UE Faculty Votes No Confidence In President’s Plan; USI Faculty Senate Supports UE Faculty
Evansville— 12/26/20 — Yesterday, the faculty of the University of Evansville completed its faculty-wide vote and endorsed the Faculty Senate’s vote of no confidence in the President’s draft academic alignment plan. The faculty supported the Senate by a margin of 106 votes to 19 with three abstentions.
The resolution through which the faculty and the Senate have both expressed their lack of confidence in the President’s draft academic alignment plan will now be sent to the President. That resolution requests written response from the President within the next seven days.
The Senate resolution that the faculty has supported points out that the President’s draft plan does not recognize the faculty’s role within the university’s shared governance structure and does not accord with the university’s policies and procedures on curricular change. The resolution also defines the university’s mandated process for curricular change and asks the President to adapt his draft academic alignment plan to make it comply with that process.
In related news, the Faculty Senate of the University of Southern Indiana has released a statement of support for the faculty of the University of Evansville:
The faculty of the University of Southern Indiana stand in solidarity with their colleagues at the University of Evansville. While we acknowledge the financial difficulties prevalent in higher education, we are deeply troubled that deep cuts in both majors and faculty at the University of Evansville were proposed without faculty input. This demonstrates a profound lack of commitment to shared governance, a foundational principle to include the campus community in important decision making at universities.
As our UE colleagues wrote in a recent editorial in the Courier and Press, these cuts will limit the University’s ability to carry out its core mission “to promote the general interests of education and to qualify men and women to engage in the employments and professions of society†and reduce the ability of students to “explore new realms of knowledge and to encounter life-changing ideas.†The draft plan cuts programs and capabilities that are at the very foundation of a well-rounded liberal arts education, including those in History, English, World Languages, Mathematics, Music, and the sciences.
The faculty of the University of Southern Indiana appreciates the complementary efforts of the faculty at the historic University of Evansville in offering quality education to our region.
We believe that unilateral decision making that ignores shared governance in institutions of higher education seriously risks compromising the ability of universities to provide quality higher education for the betterment of everyone in the community and the region.
We, the faculty of the University of Evansville, greatly appreciate this thoughtful and generous statement and we are extremely grateful to our colleagues at the University of Southern Indiana for offering it. They understand the situation because they have also recently been threatened with substantial and damaging cuts. The response to those threats from the Faculty Senate of the University of Southern Indiana has been magnificent. The senators have worked tirelessly to ensure that the faculty plays its designated role at the university. We are proud to call the senators and all the faculty at the University of Southern Indiana our colleagues.
To Learn More:
• Visit our website at saveue.com     • Follow us on Facebook at Save UE
• Follow us on Twitter at @Save_UE    • Follow us on Instagram at Save UE
• E-mail us at ueaaup@gmail.com