Feb. 25, 1999 Vol. 28, No. 15
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Knowles named vice provost for minority affairs
By Emily Caldwell
Timothy S. Knowles, vice president for student and campus
support at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tenn., has been nominated
by Edward J. Ray, executive vice president and provost, to the position
of vice provost for minority affairs at Ohio State. The appointment, pending
Board of Trustees approval, is to take effect Aug. 1.
Knowles has held teaching and administrative positions
in higher education for more than 30 years at both historically black
and other public universities and private liberal-arts colleges.
"Throughout his career, Dr. Knowles has demonstrated his
commitment to increasing minority studentsÕ access to higher education
and to developing programming with excellent recruitment and retention
results,Ó Ray said. "He understands that diversity promotes excellence.
"During the on-campus interview process, Tim also showed
a clear grasp of the issues we at Ohio State face as we strive to enhance
services provided to minority students and to build a more diverse community.Ó
Knowles has served as vice president for student and campus
support since 1996 at Meharry Medical College, the nationÕs largest private,
historically black institution exclusively dedicated to educating health
care professionals and biomedical scientists.
He began his career in 1968 at San Jose State University
as director of the Educational Opportunity Program for Black Students.
Since then, he has held numerous positions, including director of the
Educational Opportunity Program at the University of California, Irvine,
and assistant vice chancellor for academic support services and associate
professor of education at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater for 11
years. He also has held vice presidential posts for academic and student
affairs and for student development.
A frequent speaker on issues affecting minority students,
KnowlesÕ current memberships include the American Association of Medical
CollegesÕ Student and Minority Affairs Group, the Southern Association
of Colleges and Schools, and the Nashville Chapter of the NAACP. He served
as an American Council on Education Fellow in Academic Administration
in 1984-85.
Knowles holds masterÕs and doctoral degrees in higher education
administration from the University of Massachusetts; his dissertation
research focused on improving management of special minority student support
programs. He also earned a masterÕs degree in education with emphasis
on student services and a bachelorÕs degree in physical education and
mathematics, both from San Jose State University.
As vice provost, Knowles will oversee all functions of
the Office of Minority Affairs, which include the Frank W. Hale Black
Cultural Center, minority scholarship services, recruitment and development,
the Upward Bound/Minority Research Initiative, and the Young Scholars
program, Ohio StateÕs initiative to encourage and prepare underrepresented
minority youth from low-income families to attend four-year colleges and
universities.
"I will urge the new vice provost to continue the Student
Advisory Council and seek other ways to include consultation with student,
staff, faculty, and community constituents in any future efforts to reorganize
the administration of OMA and its programs,Ó Ray said.
Barbara Rich, who has served as interim vice provost for
two years, will complete her term on June 30. Mac Stewart, associate provost
for undergraduate studies and dean of University College, will supervise
OMA in July.
OSU, OU receives $500,000 Regents grant to teach foreign language via
distance learning
By Tracy Turner
In a move that will soon offer Web-based foreign language
instruction to students both in Ohio and beyond, Ohio State and Ohio University
have been awarded a $500,000 grant from the Ohio Board of Regents to create
foreign language courses taught via distance learning.
"Ohio State is looking forward to developing this language
curriculum with Ohio University,Ó said Alayne Parson, senior vice provost.
"We think that the Ohio Board of Regents is very wise to provide such
creative incentives for OhioÕs universities to constantly explore ways
to collaborate on educational opportunities to better serve our citizens.Ó
The grant is part of a program implemented by the Ohio
General Assembly in 1997 to support efforts to identify and establish
programs and methods to further improve education and services provided
by two- and four-year colleges and universities.
The Higher Education Efficiency Challenge Award was presenteded
jointly to Ohio State and Ohio University at the June 15 meeting of the
Ohio Board of Regents.
The project, "Meeting Foreign Language Needs of the 21st
Century,Ó combines the instruction and technology of both universities
to make foreign language courses more widely available to students via
the Web through distance learning courses.
Foreign language courses in Japanese, Chinese, Russian
and Arabic will soon be offered to both Ohio State and Ohio University
students via Web-based classes.
Parson said the courses will supplement the strong programs
already in place at both universities.
The project is part of an overall effort to continually
attract and engage new students to Ohio State. Other efforts include a
financial incentive offered by the Office of Academic Affairs to academic
departments to create or enhance distance learning courses. Academic Affairs
established a coursework development grant program in which departments
could apply for the creation or enhancement of distance education courses.
"As a land grant University, our mission is to serve citizens
of the state of Ohio,Ó said Steve Acker, acting director, Technology Enhancement
Learning & Research Services. "In order for the University to meet that
mandate, we have to go to students as well as have students come to us.
We have to make the learning environment more accessible to those who
have lost the ability to come to campus for various reasons. For those
students, we can provide the option to take courses on-line.Ó
The grant will also help create the Ohio Foreign Language
Coalition, part of a collaborative learning network of colleges and universities
designed to avoid course duplication statewide.
Sizzling weather, new look greet 4,700 graduates
By Karissa Shivley
Blazing temperatures and a 72-year-old spring commencement
tradition took a back seat as Ohio State bid a warm farewell to some 4,700
graduates June 11.
Before the sun rose over the tops of the trees in front
of the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library, several hundred volunteers
were making their way to the Oval Ñ the site of Ohio StateÕs 348th commencement.
The event was moved to the Oval due to renovations under way at Ohio Stadium,
where spring commencement has been held since 1928.
Many commented that the change in location, along with
the steamy weather, led to a less structured, but equally appealing graduation
than the traditional Ohio Stadium event.
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By Kevin Fitzsimons
President Kirwan confirms that the spring commencement
is 'picture perfect.'
"The atmosphere wasnÕt as regimented as it is in
the stadium,Ó said Jim Stevens, associate vice president for physical
facilities. "People could come down and see what was going on and
go back to their chairs or to the shade.Ó
Lindsay Hart, a graduate in welding engineering from
Powell, said she had been a little disappointed when she learned
spring commencement would not be held in the Horseshoe.
"I had always wanted to graduate in the 'Shoe,'"
Hart said, pausing on her way to line up for the processional. "I
even planned it so I would graduate spring quarter. So you can imagine
that I was a little disappointed. But now that I am here, and I
see all the chairs and the hard work everyone put into it - I am
just so excited. Now if I can keep from roasting in this black gown,
IÕll be even happier.Ó
The hundreds of volunteers Ñ consisting of many staff,
faculty and students Ñ stationed themselves around the Oval at information
booths, parking lots and bus stops anxiously awaiting the arrival
of some 4,700 graduates and 27,000 to 28,000 guests.
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By Kevin Fitzsimons
More than 4,700 graduates received diplomas
during the June 11 commencement held on the Oval.
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About 225 volunteers from several University departments,
including Physical Facilities, the Office of Student Affairs, Human
Resources and other offices around campus as well as the many departments
in the Office of Business and Finance, worked together to make commencement
on the Oval a success, said John Kleberg, assistant vice president
for business and finance and co-chair of the event.
"It was a wonderful opportunity to see how well different
departments can work together. From a staff perspective, that was
a really good experience,Ó Kleberg said. "We had guests saying how
welcome they felt, and we have the volunteers to thank for that.
I think it went very well.Ó
Graduates and their guests were addressed by commencement
speaker Dumisa Ntsebeza, a high-ranking member of South AfricaÕs
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). Honorary doctorates were
presented to physicist Elias Burstein; scientist, optometrist and
astronaut Lawrence J. DeLucas; and posthumously to businessman David
W. Longaberger. Distinguished Service Awards were given to businesswoman
Loann Crane and attorney Alex Shumate.
Kleberg noted that suggestion and comment cards were
randomly distributed to guests and students.
"It should be a pretty good sample,Ó he said. "So
if indeed we are on the Oval again it will give us the opportunity
to get a feel for what our guests think and how we might modify
arrangements.Ó
Keeping the tens of thousands of people on the Oval
as cool and hydrated as possible was a priority of commencement
staff and the University, Kleberg said. Despite temperatures hovering
in the 90s, EMS units responded to only 10 calls, three or four
of which were heat related. Heat-relief was aided by 10,000 bottles
of water and 22,000 hand-held paper fans passed out to graduates
and guests.
"I have to thank everyone for the fans,Ó said music
education graduate Greg Otte, 23, of Elmore, as he opened up the
fan to reveal a picture of a zebra.
Graduates had other ideas on how to keep cool. Shorts
and tank tops replaced the usual commencement attire, and some carried
hand-held battery-operated fans and spray bottles under their gowns.
"As soon as I got to my chair, the gown came off,Ó
said Melissa Freiman of Shaker Heights, who graduated with a Bachelor
of Arts in Theatre. Freiman had temporarily abandoned her seat in
the sun for a cooler spot under a tree and a drink of water.
That was the sight President Kirwan saw as he made
his opening remarks at spring commencement Ñ graduates walking to
and from water coolers, gowns hanging over empty chairs and families
waving to their graduates. He said he was not disappointed by the
lack of pomp and circumstance of the day.
"Commencement on the Oval was everything that I had
hoped for. What a great joy it was to stand on that platform and
look out at that remarkable sight,Ó said Kirwan. "ItÕs so remarkable,
so much so that I must take a picture,Ó he said, pulling out his
camera.
"The class of 1999 will always be remembered as the
class that brought commencement back to the Oval,Ó he added.
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