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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: November 11, 2016
As provost, I quite often hear the question, “What is your strategy?” The good thing is that there is an answer! Georgia Tech is one of the few institutions of higher learning that in fact has a well-articulated Strategic Plan, which was unveiled back in 2010. “Designing the Future” is a coherent statement with a 25-year vision that frames all we do. It is a touchstone that, although not static, is fairly robust in its basic statements of aspirations and overarching goals. The role of leadership, at all levels, is to translate this strategic plan into specific strategies and action items with medium- and short-term horizons. The Office of the Provost is no exception.
Building from Designing the Future, the Office of the Provost articulates its mission as:
“To advance learning through teaching and research by providing the leadership, support, and services that enable the personal and intellectual growth of our students, faculty, staff, and the academic community”
The Institute’s five strategic goals are:
Throughout the years the Office of the Provost has used several strategies in support of the above goals. Among them I can highlight:
All our long-, mid-, and short-term objectives support those strategies, as do our annual tactics and action items. For example, development of the Engineering Biosystems Building and its neighborhoods achieves Goal 1.
The campaign for increased financial aid such as the Tech Promise Program and the Stamps President’s Scholars Program, along with the move to the Common App and the forthcoming Coalition App, greater diversifies the student body, as stated in Goal 2.
The creation of the Vice Provost for Graduate Education and Faculty Development has resulted in enrollment growth in our graduate programs, as set forth in Goal 3. The Online Master of Science in Computer Science (OMS CS) and the forthcoming online analytics program (OMS Analytics) are evidence of Goal 4.
The various maker spaces pioneered by the schools of Aerospace Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and the forthcoming one in Electrical and Computer Engineering, as well as building on the InVenture prize success with the ACC competition of the same name — these are ways we are differentiating our undergraduate education experience, achieving Goal 5.
Ongoing new efforts in China and Panama are just two of ways we are expanding our global presence, the core of Goal 6.
Lastly, the Task Force on the Learning Environment is recommending ways to increase civility, collegiality, and respect among our students and faculty, creating the quality experiences each member of our community deserves, promoting the tenets of Goal 7.
These are just a few examples, and our work continues as we design the future. In summary, we do have a viable and successful strategy. There is logic to the madness!
More to come.
Rafael L. Bras