University Husson University John Carroll University Kalamazoo College Kenyon College Loyola University Maryland New England College McDaniel College Norwich University Oberlin College Rivier University Rollins College Saint Joseph’s College of Maine Saint Leo University Saint Michael’s College Salve Regina University Scripps College Seattle Pacific University Southern New Hampshire University Southern Vermont College Spelman College St. Ambrose University St. Andrews University St. Norbert College Susquehanna University Swarthmore College Thomas College (ME) Tiffin University Union College (KY) University of New England University of Puget Sound Wabash College Washington & Jefferson College Wesley College Westminster College (UT) Whittier College Willamette University COUNCIL OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES INSTITUTIONS FEATURED DePauw University, IN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . COVER Cardinal Stritch University, WI . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Mount St. Mary’s University, MD . . . . . . . COVER Mount Aloysius College, PA . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Georgian Court University, NJ . . . . . . . . . COVER Adrian College, MI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 College Of Mount Saint Vincent, NY . . . . . . . . . . . . INSIDE COVER Austin College, TX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Keuka College, NY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Holy Family University, PA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Notre Dame College, OH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Woodbury University, CA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Columbia College, SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Oberlin College, OH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 LaGrange College, GA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Corban University, OR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Naropa University, CO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Bard College at Simon’s Rock, MA . . . . . . . . 18 Grace College And Seminary, IN . . . . . . . . . . 22 St. Thomas Aquinas College, NY . . . . . . . . . . 22 University Of Redlands, CA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Linfield College, OR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Fisher College, MA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Wesley College, DE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Burlington College, VT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Tabor College, KS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Marietta College, OH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Pine Manor College, MA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Central Methodist University, MO . . . . . . . . . 40 Misericordia University, PA . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Edgewood College, WI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Dominican College, NY . . . . INSIDE BACK COVER Finlandia University, MI . . . . . . . . BACK COVER Concordia College, NY . . . . . . . . . BACK COVER Tuskegee University, AL . . . . . . . . BACK COVER Claflin University, SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 2014–2015 ANNUAL REPORT 69 ONE DUPONT CIRCLE, NW, SUITE 320 WASHINGTON, DC 20036-1142 P: (202) 466-7230 | F: (202) 466-7238 WWW.CIC.EDU