Carnegie Foundation selects U-M for partnership
ANN ARBOR, Mich.The Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching has selected the University of Michigan
as a national, multi-year partner in a project to improve doctoral
education at American universities.
The foundation's Carnegie Initiative on
the Doctorate has tapped U-M's Chemistry, English, Educational
Studies and Mathematics departments to participate in the five-year
study. The departments will analyze all aspects of their doctoral
programs and link specific activities to desired outcomes.
Carnegie Senior Scholar Chris Golde explained
that the project goals are to support and study experiments in doctoral
education with leading graduate programs, and to document and analyze
the character of those initiatives. Then, working with these innovative
units, the project will help the disciplinary community create models
and evidence of success to inform others in the field.
"We're working with departments that
are committed to being stewards of their disciplines," Golde
said. "We don't just mean a preservation of the heart
and essence of the field, although that's important, but we
chose those departments who have a critical eye toward the future,
who are willing to take risks and move the discipline forward."
U-M and The Ohio State University were the only
institutions to have four of their departments chosen to participate
as partners.
"We are in a strong position to assist the Carnegie
Foundation in a prolonged examination of reform in doctoral education,"
said Earl Lewis, dean of the Rackham School of Graduate Studies.
"I am pleased that the initiative has chosen four Michigan units
to participate in this important national project. That all four
of our projects were selected for inclusion is a clear sign of a
level of commitment of the University and our colleagues to change."
The other partnering universities are Arizona
State, Columbia, Duke, Howard, Indiana University at Bloomington,
Michigan State, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Texas
A&M, The Ohio State University, University of Chicago, University
of Colorado at Boulder, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, University of Pittsburgh, University of Southern California,
University of Texas at Austin, University of Wisconsin-Madison and
Washington State University. Carnegie also picked 22 allied departments
to form a network in each discipline. More details are available
at www.carnegiefoundation.org.
The initiative is being funded by the Carnegie
Foundation and by the Atlantic Philanthropies, which identifies
and supports leaders and organizations dedicated to learning, knowledge
building and solving pressing social problems. The Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching is an independent policy and research
center in Menlo Park, Calif., founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1905.
Contact: Joel Seguine
Phone: (734) 936-6396
E-mail: jseguine@umich.edu