Selective Investment
Five proposals receive special funding
By Emily Caldwell
New techniques to diagnose and treat heart disease, the appointment
of a nationally renowned author, and intensified research collaborations
across the University are among five proposals that have been chosen to
receive Ohio State's Selective Investment Awards this year.
The Selective Investment Award recipients have been identified as those
that hold the most potential to propel Ohio State into the highest ranks
of public research institutions. Each unit will receive up to $500,000
in continuing funds, which will be used primarily to hire senior and junior
scholars intended to enhance already strong departments' educational mission,
attraction of talented students and overall national reputation.
"The concept of strategic investment is a core element of our new Academic
Plan,"said President William E. Kirwan, referring to the strategic plan
unveiled in early October (see page 1) to elevate Ohio State into the
top ranks of teaching and research institutions. "The strategic allocation
of resources will be a key tool in making us one of the world's truly
great universities."
Selective Investment winners this year are an interdisciplinary proposal
in cardiovascular bioengineering forwarded by the colleges of Medicine
and Public Health and Engineering; the departments of Economics, English
and Mathematics; and the College of Law.
"The proposals chosen are exceptional in both vision and planning effectiveness.
They have the potential to create extraordinary benefits for the entire
University and to the larger public community that we serve,"said Edward
J. Ray, executive vice president and provost. "The selection committee
made a very convincing case that these five proposals should be funded,
even though the original intention was to fund four new proposals. The
president and I strongly agree with their assessment."
Recipients provide matching funds from their own departments or colleges,
bringing total targeted funding of up to $1 million to each unit. The
highly competitive program, now in its third year, requires applicants
to present detailed proposals; recipients are chosen by a faculty committee
in consultation with external experts in each field.
The recipients this year join the University's eight previously named
Selective Investment recipients: Chemistry, History, Neuroscience and
Political Science in 1999; and Electrical Engineering, Materials Science
and Engineering, Physics and Psychology in 1998.
The selection committee, chaired by Paul Beck, chair of political science,
evaluated and selected proposals based on their positioning related to
the University's academic mission; plans to build on strengths and expectations
for substantial benefit; demonstration of interdisciplinary potential;
plans to monitor progress and evaluate achievement; and emphasis on outreach.
According to one funding recipient, Ohio State's commitment to Selective
Investment bodes extremely well for the University's future. "This is
a new era,"said Robert Michler, co-director of the Heart and Lung Research
Institute, Karl P. Klassen professor of surgery and chief of cardiothoracic
surgery. "It's an era of great, palpable energy and interest in being
world-class and really reaching for the stars."
Other leaders of the winning departments and programs spoke to the Board
of Trustees during an Oct. 6 presentation.
Cardiovascular Bioengineering
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| Robert Michler, co-director of the Heart and Lung
Research Institute |
Mauro Ferrari, associate director of the Heart and
Lung Research Institute |
Already the national leader in the use of robotics surgery and renowned
for research in microdevices that could be used for drug delivery (nanotechnology),
Ohio State expects to become a world leader in biomedical engineering
by combining the expertise of engineers and clinicians to find innovative
ways to diagnose and treat heart disease.
The Colleges of Medicine and Public Health and Engineering joined in
a proposal to strengthen multidisciplinary collaborations by bringing
together six units: the Biomedical Engineering Center, Cardiothoracic
Surgery, Cardiology, the Heart and Lung Research Institute, Chemical Engineering,
and Materials Science and Engineering.
Those spearheading the proposal say this multidisciplinary approach
will eliminate college barriers and create a seamless environment for
clinicians and engineers to work together to bring new technologies into
the domain of patient care.
Nine hires, all split appointments, are proposed over four years. Researchers
envision advances in the development of metal alloys and drug-delivery
systems that will increase effectiveness of treatment and reduce patient
side effects in the fight against the leading cause of death in the United
States.
"The people we hire are going to be living and breathing more than one
discipline,"said Robert Michler, co-director of the Heart and Lung Research
Institute, Karl P. Klassen professor of surgery and chief of cardiothoracic
surgery.
Mauro Ferrari, director of the Biomedical Engineering Center and associate
director of the Heart and Lung Research Institute, said Ohio State plans
to focus this approach on classes of diseases. "We are starting with cardiology,
and plan to follow up in the areas of oncology and endocrinology,"said
Ferrari, also professor of internal medicine, mechanical engineering and
materials science.
Economics
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department Chair Masanori Hashimoto |
The Department of Economics has conducted a careful analysis of what
it will take to achieve the goal set forth in its own 2010 plan -- to
become a top 20 department overall nationally and in the top 10 among
public universities by the year 2010. In 1998, U.S. News & World Report
ranked the department 30th overall and 12th among public schools.
In recent years, faculty productivity has increased substantially. Since
1995, the department also has hired a number of promising junior scholars
and three full professors, including one of the top three producers worldwide
in econometrics research.
"We want to continue, and indeed accelerate, this momentum,"said department
Chair Masanori Hashimoto.
He added that the department plans to recruit a combination of up-and-coming
young scholars and established scholars who would increase the department's
performance in external research funding and original research, and help
move the department to a rank of seventh or eighth among public universities.
"We want not only to reach the goal, but also to sustain it well into
the future -- that's why we want to recruit young scholars, as well.
"We are very close to this goal, and, according to our analysis, it
is within our reach. A judicious use of the SI funding will put us over
the hump and get us there."
Economics, which serves numerous departments by instructing about 12,000
undergraduates annually, plans to hire up to nine faculty in the areas
of macroeconomics, microeconomics and econometrics.
The department operates from a position of faculty strength, housing
many award-winners as well as those who have received prestigious temporary
outside appointments.
English
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department Chair James Phelan
|
A creative writer of distinction, perhaps even an author with a household
name, is likely to join the Department of English faculty, thanks to Selective
Investment funding. That appointment, along with five others, is part
of the department's plan to move from its current ranking of 16th among
public universities into the top five.
English will maintain its identity as a comprehensive department even
as Selective Investment allows it to strengthen particular subfields and
to build on its strong commitment to diversity through the planned appointment
of a scholar in African-American literature, said department Chair James
Phelan.
The department has a strong history at Ohio State, and touches the lives
of virtually every undergraduate student at one time or another. "English
is one of the central disciplines in a liberal arts education. We train
people to be good readers, writers and critical thinkers, and we keep
alive a significant part of our cultural heritage by making literature
of the past relevant to the present,"Phelan said. "The core of what we
do is central to the University, and educates the citizenry of the state
and country."
A winner of the 1998 Departmental Teaching Award and home to eight recipients
of the Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching, the department seeks to
hire six new faculty in the areas of British literature, American literature
and writing (both creative writing and rhetoric/composition).
British and American literature are central to any English department,
and the already high rank of the department is largely dependent on its
current strength in literature. The rhetoric/composition program is among
the University's and the nation's best, and boasts that 100 percent of
its graduates over the past 12 years have been offered academic jobs.
The relatively young creative writing program also will be enhanced,
but already is attracting students who are choosing Ohio State over other
highly respected programs.
Law
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Dean Gregory H. Williams |
The College of Law seeks to hire new experts in various areas of law
with its Selective Investment funding, but also seeks to create an opportunity
for Ohio State faculty across campus to undertake law-related research
in a new distinguished visiting research professorship. Under the proposed
program, faculty from other disciplines would maintain residence in the
college during fall semester and collaborate in research with members
of the law faculty; college leaders say the program will build lasting
connections between law faculty and the rest of the University.
The college seeks to increase the size of its faculty by hiring five
new full-time professors in the areas of criminal law, intellectual property/cyberlaw,
corporate law, law and society, and professional ethics. In fact, in early
October the college received a commitment to join the faculty from one
of the top five criminal law professors in the nation. Two joint professorships
also are proposed, one with political science and another with the Mershon
Center. The Mershon Center position would expand the college's already
No. 1 alternative dispute resolution program by adding an international
component to the college's investigation of and expertise in this increasingly
important area of law practice.
Dean Gregory H. Williams said Selective Investment support should allow
the college to achieve its goal of becoming a top 10 public law school
with respect to its academic reputation by 2005.
A highly interdisciplinary college, Law has an emerging national reputation
in intellectual property and health-related law, houses nationally recognized
faculty and is one of the University's more diverse units.
"I think it's always important for an institution, particularly a university,
to recognize its strengths and nurture them,"Williams said. "We feel
very flattered to be recognized as one of the great strengths of Ohio
State that will help propel the University into the highest ranks of public
institutions."
Mathematics
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department Chair Peter March |
The Department of Mathematics bears the responsibility of grounding
thousands of Ohio State students annually in the basics of math so they
can pursue degrees in the sciences or engineering. Offering a core discipline,
the department teaches virtually every undergraduate on campus. According
to department Chair Peter March, the mathematics department is an important
contributor to a university's reputation.
"Mathematics is at the absolute core of education in the modern world.
If a university is going to be strong and prominent, it has to have a
strong mathematics department,"March said.
For the past several years, the department has been devoting much of
its resources and energy to improving the student educational environment.
A proposed senior faculty position in mathematics education research,
which will bring cutting-edge research to bear on mathematical learning,
will expand on that trend by further enhancing the educational program
at the undergraduate level.
The department also seeks to hire four other senior faculty members
in the areas of number theory, global analysis, mathematics and biology,
and mathematics and computing.
An expansion of the advanced degree program also is proposed. The department
plans to create a professional master's degree program, which recognizes
the growing need for instruction in the kinds of mathematics needed for
nonacademic jobs in the competitive global marketplace. To enhance its
existing doctoral program, the department plans to create a small number
of fellowships and to improve its computing environment.
Mathematics faculty hold a number of prestigious state and national
fellowships and titles, and have received numerous high honors in the
field. Six assistant professors, two full professors and one associate
professor have been hired in recent years. With its new hires, the department
seeks to become a top 20 program in the country within 10 years.
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