The University of Arizona

 

ABOR to Discuss System Realignment, Numerous UA Projects

Robert N. Shelton

UA President Robert N. Shelton, along with the presidents of ASU and NAU, will present plans aimed at increasing the number of Arizona students who are enrolled and who graduate.

Arizona Bioscience Park

The Arizona Board of Regents will discuss the master land use plan that the UA has proposed for the Arizona Bioscience Park, a facility created to help boost the state's bioscience industry.

A plan to create UA learning centers, a master land use plan for the Arizona Bioscience Park's master land use plan and leases at the Science and Technology Park are on the agenda.


A proposed plan for the Arizona university system that would mean new learning sites, accelerated degree programs and community college partnerships is at the top of the agenda for the Arizona Board of Regents.

The draft plan, "Pathways: Access-driven Architecture for the Arizona University System," is among the items Arizona Board of Regents members will discuss during their meeting at Northern Arizona University tomorrow and Friday.

The purpose: To make earning an undergraduate degree faster and less expensive for students in more locations throughout the state.

The Pathways plan – which is listed as a discussion-only item – would modify the structure of the state's university system to create better alignment with the regents' strategic plan, which calls for an increase of at least 50 percent in the number of baccalaureate degrees awarded by the three state universities by 2020.

"Our current mechanism for public higher education relies almost entirely on a version of the research university platform," regents documents explain. Board documents explain that while it is important to stress the research mission, offering multiple sites to obtain degrees is also important.

The draft proposal being presented to the regents calls for developing a "new baccalaureate campus by 2010," with at least four "highly integrated partnership campuses or regional universities established in collaboration with community college partners by 2012."

For The University of Arizona this would mean sustained and expanded offerings by way of "2-plus-2" partnerships with community colleges and also select offerings of undergraduate and master's level programs at sites in counties across the state.

It is expected that the UA would be serving an additional 10,000 students by 2020 through what is being called the "UA/Community College Partnership Campuses," board documents show.

To do this, the UA would work with community colleges to lease space and offer programs that meet local demand. The plan also leaves room for new campuses leading up to 2020.

Like the UA, NAU and Arizona State University also may be able to offer selected four-year degree or accelerated programs through the use of Web-based and on-site courses at community colleges. This would enable the universities to share both facilities and teaching resources, board documents indicate.

Other items before the board:

et cetera

© 2009 Arizona Board of Regents