HIGHER ED TODAY 
  
  
 The  opening  of  the  spring  semester  
 for CUNY comes with great news for students  
 and faculty on all our campuses,  
 and for public higher education in New  
 York State. In January, Governor Kathy  
 Hochul announced a budget plan  that  
 will allow CUNY  to hire more  than  500  
 new  full-time  faculty  members,  an  investment  
 that  is  so  pivotal  to  our  longterm  
 strategies that we made it the top  
 priority  in  the  University’s  proposed  
 budget request for the next fiscal year. 
 The  funding  for  new  faculty  hires  
 —  part  of  the  governor’s  proposal  to  
 increase  state  support  for  CUNY  and  
 SUNY by more than $1.5 billion over the  
 next  five  years  —  marks  a  seminal  advancement  
 of  our  historical mission  to  
 provide high-quality education to New  
 Yorkers  of  all  backgrounds  and means.  
 Increasing  the  number  and  proportion  
 of full-time faculty has direct bearing on  
 student  success  and  retention,  and  the  
 benefits are also substantial for faculty. 
 The  state’s  investment  will  bring  
 more  stability  to  many  of  the  courses  
 we offer, especially introductory classes  
 that many times prove the hardest to engage  
 students. Because some of the new  
 full-time hires will likely come from the  
 ranks of current CUNY faculty adjuncts,  
 the new state funding will also create a  
 critical  career pathway  for  some of our  
 dedicated and talented part-time faculty.  
 And it will help us in our ongoing efforts  
 to increase the diversity of our faculty.  
 An  added  benefit  of  the  increase  in  
 full-time faculty is that it will bolster  
 our academic departments throughout  
 the University, whose faculty have made  
 numerous  and  important  contributions  
 in  their respective fields.  It will reduce  
 the  amount  of  time  department  chairs  
 need to spend on hiring, evaluations and  
 related  administrative  tasks,  freeing  
 them to focus more broadly on creating a  
 more  collegial  departmental  life,  building  
 curricula and improving courses  
 and advising to better serve their students’ 
  needs. 
 An Unprecedented Approach 
 One  of  the  reasons  I  am  so  excited  
 is that many of the new full-time faculty  
 will be assigned  to  entry-level and  
 gateway courses with high numbers of  
 students  who  struggle.  These  courses  
 are often taught by part-time faculty  
 who often don’t  get  the  chance  to  teach  
 a particular class over successive semesters. 
  Full-time faculty have the benefit  
 of more  time  to work with  students  
 and  to  develop  advisory  and mentoring  
 relationships  that  can  make  the  difference  
 between a student who perseveres  
 to overcome obstacles and one who gives  
 up and drops out. Full-time faculty also  
 have time to revise and improve their  
 courses,  refine  their  teaching  methods  
 over  time and  develop  new  offerings  to  
 serve our students. 
 We also won’t simply be hiring people  
 and sending them into classrooms.  
 Instead, from the moment the first group  
 of  new  faculty  join  us  they  will  be  invited  
 to participate in CUNY’s Innovative  
 Teaching Academy, which we began  
 in 2020 to improve teaching and encourage  
 faculty throughout the University  
 to  adopt  proven  pedagogy  and  high-impact  
 best practices.  It’s  the  kind of professional  
 development  for  faculty  that  I  
 have  long  believed  is  sorely  lacking  in  
 higher  education.  This  onboarding  of  
 such a large group of new faculty is unprecedented  
 at CUNY, and very rare in  
 general.  
 Moving  forward,  continued  investments  
 will further solidify the University’s  
 research programs, scholarship and  
 creative work, and targeted hires in the  
 sciences will grow and support the University’s  
 research  pipeline  and  support  
 for STEM students. 
 Universities  across  the  country,  especially  
 public ones, have been contending  
 with  their  over-reliance  on  parttime  
 teachers  for  many  years.  It’s  been  
 a particularly important issue for us at  
 CUNY, and for me personally since I assumed  
 leadership  of  the  University  in  
 2019. Governor Hochul’s budget marks a  
 turning point in our efforts, a major vote  
 of  confidence  for  public  higher  education  
 in New York and an investment in  
 the success of our students that will pay  
 dividends for years to come. 
       
       
       
  
  
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   JAN. 28 - FEB. 3, 2022 25  
 
				
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