College of Agricultural, Human,
and Natural Resource Sciences

June 9, 2008

Academic Affairs Program Prioritization Process Update

Washington State University, as other distinctive, land grant, research institutions of higher education in this country, has a mission of instruction, scholarship and research, and service. The vision for WSU directs the institution to achieve excellence and pre-eminence in a selected number of areas of scholarship and research while delivering world-class graduate and undergraduate degree programs and making significant contributions to the economic vitality of the State of Washington and beyond.

With few new resources available for investment in strategic priorities, the university must use existing resources in the most efficient manner possible. In order to increase the efficient use of our limited resources Academic Affairs will prioritize programs to place them on a continuum from investment to phase-out. This prioritization process will create a roadmap for investment and reallocation over time.

The Academic Affairs Program Prioritization (A2P2) process has advanced to its final stage. The A2P2 Task Force II completed its work and provided its set of recommendations to the Provost on March 15. These recommendations have been considered by the Provost and his staff, and the Provost’s decisions were released on May 20th. On that date, an open meeting was held to release the Provost’s report. The report was posted on the A2P2 web site (http://academic-prioritization.wsu.edu/decisions/). The Provost’s report consists of three sets of decisions:

  1. General institutional decisions
  2. Cross-college/cross-area decisions
  3. College-specific decisions

For CAHNRS, there are few surprises. Here are the main points:

  1. Phase out the undergraduate major in forestry and retain forestry programs only in support of areas of emphases within natural resources (e.g., wildlife science, water resources management).
  2. Consolidate statistics across the university.
  3. Phase out Community and Rural Sociology from CAHNRS. Combine essential elements in new unit with Natural Resource Sciences and School of Earth and Environmental Sciences or move to Sociology.
  4. Determine the future role of Landscape Architecture and Interior Design in the Interdisciplinary Design Institute. Consider consolidating Landscape Architecture, Interior Design, and other appropriate units to form a “school of design.”
  5. Consolidate elements of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Crop and Soil Sciences, Plant Pathology, and Entomology to form appropriate interdisciplinary undergraduate/graduate program(s) in “plant science.”
  6. Reduce the number of course offerings and low enrollment degrees.
  7. Consider moving the Department of Human Development into the new Division of Social and Behavioral Sciences in the College of Liberal Arts or to the College of Education.
  8. Invest strategically in a specific, chosen area of Biological Systems Engineering (rather than just adding resources to the unit).

Precisely when, or if, any of these changes will take place is, at the moment, not known but I’ll keep you posted.

--Dan

About this Blog

Rather than adopting the rather mundane approach of having the static and typically uninformative administrator’s page, I am attempting to join the 21st century and maintain my own blog. I hope to use this medium as another means of keeping the lines of communication open to our employees and the stakeholders of our college. I hope that you will find the posts timely and informative.

Daniel J. Bernardo, Dean of the College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences

About Dan Bernardo

Dan Bernardo joined Washington State University as dean of the College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resources Sciences (CAHNRS) in August 2005. Prior to moving to Washington State, Dan was professor and department head of the Department of Agricultural Economics at Kansas State University from 1995 through 2005. Prior to his service at KSU, Dan Bernardo was on the Agricultural Economics faculty at Oklahoma State University for a decade.

Dr. Bernardo has published over 200 papers on various agricultural economics topics, including production economics, natural resource policy, and farm management economics. He has a Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from Washington State University and a B.S. in Agricultural and Managerial Economics from the University of California, Davis.

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CAHNRS, Hulbert 421, PO Box 646242, Washington State University, Pullman WA 99164-6242, 509-335-3551, contact