Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 9, 2017

Auto news on Youtube Sep 28 2017

- Good afternoon.

And thank you for joining us for the annual

State of the University address.

Frank was just reminding me that this is the seventh time

we have done this together.

So you all should know the drill by now.

During our time today, there will be several ways

for you to interact with us and ask questions

or make comments so at the conclusion

of Frank's presentation, we will both take questions,

first from anyone who sends in a question

through social media or delivers a card

to Suzanne Shaw and we will ask those questions first

and then when we're completed with that or if there

are none then we will have people directly ask questions.

We'll bring you a microphone and anyone can ask a question

on any topic from the floor.

Welcome Keyshore, I look forward to your question.

(audience laughing)

I promise we'll start with you after all of the social media

questions are done.

I want to begin this afternoon by saying that we had

an extraordinarily good year last year on all fronts

but one.

I bet you can guess the one.

It's state funding.

In the last eight months, our system has experienced

three reductions in funding.

If you look at this slide, you will see that last year

we were scheduled to receive 91.6 million dollars.

That was the biggest increase in history,

about a 4.8% increase.

We'd had our cooperative mechanical engineering program

funded.

We did not get all of the increase and we did not

receive all of the engineering funding.

Instead in FY 17 we had a withholding of 6.3 million dollars

of operating money and we had a withholding of almost

$600,000 of the engineering fund.

Then the FY 18 budget came out.

That's a year that begins July first.

That's the year that we are in now and we had

a 6.58% reduction in funding,

that's the 6 and a half million dollars there

and we lost half of our engineering money.

And then shortly there after that this summer

at the end of June, the governor announced additional

withholding of 2.7 million dollars plus the other half

of the engineering fund.

That's a nine percent reduction in budget from this year

to last year.

You can add all those numbers up and see how much

we're down in the last two years.

Let me put these numbers in context for everyone.

This is not a new trend.

If you go back to 2002, state budget for all of higher

education took about 16% of the budget and so in the last

15 years that's been reduced to now, state budget

has about 10% of the money dedicated to higher education.

We receive less money today from the state

than we did in 2002.

That is true for all universities

and that's before factoring in inflation.

But I would tell you the cuts that we received this year

and they're shown on the board were certainly the most

dramatic cuts that we have received from the state

in six plus years that Frank

and I have been doing this work.

Unfortunately, we project the trend to continue

for several years and as a result of that, we've created

what we hope, what we believe will be a new, sustainable

funding model.

It has four key principles, they're on the board now.

It begins with maintaining affordability.

A good part of our growth is a result of the value option

and we can't give that away.

Second, becoming more efficient.

We must prove to the state and our students as well,

frankly, that we're good stewards of the tax and tuition

money that we receive.

We need to continue to grow revenue beyond raising

tuition and fees.

A part of that is enrollment growth and part of that

are new programs and other initiatives.

And if we do these things, we'll also be evaluating

our tuition fee and scholarship structure.

I wrote about these items in detail on August 8, 2017

in a Clif Note.

They're on the blog we keep on the president's website.

Frank and I have discussed all of them at every division

and college meeting that we have attended.

That work is still online.

The link is on the board and I would encourage you

if you haven't read that material to go back

and read it and see the details.

Despite that major funding obstacle, we had some

really incredible achievements last year and I want

to review some of those with you.

And we thought the easiest way to do that

would be start by showing you a video.

You're the first group to see it in final form.

It's hot off the press.

It's our What's New at MSU video.

It's about four minutes long.

(serene music)

- [Narrator] Onward, upward.

That vision started as a teacher's college in 1905.

Onward, upward.

It continued when we became Missouri State University

a century later.

Onward, upward.

That vision?

It's what keeps us moving forward.

To this.

(up-tempo music)

Onward, upward is adding new chances to learn.

Check out new graduate degrees for vital fields

in agriculture and computer science.

It's elevating the Darr School of Agriculture

to a college

and continuing to be a leader in faculty research

with more than 24 million dollars in grants.

We move Missouri State forward

with incredible student experiences,

including a chorale performance for the ages.

- We have one of the great chorale programs anywhere.

- [Narrator] Onward, upward is helping our neighbors

research ways to improve Springfield

with the Community Focus Report and then assisting

the Northwest Project.

(people cheering)

Trees?

We love them, and Tree Campus USA loves that we love them.

We are the top university for students that have

visual impairments and one of the five best

in the state for first generation scholars.

- I'm first.

- I'm first.

- I'm first.

- My name is Shelby and I'm first.

- [Narrator] Another fall enrollment record

included over 1,500 international students

who want to move onward, upward.

(people cheering)

Our international flair encourages students

to become travel bears.

New chances are offered in Cuba, Uganda, Ireland and Japan.

It's an ongoing commitment to be a keystone university

in inclusion.

Onward, upward.

What once was old now is new.

The Oldham family helped us build a place

for our students who fought for our country.

But we don't forget active service members.

The ROTC Bear Battalion brought home

a championship of their own.

Then there are landmark renovations

at Glass and Ellis Halls.

The inhabitants of Glass are doing big things.

That's five-straight national titles for the Ad Team.

(people cheering)

Golf, baseball, swimming, volleyball.

We're Missouri Valley Champions times four.

(people cheering)

Our student-athletes won in the classroom, too.

A record number graduated and moved onward,

upward to what's next.

(people cheering)

And none of this would be possible without our Foundation.

They have 19 million reasons for being recognized

for excellence in fundraising.

Onward, upward.

That's what's new at MSU.

(upbeat music)

(audience clapping)

- So we'll be using that video in a lot of different

places this year as we promote the university

literally all around the world.

Let me follow up on some of the things

that were referenced in the video to give you

little more detail.

Enrollment has continued to increase.

We set both system and campus enrollment records

for the sixth consecutive year, six years in a row.

We're now at 26,216 students in the system

and 24,350 on the Springfield campus.

In part, that's a result of a record freshman class,

our biggest freshman class since we went

to selective admissions.

We have the most graduate students ever,

over 3,500 and the most underrepresented students ever,

almost 3,200 as a part of that accomplishment.

More importantly though we graduated a record number

of students, awarding over 4,600 degrees

and over 300 certificates.

We added new academic programs in areas of critical need.

We began several new retention initiatives

to retain more of our first generation Pell eligible

and underrepresented students.

As a result, St. Louis Graduates

and the St. Louis Regional Chamber recognized

Missouri State University as one of five Missouri

colleges and universities, only three of which were public,

for leadership in graduating low income students,

first generation students, and students of color

with less debt.

I'm very proud of that recognition.

We increased the diversity of our faculty and staff

and we once again met our target of 20% of new hires

being from diverse backgrounds.

We made significant facilities investment.

If you haven't gone through Ellis Hall, you should.

It is a brand new, phenomenal building and we dedicated

it yesterday.

But we also did renovations on the third floor

of the professional building, in the computer lab

in Cheek Hall, in Blair Shannon where there

are all new bathrooms.

Glass Hall renovation will be completed in about five weeks.

A brand new health and wellness center is going up

and Hass-Darr Hall in West Plains will open in January.

And, maybe most importantly, in about a week

we should have a new parking lot open on Walnut Street.

(audience laughing)

For all our faculty in here know that most of the money

for renovation has gone into academic space.

Over 50 million dollars this last year alone

has gone into renovating academic space across campus

with most of that going into Glass and Ellis Halls

but also the other facilities mentioned.

We improved safety on campus.

Probably the most important thing we did was hiring

and emergency preparedness manager, David Hall.

We did that through a reallocation of funding

where we closed other positions to be able to hire

David and as a result of his good work

and the good work of his team, we are better prepared today

to handle a crisis than we have been ever on all

of our campuses.

We've expanded our entrepreneurial activities

at Jvick and the eFactory and for the second year

in a row we received more than 40 million dollars

of external support through grants and sponsored contracts

as well as contributions through the foundation

which had its second best year ever.

And finally we won four conference championships

in athletics with our athletes earning the highest

overall grade point average in history and frankly

the success of the baseball program in making

the super regionals for the second time in three years

raised the profile of the university significantly.

These were all group efforts and so thank you for everyone

who played a role in improving our university

as we move onward and upward.

One major disappointment this year was our inability to fund

an across the board pay raise due to all of those cuts

in state funding that I referenced.

This was the first time in my six years in this position

that that occurred and while we still did increase

compensation as you can see on this slide,

including contributing more than two million dollars

to our pension fund more this year than last,

we must do better next year and that is the number one

priority of the executive budget committee as we move

into conversations about that.

Building on the really good work of everyone here

and everyone a part of our team,

here are the three focus areas for the coming year.

The first two areas were our focus areas last year

and we have added the third, funding, in anticipation

of further decreases in state funding for next year.

We've built an action plan based on these three areas

of focus and I want to share key highlights

of that with you.

I anticipate Frank will expand on some of those

academic initiatives that I reference now.

So there are certain things that we can do to both

increase revenue and improve student success

and if you look at the list that's on the board now,

the last four bullet points do just that.

As we work to increase retention and graduation rates

of our students through, restructuring summer school,

providing enhanced transition support, expanding

advising services and restructuring and reassigning

GEP 101 classes.

Those are all retention initiatives and the more students

we retain, the more that remain here and graduate with us,

the side benefit of that is additional revenue

that comes into the budget.

So those are consistent.

We can work on the revenue side while at the same time

making our students more successful and increasing

the number of graduates that we have.

We will also need to strategically unbundle programs

into stackable, micro credentials

and create new opportunities

for students to be successful.

Maybe students that are not here with us,

non traditional students who want to come back

to the university.

We'll have a consultant on campus at the end of October

to help us work through what makes sense for us

in that venue.

And then finally we need to continue to grow enrollment

of both our domestic students and sustain enrollment

of our international students.

On the video you saw a reference

to 1,500 international students.

That's a great number.

It's 212 less than we had last year

and so we will be working to turn that number around.

And frankly that loss hides what would otherwise be

a bigger growth in our domestic students and students

from Missouri and the region.

If we look at the affordability issue,

there are a variety of things that are going on now.

The faculty senate has a task force working to

evaluate reducing the minimum number of hours

it requires to graduate.

Chris Craig is leading a task force

on open access textbooks and can we make progress

on affordability on that angle.

The math department has rolled out its first pilot project

on co-requisite math so that as we work to reduce

the number of students that take developmental classes,

classes that don't count towards graduation

in any way.

And we will be rolling out next year several pilot programs

on structured schedules, again to help students

make good choices in terms of the number

of hours they take before they graduate.

We will continue to work on our diversity

and inclusivity efforts.

We have more progress that needs to be done.

We live in a state where the NAACP has issued

a travel advisory for Missouri.

St. Louis is still in turmoil.

There is work we need to do as a state and on our campus

and again, this will result in increased retention

and graduation rates for our underrepresented students

as we work to make them feel an equal part

of our community with any other student with any

other background.

They don't always feel like that and there's continued work

we need to do there.

And if we do these things, frankly, only if we do

these things, can we then evaluate and revise

the tuition and fee schedule.

That's a directive from our board.

They have told us at the August retreat

that they want us to focus on efficiency

and revenue growth first before we bring any proposed

tuition and fee increases to them.

Working together, I believe we can make progress

on all these actions and that will allow us to grow revenue.

Why do we care about that?

Because if we grow revenue, then we will be able

to hire additional faculty and work to reduce

the student faculty ratio.

We'll be able to increase compensation for faculty

and staff.

We'll be able to increase our graduation

and retention rates as well as the number

of credentials awarded, improve our student experience,

help grow the economy of our state,

all the while maintaining affordability.

We live in challenging times.

Our country is divided across many lines.

We saw that carried out yesterday if any of you watched

any of the pro football games that were on television.

The world has become a scarier place.

The tone and style of national

and state political leadership has changed

and frankly not for the better in my view.

People are hurting.

It would be easy for us for despair and or apathy

to take hold and so let me leave you with this,

two final challenges.

First, let's continue to be positive.

We're making a difference in the lives

of tens of thousands of students.

The university is thriving despite the funding cut backs.

Our influence and profile as a university in the state

has never been higher.

Second, let's continue to emphasize our public affairs

mission of community engagement, ethical leadership,

and cultural competence and let's do it with an emphasis

on inclusion, civility, and kindness.

Every employee, every student, no matter their political

or religious views from very conservative to very liberal

should feel a part of the Missouri State University family.

If we can make them feel that way, this will continue

to be a special place to attend school and to work.

Frank is now gonna report on some of the academic

achievements of the past year and comment further

on various academic initiatives underway.

Frank?

(audience clapping)

- Thank you Clif.

In my comments today, I know that there are some things

that I will highlight that are unique and perhaps different

but before we get into highlighting things

I want to point out that this semester

we have 5,300 sections of class or lab that are going on

every week.

And what we do in those classes and laboratories

and settings is sometimes seen as mundane

but it's the heart of the university

and what we do in those classes to inspire our students

makes all the difference.

And while I'm going to highlight some things

that are beyond the classroom in many cases,

I never forget the importance of the heart

of the university and the class and the lab sections

that we run.

Starting with my highlight section of things,

I'm going to emphasize various types of active learning

and also collaboration.

And the second half that I talk about,

I want to emphasize that we have some challenges

and go into a few of the details but also indicate

a few things that we hope to do to make successes

of the challenges.

We had a great start and thanks to the College

of Natural and Applied Science and the dean's leadership

in that role, we had a natural science event,

a once on a century natural science event,

a solar eclipse for this point in the globe

that we were able to have a euphoria about,

a learning experience and bringing the community

into that event.

What a great start!

I have to admit I was nervous and it turned out

probably the best start of the year that I think

has ever occurred.

And if we could regress just a moment to back

to our enrollment numbers, all of those numbers on there

are record enrollment numbers.

The ones that didn't get mentioned by Clif

are dual credit, where we surpassed 2,800 students

in our dual credit program and I've got to re-mention

graduates because at graduate college level,

that 35 number has haunted me for a number of years

and so we got there.

But what's not on the record in different segments

on the screen is to get there, many programs

grew in their majors.

Many programs.

But I want to highlight a few because they show

that growth occurs where we have economic realities

and demand.

Our pre nursing program has 670 people in that area.

Because of that kind of number and pressures

in the community and our state, we will try

to expand that nursing program to taking in more

than 61 for our bachelor's program to taking in

at least 72 next year and hopefully progressively

in years to come, gradually build that further.

Our computer science and computer information system

programs in different colleges have increased

about 50% over the last five years

in their undergraduate majors.

Our cybersecurity program at the graduate level

is relatively new but it increased about 50% this year

going to 50 in the masters degree.

And, finally I want to mention our doctorate

in the nurse anesthesia practice program

has 135 students and we are becoming a national,

known entity in that area.

Online I saved in not mentioning its growth

but if you notice that this semester

we have a little over 14% of our credit hours

are online.

In the summer it's a whopping 53%.

The last fiscal year we have almost 16% of the credit hours

in online education and we assume that's going

to continue to grow.

That process, last year, we started a new approach

for our faculty and we had a boot camp in which our faculty

in the College of Natural and Applied Science,

12 of them we through a compressed period of time

to gain some skills and also at the same time

develop a new class.

Because of that, we will have four new online classes

in biology, five new classes in our geography,

geology, and planning department,

and one each in terms of math and chemistry and physics.

We will run another boot camp this year.

The doors are open.

We're taking solicitations for all those who want to join

right now.

In addition to that now I want to move into

some of the highlights of specific college areas

and I thought I'd start with the fact that our

masters degree in computer science had a very late

approval process in mid summer and yet we start

with 15 students in that program.

And to aid the program and the whole of the computer science

area, we have a renovated laboratory in Cheek Hall

that will accommodate 50 students.

Our undergraduate, as I said,

is a booming process right now.

There is demand in that area, either short term

programming or the long term or the graduate,

all of them.

If we look down the line and look at another college,

the College of Arts and Letters, we have a two and a half

million dollar grant that was achieved by Dr. Andrea Hellman

that is helping teachers in the Ozarks in their process

where they take people that are not first

in their English language but second in that language,

how do we teach them in the public schools?

In the parochial schools?

And so we have partners from Monett, McDonald County,

Neosho, and Springfield and we anticipate at least

that that two and a half million dollar grant

is gonna help a lot of students, at least 85,

who are teachers now but still students of ours

who will get a certificate but they'll also get

an endorsement from the state for the skills

they have developed in teaching English language.

Moving on to some of our learning opportunities

that have expanded now as we have a college of agriculture.

Due to long term connections and the help and work

of the foundation, we took another farm into our wing.

Now we are land poor, so to speak, but land rich

from the teaching standpoint.

This 80 acre farm provides another opportunity

for students to have active learning sites

and almost immediately after we had the approval

in March at the board of governors meeting,

Dan Monsanto assists us in some field plannings

and our students are working those plannings even now

in the harvesting process.

If we go on into the College of Agriculture

and look at the array of things that they have

at their hands, so to speak, we are the envy of many

land grant institutions.

We have indeed 190 acre fruit science station,

a 3300 acre journagan ranch, a massive woodland area,

a Shealy farm with 256 acres.

We have sites for learning in all areas

of agriculture and forestry now from row crop

to cattle raising.

If we take another step in looking at what we do

in the College of Business, it's already been known

for a long time that we moved back into Glass Hall

but in that process we have five active learning areas

for student development, including a trading lab

that has a real time stock market approach

with a fairly expensive software package of Bloomberg's

and in that process, our finance students will have

classes in that room.

We also have a lab that is going to be dedicated

to sales and marketing and when I heard they had

one way mirrors in there, I knew the sales pitches

that are coming out of our students are going to be

pretty high because they're going to be critiqued

on how to do it.

In addition, you'll notice the other laboratory areas

in the creating work together think tank type processes

that that building will provide.

If we look to another college, the College of Education

is a situation where we have increasingly tried

to get our students into the school systems.

So we have an active internship program that's the envy

of the state and in that internship program,

we're now starting our third year where 25 students

in elementary education spend a year in doing

what they've been shown a little bit how to do

and now they really learn how to do it.

Everything from the assessment side to the direct teaching

and lesson planning, they are involved

with master teachers.

We have a One Missouri project in which, now for a couple

of years, we worked with inner city districts

in St. Louis, Riverside, (mumbles) and also Plattenville

and in Kansas City, Lee Summitt, where we offer

the opportunity for students that are in

the underrepresented area to come to campus

for a little short time in the summer, get some help

on what it would be like to come to college

and how to get there.

And then if they come here, we can also assist

them by working back with the school district

with the overall idea of placing them there in student

teaching and placing them there eventually

in a job to come.

Chris Craig and a number of you have worked on

our Bear Power project, which a lot more information

will be coming on that project which we plan to take

some students from 17 to 23, 25, of intellectual disability,

give them a college experience that gives them

a certificate in hopes to move them into being

a employable person.

If we take a look at the College of Health

and Human Services, by the way I had another picture

and I took it out about how they moved that up the steps.

The elevators weren't working and so they all

got together, and this is a cooperative thing.

We have a balance instrument now that's in envy to anyone,

almost $150,000 instrument that was able to be

obtained because everybody worked together

that has an interest there.

Physical therapy, audiology, athletic training,

occupational therapy, worked together,

now we can have research and student activities

connected with that instrument being present.

MSU Care is another area in which we heard about

this last year as we opened it October 15,

a year and a half ago, almost two years now.

We have served over 4,000 clients in the last year

and now we are doing about 400 a month

and in that last year over 1,000 or approximately 1,000,

were individually clients.

Some men came and repeated sessions.

Most recently, we've opened our vision screening

service learning program to those people to come in

that need care.

Finally,

I'm looking at the College of Humanities

and Public Affairs who have always been active

in study away.

We had a project in Haiti where Elora Hobbs had her class

doing work with young children, among others there,

and some older, and testing them for the need

for glasses and assisting them in that way,

among other things that they did while in Haiti.

We had another project to cite here

that went to The Netherlands where the students

of political science of Kevin Pivos were able to

gain insights into a different system of government,

slightly different, and collectively then,

we see that if we look at lots of study away

that's going on, we served over 700 students

in the study away experience.

Most of that growth is in the short term study away

type experience and that amounted to 34 different

programs last year, which was a 26% increase

over the prior year.

Victor, thank you for giving me some stimulus

to talk about that.

At the graduate level, one of the interesting activities

that has occurred is after little by little growth,

the masters of professional studies now is the second

largest graduate program.

It's interdisciplinary and it offers great flexibility,

both of which are things that there is a group

of students that look for those kinds of things.

In addition to the masters of professional study,

we have a masters degree that is interdisciplinary

and collectively it's those two numbers that give you

the 148 on the right as far as the majors in those

two areas but the vast majority of them, about 95%

are in the professional studies program.

Our graduate partnership in Unicesumar in Brazil

is quite unique.

We have 22 students that started that masters

of professional study program with an applied communications

option and that is done as a combination where our teachers

actually teach online for part of their program

and on the ground.

So Shawn Wall was on the ground there.

Now our interim dean and taught a class

and finished it up online but we'll also use teachers

from Unicesumar and so it's a unique experience.

It adds to the cultural competence, I think,

of all those that get involved as a teacher

and indeed I think this is one of the important

experiments we're trying.

Another type of collaboration I wanted to emphasize

is where we have colleges collaborating with our center

that brings in students in the international way,

in the international leadership and training center.

The College of Education has their first cohort

of students.

Gilbert Brown's been heavily involved with that,

coming into do a graduate certificate

in what higher education is all about

and for the third year, our College of Agriculture

has students from Ningxia University.

This year, some of those 41 students are in other places

on campus as well.

Moving now onto some of the challenges

and some of the actions we might take for success,

one of the things that we do that continually

is upon us is the accreditation or another type

of outside approval process.

This day, in fact, we had accreditors here

that I met with this morning in speech language

and audiology.

Last week we had nursing here for our nursing board

approval process from the state of Missouri.

So we have accreditations that are continually

one way we try to assure our quality of our programs.

There are others but this is this year.

If we look at performance measures now,

performance measures are changing.

This is a challenge because we met all of our

performance measure every year now for five years

and we're gonna meet it again this year.

But now they are going to change and half of them

are going to be new.

In the efficiency section of that slide,

we have two new measures, affordability

and operating salaries per FTE.

I don't have a clue yet how they're going to

have the metrics on those though so I'm not gonna mention

much about it but it will be a challenge.

On the left hand side here, completions per student FTE

is a new measure and I'm going to be redundant

and re-show this indication of what our past history

has been in awards and I have two major purposes.

Of the 4,900 awards that we gave last year,

certainly the vast majority are in degrees

but certificates now number over 300.

Both types will be able to be countable as far

as we know and so let's not to forget using certificates

that we have that can be valued by the student.

Secondly, if you look at all of those awards,

we've been on a good increase but the increase

depends on our starting point in all of the areas

so we can't forget that.

Looking at that same type of data in a little different way,

we have all colleges contributing and one thing

I am going to like about this measure is the fact

that every thing we do with our students

in a positive way will be counted in the end,

whether they come in as sophomores,

whether they come in as transfer students

or graduate students, all is going to be counted

because it's the output that's going to count.

A second think I like about it is that we're able

to show that nothing should be forgotten across our colleges

as long as they're contributing outcomes

and it's not just freshman to sophomore retention

that will be important.

If you look at the bottom of the screen,

you see 30% of our awards last year were given

to graduate students.

Again, my old graduate dean comes out

but if you want to forget the graduate program,

you drop out 30%.

That's not a healthy way to look at the future.

Cliff has mentioned that because we have

125 hour requirement for graduation,

we thought it was time to look at that

at the faculty senate level.

They are looking at it and he didn't get to show

all the pretty pictures here of the people

so I thought I should do that part.

But, one of the real background pieces

of information that come out of the reason to look at this,

number one, we're the highest in the state

for the requirement.

Number two, almost four out of five of our programs

could be completed if we didn't have a university

requirement of 125 hours.

They're completable in 120 hours without any change.

Number three, I think it's worth noting that in having

the charge that came from Cindy McGregor to this committee,

the idea was that if we would make a change,

nobody who was in that other one fifth and has accreditation

and other reasons for more hours

would have to make a change.

We're also taking a look at summer school.

Perhaps this is a more complex problem.

You notice we have people from basically all parts

of campus from up in housing, from financial aid,

as well as faculty and the registrar's office.

Again, this is an area we would look at for one primary

reason, how can we better serve our students?

And in looking at that, Tom Hickey is the chair of this

committee as he is the other one,

the questions are something like this,

can we increase enrollment by having greater flexibility

in the summer school process?

The answers are not absolutely clear.

But that's the type of question that we want to look at

and we already know that our departments

are frequently dividing the summer school into

components of four weeks and sometimes two weeks.

We also know that our inner session, prior to summer school

is effectively dying.

So, we need to look at this and see what is our best

approach for the future.

We can impact success in a lot of ways.

Our Jump Start programs have been going for many years

and this is a program that serves students

who didn't quite meet our admission requirements

but if they'll come in the summer they can continue on.

We had 52 of those students last summer.

Thanks to Wes Pratt and a number in student services

and Rochelle, a lot of people working together,

we have a transition program now for a different

kind of student, a student that is here

but can probably profit from a little more attention

about what the experience of transition is all about.

The last thing on my slide here is to illustrate

one other thing, we're going to change

the admission requirements and raise the criteria

in one direction and that is below a ACT composite

of 17 will not be admissible.

A small change but an important one because our data

shows those students have not been very successful

and they need some help prior to coming

and we will be doing them a favor if we make that change.

Retention, of course, is always on our mind.

We promote retention in a number of ways

but the GEP program is our starting point for that.

Right now we have 28 sections that are first generation

or college sections and we'll try to increase that number.

The total number is 96 and we have a long ways to go

but in the process we want to get better utilization

of Blackboard.

We want to introduce the student educational planner

and get 'em involved in GEP 101 in using that

educational planner and try to work on retention

in those kinds of ways.

Eventually, we'd like to have a second year experience

in a hands on way, probably of either study away

or service learning but there are other possibilities

in research and so on.

Clif has mentioned remedial classes or something

that takes time, money, and often is discouraging

so the co-requisite model is one approach.

Last spring, Margaret Weaver ran a co-requisite

English session where they joined the remedial class

with the regular required class.

She wrote a pretty extensive report, I read it.

My conclusion was there's hope that it can be successful

but it's not a proven fact.

So, we'll now run more remedial, excuse me,

more co-requisite classes in English this fall

and, as Cliff has noted, we'll have one in college algebra

being linked to Math 101 in a sequence for next spring

and right now we're doing a co-requisite model

in math 130.

Perhaps a bigger impact overall is good advising

as to what kind of class best fits the matron

and so on.

Math pathway approach is something we need to pay

more attention to.

Structured schedules, again, have been mentioned

but this is simply the idea that all over the country

they're finding that if you give less choices

to your first enrollment, students are going to do better

and those are called structured schedules.

All of our GEP students will be pre-registered

in a section so they can hit that first (mumbles)

or whatever section best fits them.

In the College of Business they volunteered

that the pre-business students will be in a structured

schedule of three classes, not all total,

and we also will have the pre-nursing students, again,

in a structured schedule model and we'll probably do that

by using the student educational planner

and strongly getting the students working with

the advisement process and making that happen

in the pre-nursing program particularly.

If we take a look at the advisement initiatives,

we know and have always felt advising was important.

That doesn't mean we can't always do better

in advising and recently the deans and working

with our departments have gotten most of the degree plans

updated, so four year degree plans are available

and all will be soon.

In that process then in GEP, their four year degree plan

will be utilized and it will be a part of the advisement

process for the longer term.

Moving on to some other types of activities,

the transfer council has advised that at least

for transfer students and we've decided for everyone

they should see an adviser at least three times.

And so that will be put into practice.

So, there are a lot of things that can impact

our success to graduation.

Elements of retention, all the way along the line

but if we look at all the things we've mentioned,

structured schedules, no one of them fixes an issue

and a lot does depend on student motivation.

In my box down at the bottom of that slide,

I try to point out the fact that the student

has a responsibility here and they have a lot

of variables in their lives too.

Financial and family which we cannot control.

We can control how much we care about what we're doing

with the students and it's not just programming.

It's how much we care and put into practice

at every level of what we're doing.

So thank you very much for your attention.

I appreciate it.

(audience clapping)

- Alright, I know some people need to leave

and that's perfectly fine but we will take first questions

that were either written on cards or sent via

social media to our vice president, Suzanne Shaw.

Suzanne, do we have any questions?

- [Suzanne] Okay, can you hear me?

- Yep.

- [Suzanne] For those who have cards, we have a couple

people in each aisle who will come by and pick them up

and I will start with the social media questions.

The first one is campus safety, a current issue.

What changes, if any, should we expect to see

following recent clarification of title nine protocol?

- Great question.

As you all may have seen in the Chronicle

or on news, the Secretary of Education withdrew

the guidance from the Obama administration

on sexual assault from 2011 and 2014.

We seem to, we talked about this this morning

at admin council so I know what the changes are.

It gives more flexibility to universities

in terms of standard of proof.

On a criminal trial, the standard of proof

is beyond a reasonable doubt.

Colleges, before 2011, either chose preponderance

of the evidence or clear and convincing evidence.

The Obama administration required universities

to do preponderance of the evidence which simply means

what's more believable?

Do you believe this student stole from this other student

or assaulted this other student, et cetera.

So the new language allows universities to choose

their standard of proof for disciplinary measures.

It also allows for mediation of sexual assault claims

that have been precluded under the theory

that victims are often pressured in those situations

into accepting a resolution that they found unacceptable

and then the third thing, what was the third thing?

60 days, thank you Wes.

The third thing was right now the requirement is

that a complaint has to be resolved within 60 days

and they have taken that away and given additional time.

So, nothing that they put out last week changes

what we have to do and so we plan to make no changes.

Our, and that's a good thing.

I will tell you, there's no university in America

that does better than we do on title nine, period.

We have a great team.

We give both students due process.

We have had students found not responsible

that have been accused of sexual assault,

both on the investigative stage and at the hearing stage.

We have had a student who made a false claim

who was ultimately found responsible for making

that false claim and we have expelled a dozen or more

students from the university who were involved

in sexual assault.

So we are doing really well on this.

There is no need for us to change it.

Our team has written the Department of Education

saying this is what we do and this works.

So no changes in the short term that will be referenced

in my Clif Note tomorrow.

No changes in the short term.

We continue to aggressively prosecute those

alleged to have been involved in sexual assault

while making sure they get a fair hearing.

Good question.

Suzanne, next question.

- [Suzanne] Okay, the next one is more for Frank

with regard to academic research.

What actions will be undertaken to expand and encourage

research among the faculty in order to be

a high research institution?

- We saw the data in the film clip that we had

about 20 million dollars.

We will continue to encourage faculty go for

external funding because that's key to our research.

All the deans will continue to have programs

that will incentivize faculty in the research process.

Sometimes it's through a monetary incentive

for going for a grant and sometimes a small incentive

for a publication.

It figures into our tenure and promotion process.

None of those things are new but they are continuing

actions and I would tell you that I think

our grant program, in fact our international travel program

to present research was underutilized the last two years

we've had it.

We had money left over.

That's because we need to have the people applying

that have done things and moved on

to making those presentations.

I don't see us putting a lot of new funding

but anytime a person is able to really do something

outstanding, I think the deans and department heads

work with them in special ways.

- [Suzanne] Okay, thank you Frank.

The next one is budget related.

Will Missouri State encourage those that can retire

to do so in order to create job security

for those who are not retirement eligible?

- Read that again.

- [Suzanne] Will Missouri State encourage those that

can retire to do so, creating job security for those

who are not retirement eligible?

- Probably not in any kind of official program.

I don't anticipate us having a retirement incentive

program this year.

We have not found that those save money.

Frankly, for us when we did those under Dr. Kauffer

and maybe Dr. Nietzel, I don't think ultimately

we saved money in those programs.

I think it is always appropriate for employees

to have conversations with their supervisor,

their department head about their retirement plans.

I think it would be improper for us to pressure people

to retire for any reason,

whether it saves other people's jobs or not.

But again, it's not improper to have conversations

with your supervisor about when you intend to retire

so that there can be planning that takes place

in that regard.

- [Suzanne] Okay, thank you.

The next one is for Frank.

Will advisors have to become certified

with a master advisor program and if not, why?

- I don't know where we stand in terms

of requiring all of our people advising

to have gone through our master advising program

but as I recall, most of them have gone through.

I simply don't know that that's an absolute requirement

so the deans can help me out here.

But I do know that most people go through that.

The requirement is not always the best way

to get people's attention.

I think encouragement is going on and we will continue

to encourage them to go through the master advisor program

and I'd also say that that doesn't quite apply

to all levels of advising so there are other ways

that advising needs to take an upward movement,

often by colleagues helping out and showing new people

what needs to be done.

- [Suzanne] Okay, thank you Frank.

And last question from social media and from cards

is network security.

Can you tell us more about the email phishing scams

that took place last week and how are they resolved?

- Some of you may have noticed that last week,

I think on one of them, 2,200 people got a phishing scam

that if you clicked on the link, went to what looked like

a log in for your my Missouri State account.

If you clicked on that, and people did,

then if you then put in your password,

and I think six people did, the scheme, the goal,

was to get to your personal account

and change your payroll deposit.

That would've meant that your check would instead

of going to your bank, would go to the bank

of the criminal.

I believe that we caught all of those.

Jeff Morrissey and his team very vigilant on this

and got back with the employees that made that mistake

to make sure that they changed their password

so that no one lost their check for this month.

That would have been significant.

So let me, we are always working to be vigilant on this.

Literally thousands of phishing schemes are caught

and never make it to you but a handful get through.

Here's a tip, we will never ask you to log in

and put in your password in an email you get.

We will never ask you to log in and put in your password

in an email from the university.

Never do that.

Never do that.

Now, how do we change your password?

You have to go to the website yourself.

Alright?

So that's a different deal.

We change our passwords regularly because that's

a part of our security piece.

If we send you an email, we may tell you to do that

but we're never gonna send you the email for the log in.

If you ever get an email that says, log in and plug in

your password, it is from a criminal trying to steal

your money.

Don't do it.

(audience laughing)

If you lose your money and you come back to Steve

and say, hey I logged in and someone stole my money,

we're gonna say, sorry, don't log in.

Don't log in.

Now, we're gonna try to roll out some training.

We're gonna train all of our staff.

We've already trained 700, although frankly,

one of the people we trained logged in

and put in their password.

(audience laughing)

I know we laugh about this but we are getting

literally hundreds of these every month

and so we've gotta be cognizant, even in a world

where we get dozens and dozens of email.

Be careful.

There will be a note in a week from Tuesday in Clif Note

kind of going through this and explaining it

in more detail.

We're gonna do some additional extensive training.

We want to get all our staff trained by the end of the year

on this.

Next semester we'll take this to departmental meetings

and work on faculty.

Again, be careful in terms of these kind of scams.

When you see the Clif Note a week from Tuesday,

there will be some clear, hey, here's some tips

that you will know besides the big one that this is a scam

and it's in the email address is the key.

The one for the 2,200, if you looked at the email address,

Jeff, what was it?

(man speaking softly)

So the university is never gonna send you an email

from someone called Melissa@JBcabinets.com.

(audience laughing)

So when you combine that with we're never gonna ask you

to log in, two big clues that was a scam.

Again, we just gotta be careful.

We laugh about it and I don't mean to berate you

or belittle this but I mean, I get 'em too

and I'm not immune from making mistakes.

We just gotta all be cognizant that there are people

out there trying to hack into the university

and your personal information and your bank accounts.

Alright, I think we've done all of those.

Who has a question in the audience?

And I promised Keyshore we'd start with him

so let's get a microphone down here.

I can't imagine that people aren't staying

for Keyshore's question.

(audience laughing)

- [Keyshore] Thank you.

- Yes sir.

- [Keyshore] Thank you Clif and thank you

for being a great president of a great university.

- Thank you Keyshore.

(audience clapping)

- [Keyshore] I have three questions as such.

(audience laughing)

- Three, did you say three?

- [Keyshore] Yes.

- Alright, let's do 'em one at a time.

- [Keyshore] Okay.

I remember you wrote in one of your briefs

or I read somewhere that you would like MSU

to be the number one undergraduate choice

of students in Missouri so my question is

is MSU already at this time the flagship university

of Missouri as far as undergraduate studies are concerned,

well ahead of (mumbles)?

- So we came within four students of having more

Missouri freshman than the University of Missouri

in Columbia.

(audience clapping)

That makes them very nervous.

(audience laughing)

And I guarantee you they have new admissions folks,

they have a new leadership team.

They are working really, really hard to turn that around.

I happen to believe that we are a phenomenally good choice

for undergraduate programs and we're gonna do our best

to frankly continue to work very hard to also

become the number one choice for undergraduate students.

Now, that doesn't mean our graduate programs

aren't phenomenal, it doesn't mean our doctorate

programs and other programs aren't really good,

but 85% of our undergraduate students

come from Missouri and that is significantly more

than the University of Missouri.

More and more people are coming to visit.

More and more people are looking at us.

And that enrollment growth is important

both from a revenue standpoint, a profile standpoint,

our influence at the university.

You may have seen that the students that took the ACT test

in Missouri this last year chose us as their number one

dream school where they want to go to school.

We're also second.

So, we made a lot of progress on that.

- [Keyshore] Thank you.

- Question number two.

- [Keyshore] Thank you.

Last week I remember seeing a photo where

you are sitting and president of Missouri is sitting

next to you and you all are having conversations.

What was the verbal agreement made, if any?

Are they trying to take advantage of us?

- Say again.

- [Keyshore] Is Missouri trying to take advantage of us?

- I try not to let my friend Mun Choi take advantage of me.

We had a really good conversation for about

an hour and a half in terms of our legislative agenda

and how to work together in terms of funding

and what each school is thinking about in terms

of an approach and how to best approach

the governor of the legislature.

We talked about various academic programs

that we could work together on.

For example, could they set aside certain slots

for Missouri State University undergraduates

for med school who then ultimately want to study

in Springfield in their third and fourth years

of med school.

Very open to that.

We talked about some of the other big issues that are gonna

be on both our agendas next year.

We talked about tuition policy.

We talked about our agriculture work together.

And, by and large, while we compete for students,

by and large our interests most times are the same

and so the more we work together, the better we know

what each other is doing.

We talked about how their legislative,

their governor (mumbles) is gonna work this year

because you might remember they cut them all loose

and are hiring new people so we wanted to make sure

we were gonna get off to a good start on that.

The University of Missouri is a great partner

for us in a variety of ways.

They are the number one leader in higher education

for our state is the land grant.

The university, they need to take that position

and we want to be a good partner with them

and I think we'll have a good year working together

on a variety of things.

- [Keyshore] So when it comes to undergraduate programs

we are, MSU, is obviously very, very good and Missouri,

however, when it comes to masters degrees,

how do we compare with Missouri (mumbles)

universities in Missouri masters degree?

- Frank, do you have a sense of a comparison

between our masters degree programs here

and the University of Missouri Columbia masters programs?

- Is that a quality question?

- I presume so.

- I'm not sure whether it is a quality question

but the biggest comparison all the way,

I don't have a number to give you

but our masters program ends for a student here

with a significant prize that they started,

they went through, and they got a masters that they

wanted to get and we did treat them like they

were the top of the heap.

That is not true in a research university

of MU all the time.

Many times the masters in the basic areas

of the arts and sciences is a consolation prize

rather than a first prize type event.

There are areas where it is the primary ward

but we stack up in every way that we have to compare

on the accreditation side.

Beyond that, I can't say.

- Anything else?

- [Keyshore] Since you asked, one more final.

(audience laughing)

- I got nothing till 2:30.

I'm good.

(audience laughing)

- [Keyshore] Obviously you are a great president

and provost also is very, very great.

Do you promise us, the university constituents,

that you will never leave MSU and take up somewhere?

(audience laughing)

You will not take up a job somewhere else

like I heard some of the administrators have tried

to apply, et cetera.

What about you?

- That's a fair question.

I don't think Frank's going anywhere.

(audience laughing)

I think we got him.

(audience clapping)

So that's a fair question and I think the question

may be paraphrased, are you looking or interested

in other jobs?

The board asked me that this summer and my answer

to them was no.

I was approached by a major university last year.

I thought about it for a day and turned them down,

told them I was not interested because this is the best job

for me and so I know Missouri, I know Missouri politics,

I think I know our university.

I think we've had very good success in six plus years

with a great partnership with Frank

and so this is my last job and I'm gonna work it

as long as it's good and it that's two years

or six years or 10 years, whenever that's over

then I'll retire.

- [Keyshore] Thank you.

(audience clapping)

- Alright, anybody else want to ask a question?

Yes, up here?

- [Woman] Hi, will the university continue

to advocate for greater access to doctoral programs?

- Great question.

We are continuing to advocate for that.

Last year, a bill was filed and all the universities

and community colleges signed off on it,

passed the house.

It did not get action in the senate.

We continue to advocate for that and think that

has a great chance to pass this year.

The next step for us would be to add additional,

professional doctorates and so we, that will be a priority

this year and I think it has a reasonable chance to pass.

Anything else?

Okay, great.

Thanks for coming out tonight

and let's have a great semester.

(audience clapping)

For more infomation >> 2017 State of the University Address - Duration: 1:13:08.

-------------------------------------------

University Of Miami Confirms Feds Investigating Basketball Staff Member & Recruit - Duration: 2:32.

For more infomation >> University Of Miami Confirms Feds Investigating Basketball Staff Member & Recruit - Duration: 2:32.

-------------------------------------------

Student Spotlight: Napier University - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Student Spotlight: Napier University - Duration: 0:59.

-------------------------------------------

University of Texas student attacked near campus - Duration: 1:50.

For more infomation >> University of Texas student attacked near campus - Duration: 1:50.

-------------------------------------------

We are the Union: The Origins of Organizing at The University of Pittsburgh - Duration: 3:33.

So, the efforts to organize graduate employees at the University of

Pittsburgh actually date back a handful of years at this point.

A few of us in our department got word that some of our colleagues had had their funding cut

or weren't going to be asked to return for the ph.d program after completing a

master's, and and so some of us were a little worried by this.

In the early days, it was really quite informal. It was effectively a handful of friends and colleagues.

We met at Coffee Tree Roasters on Craig Street and we started talking about unions.

It became pretty clear that we needed a lot more support

if we're going to to see a union form here at Pitt.

A few of us sort of broke into teams and we agreed to contact several different unions.

So each team would have one union that get in touch with.

AFT, UE, these were some of the some of the names that we were throwing around and we did talk to all of them

so we did our research and by far USW was the most responsive

Not only were they our home union, not only were they working with the faculty and adjuncts at our own

university, not only had they had a recent win at Point Park but there was

also a clear interest, energy, and readiness to support us in the ways that

we needed to be supported.

And so we put all the issues on the table we looked at pros, cons and we decided for USW

There was a clear sense that they were here to support us.

The campaign changed dramatically. It was no longer

kind secret conversations behind closed doors

It was no longer just folks sneaking in kind of hours here and hours there

going department to department kind of scattershot.

Suddenly it was a massively organized outreach effort.

First and foremost was a greater sense of purpose. It shifted from being sort of this disorganized

enthusiastic campaign to one that seemed achievable.

Of course it was a watershed moment when we were finally able to go public

because it was at that point that we were able to say to the university administration, to graduate

student employees at large - we're here, we're not going anywhere and we're gonna

continue to fight for this Union until we win it.

There were more and more people and there was more and more enthusiasm and that was palpable for me

because I started with a core group of activists who were really dedicated to

this and then just to see it grow has been amazing.

All of a sudden we're having this this giant card launch and all these people are here

signing cards, interested in the Union yeah it felt really amazing.

This campaign started with graduate students who recognized the basic insecurity that

we all face. And this campaign is only going to be finished, it's only going to

reach its goal with graduate students taking action and realizing how vital

they are to this University.

For more infomation >> We are the Union: The Origins of Organizing at The University of Pittsburgh - Duration: 3:33.

-------------------------------------------

BACK TO UNIVERSITY - Duration: 4:06.

For more infomation >> BACK TO UNIVERSITY - Duration: 4:06.

-------------------------------------------

Oakland University students say they're taking precautions after sex assault - Duration: 2:02.

For more infomation >> Oakland University students say they're taking precautions after sex assault - Duration: 2:02.

-------------------------------------------

Dean of Business Administration, Dr. Russel Winer of New York University - Virtual Meet-Up - Duration: 50:04.

hello everybody and thank you for joining us we're gonna get started just

a moment my name's Chris I'm with shindig and before we get started

introducing dr. Wyner I'm gonna play a quick tutorial video welcome to shindig

video chat you can click on any participants image to engage in a

private video chat double click on another participant to add them to your

existing conversation click the arrow to exit you can also send an instant

message either to an individual or to your entire room want to interact with

the host use the buttons on the lower right click raise hand to signal to the

event administrator that you want to be brought on stage otherwise submit a

question to the host via text if the system has not automatically detected

your webcam and microphone roll over your image and click settings click your

image to enable your working webcam choose a working microphone by selecting

the option with volume indicators that flash green and responds to your voice

we hope this was helpful enjoy the event okay so now I would like to introduce

and welcome you all for the opportunity to meet with the Dean of the business

administration program dr. Russell s Winer from NYU today dr. Wyner will be

sharing information about the Business Administration program and about

potential career opportunities and will also be able to answer questions during

the event so during today's event and we already

have some questions please feel free to click on the raise your hand

tab it's in the bottom toolbar it's a hand icon as you come up to signify you

wanna climb on stage and ask your question or click on the question mark

to let us know it's like to submit a text question so that further ado I am

going to bring up dr. orange hello everyone we're going to run through

first a relatively quick presentation many of you may already be familiar with

the material in this but I just like to bring everybody up to speed as to what

the University of people is what we stand for and particularly what we have

in terms of degrees in the business administration area so let's go to the

next slide so we offer three degrees in the business school we have an associate

degree which is essentially a two-year degree although get into more details in

a minute we have a regular bachelor's degree which is typically like a

four-year degree and just recently we've launched an MBA program master's degree

program in Business Administration next slide that's kind of an old picture

of myself I've tried to give the newer pictures but I guess they like the old

one but I am the the Dean of the School of Business Administration just a little

bit about my background I've been teaching and doing research and

marketing for roughly 40 years I've been a professor at a number of top

universities including Columbia University Vanderbilt University

University California Berkeley and now New York University or NYU as it's

better known I've also taught number of programs abroad including

in India in Japan in Europe and a number of other locations next slide so as I

mentioned before we have an associate degree in Business Administration that

is 420 or requires 20 courses and is normally just sort of a pathway to

getting a four-year degree but basically in in 2020 courses you cover the basics

of Business Administration next slide we also as I said have a bachelor degree

program in Business Administration a Bachelor of Science and that allows you

to take more elective courses in business the requirements are for 40

courses in four years but again four years is kind of an ideal we realize

many of you have special circumstances where you're probably not going to

finish it in four years but that would be the equivalent of like a full-time

four-year undergraduate degree in Business Administration

next slide as I noted just relatively recently within the last year or two

we've introduced Master of Business Administration or MBA degree as many of

you know the MBA is one of the most popular graduate degrees in the world if

not the most popular the idea here is to allow people who have undergraduate

degrees in any discipline not not just business to get advanced courses in

Business Administration it's intended to provide a general

management degree to allow the graduates from the ears of the people to take

management positions in a variety of industries so it gets noted on a slide

it completed as little as six terms or 15 months but again the speed of which

it's completed is really up to you but we we are

getting you know a lot of enquiries and a lot of police with people with a wide

variety of background so it's not intended just for people who have

bachelor's degrees of Business Administration in fact we would really

like to see a very diverse set of applicants from variety of backgrounds

including humanities engineering etc next slide as many of you know if you're

already students you get connected with the personal program advisor who you can

call on to give you advice throughout the program and if you've got specific

questions about the programs these advisers are there to help you I can't

answer many of the questions you might have that are very specific questions

you know my role is sort of a higher level role role within school I develop

you know strategic emphases of the programs if time permits of some answer

questions I'm working on modification of the MBA program to provide more

flexibility for students to specialize in different areas if you have specific

questions about you know about certain courses or or technical aspects of

Moodle and things like that I'm not the right person but your program advisor

can help you with that next slide and just to slide about the curriculum again

if your current students you know that we we try to not only give you

specialized education as many of you know we also have a computer science

school my colleague in my you ask - Jalen is the Dean of that but we also

have the arts and science or liberal arts courses to help develop a

well-rounded students so we don't want students coming out with a business

degree just taking business classes we want you to have a well-rounded

undergraduate experience the next slide I think that many of you are aware of

the advantage of having a program that's Ford online I think that it gives you

flexibility with your scheduling and of course students are particularly

attracted to the use of the people and other online programs because of that

flexibility and I think you've got multiple challenges that many of you

face the family issues their economic issues we have refugees and the program

robberies are facing significant stress in their lives and now with more and

more restrictions on travel especially coming to the u.s. it allows students to

finish their degrees no matter where they are in the world and get a first

quality degree and and we think that having this online technology that we

have called Moodle is a great way for students to get a degree based on

classes that developed by top educators and it's accredited as well so we really

think that the online model is is the best model for our students next one as

you again if your student you know we have this mentorship program where you

are assigned a mentor and/or you have at least the opportunity to have a mentor

if you would like and again if you need career advice these are the people that

you go to next slide obviously graduates of the business program are oriented

towards degrees hopefully or careers in management some of you will get

entry-level jobs but we also hope that many of you are interested in

entrepreneurship I'm one of the things that really excites me about being

involved leadership the people especially with our students that are

coming from less developed countries is that the mission of the university

really is to help many of these countries grow economically the way they

can grow economically is to create entrepreneurs develop companies

hire people and really contribute to their their local economies and Melton

went to their countries so this is what one of the reasons that excites me about

being involved here to the people and one thing I did notice I've been

involved with the university since its inception so I've been involved with the

University for over seven years I think 2009 when it really first started and

the reason that I've been attracted to it is the mission based aspect of the

university and particularly the opportunity for people many people like

yourselves to contribute to the local economy know to better yourself but to

better your cities better your countries obviously graduates of the MBA program

are already older perhaps more experienced and and hopefully will get

jobs and a wide variety of industries and hopefully move up to senior

management positions next slide okay so now is your opportunity to ask me

questions I guess we have about 45 minutes I'll do the best I can to answer

your questions if I can't answer them one of our senior leadership team a soft

wolf will get back to you with some answers he's monitoring everybody who's

on the site and hopefully everybody will have their questions answered if not by

me at least by somebody from the University okay I so I have a question

after graduation for the university BSC in computer science one of the

professional courses you recommend for students that have expertise well as you

know this is supposed to be questions about Business Administration but if you

are student computer science you can in fact you know apply to the MBA program

and perhaps you know get a back in business that will then help you with

the business career but many graduates with computer science also become

entrepreneurs right start their own companies so I don't know if you have a

background some business courses already an idea about how to develop a company

but it might be useful for you to either enroll in the MBA program or take an

evening course or a course in entrepreneurship or how to start a

business how to write a business plan in your local community wherever you live

take advantage of your local educational resources how is the possibility to

bridge with the MBA to PhD or DBA to universities like NYU ok this is a

question from Lucas well all I can do is speak to you from my experience about

PhD programs PhD programs generally and business do not require an MBA some of

our students do have MBAs students that apply to PhD programs often have

advanced degrees in other areas like statistics or economics or psychology

something like that and I think that the the the reason that's the case is that

PhD program is a research degree program and so typically you're trained to be a

researcher you also teach in your area of interest my area of interest as I

said before is marketing I do not have an advanced degree when I got my PhD I

had a bachelor's degree in economics and I received my PhD from Carnegie Mellon

University in business with a specialization in marketing you don't

need an MBA but if you do have an MBA that's okay if you're interested in PhD

program that's great I mean I think that it's a terrific career I've enjoyed my

here is an academic I like to joke that I've never worked for a living I've only

been an academic the reason that that's that's almost true is that academics

don't keep regular hours you don't have to come to school every day you can work

at home it's very flexible career it's good if you want to have a family or

have a family but it's difficult alright because if you want to be a researcher

you have to learn how to write scholarly articles you have to learn how to

publish in academic journals and the 10th of attention for your time between

teaching administrative tasks and research is there but if you could be

successful it's a wonderful career so I strongly encourage you to apply to PhD

program ok with the Business Administration degree how long will it

be before we start taking courses that pertain you'll agree this is for myrtle

I'd I'm not sure I'm not sure I understand the question if you're

already in the Business Administration program you should be taking business

courses do you want to expand on that question in some way ok maybe not

let's take the next question what about a scholarship in the MBA program ok well

you know we do the best we can to make sure everybody who wants to come to the

program can come to the program we encourage you to do a couple of things

we encourage you to apply for scholarships and and many members on our

board including myself make financial contributions to the university to try

to help students with scholarships but we also encourage students to apply for

scholarships in their local communities often there are sources of scholarships

that can be provided by local organizations or individuals to help you

get through the program but we've tried to keep the cost as low as

possible we know it's more expensive than the undergraduate program in terms

of the the course completion fees but it's still significantly less expensive

than attending a what we might call bricks and mortar MBA program so we try

to keep the cost down and we realized that still for some students it's it's

it's a bit of a financial burden but we try to try to offer as many scholars as

possible but encourage you to try to find other sources of funding as well

how do you cooperate with those others universities that you said you do can

University of the people students have scholarships to those institutions

Mikiko I think are you referring to if you're referring to Berkeley and NYU Abu

Dhabi where we have it's a very limited opportunity for only our very best

students in in small numbers to transfer to those universities you know that that

is my knowledge about the cooperation with other universities I'm not sure

exactly what other cooperation you might be referring to does University people

provide scholarships to those universities we do not but our

arrangement with those universities as far as I know is that you would tend

them on on full scholarship they've made allowances for you to go without having

to pay tuition if I'm if I'm incorrect one of my senior people in the

university we'll get back to you with corrective information okay from Georgie

what are the main differences between associate and bachelor's degrees what

are the difference in this the graduates could you please give more

information well an associate degree is a two-year degree okay it's not an

undergraduate degree some students don't have the ability necessarily to stay for

the four full year degree the idea of an associate's degree is

that hopefully you will continue on to get the four-year degree I would say in

all honesty the opportunities for jobs with an associate degree are going to be

more limited than if you have a what we call regular Bachelor of Science degree

in business administration I strongly encourage you and anybody else who's

listening to try to work towards the four-year degree as I said the the

opportunities are limited but if that's all you can you can do what in this

country for example we have what are called community colleges community

colleges offer two-year associate degrees and for some students it's a

terminal degree but they're generally encouraged to transfer to a school that

offers a four-year degree and many universities in the u.s. offer

opportunities for students the transfer fortunately at the University of the

people you can just continue to your 4-year degree by staying in school and

that's what I would I would argue for is the flexibility and the options of

specialization for the MBA program this is strictly based on what the

inverse is already designed or it can it be customized based on student

preference well I'm glad you asked that question

look I'm working as I mentioned in my introductory remarks I'm putting a

proposal together that will go in front of the board of the business school in

about two weeks to allow specializations let me look at my notes that I have here

right now the I'm sorry let me be clear the proposal that I'm

working towards is for the undergraduate degree program not for the MBA program

right now we don't have the opportunity for specializations to my knowledge

within the MBA program there's a certain set of courses that have to be taken

from everybody the reason for that is that right now we have a limited number

of courses that we've developed and we would need more elective options to be

able offer specializations within the MBA program what I referred to before is

specializations in the undergraduate program that I'm working on to give

students more flexibility so be on the lookout though for further courses that

we're developing for the MBA program and hopefully we'll be a little while more

flexibility going ahead into the future

next question let me let me also say that if anyone would like to ask me a

question directly by email feel free to email me my email address is rwi any are

our Winer at stern ste our n dot nyu edu that's

our WI any arm at stern NYU edu I'd be happy to either answer it myself or

forward it to the person who can answer

okay question from Lucas I was the possibility to bridge I think I was

already asked that question

I was already asked that question I think I talked about the MBA in the ph.d

program okay question how difficult is it for students to enter to one of the

best schools for masters if we don't have an online bachelor's degree that's

a very good question this is from Fernanda you know we don't have much

experience yet we do have in fact a number of examples of students who have

in fact been able to gain admission to excellent programs with an undergraduate

degree and I think one thing that makes your application to a graduate degree

program I think standout is that if they take a look at your background right and

every MBA program has involves writing essays talking about the you know your

background maybe you know struggles you've had you know with an accredited

undergraduate degree from the earth with people and your own personal story my

belief is that you would be a very attractive candidate to many top MBA

programs you would have to take what we call the GMAT which is the Graduate

management admissions test you would have to be fairly proficient in English

which of course you have to be for our program as well

but in my opinion and I've worked in envolve been involved with admissions at

all the MBA programs with its schools which I've been associated I think you

know to the people applicants would be very attractive

applicants again I'll offer this this assistance if anybody has any questions

about particular MBA programs please drop me an email I'd be happy to

try to answer any questions is it possible to be duly enrolled in a

bachelor's and healthcare program and the MBA program or to take classes in

business at the bachelors level all enrolled in a separate degree program

well first of all you can't take classes in the MBA program and the bachelors

degree program Elizabeth because you have to have an undergraduate degree to

get into the MBA program so that won't work however as far as I know you can if

you're enrolled in the healthcare program you should be able to take some

classes in business administration if I mean correct ass off we'll get back to

you and tell you that that I'm wrong but to my knowledge you have enough open

electives in the undergraduate program to be able to take classes in the

business school so my answer is yes you should be able to do that is the MBA

degree for you so the people recognized and/or accredited the answer to that so

the second part is is accredited yeah is it's accredited by accrediting body

called the deac the distance education accrediting something member with the

CEA's doesn't matter it's accredited in the US by the deac in

fact we just went through the accreditation process for the MBA

program several months ago and you know subject to some very minor issues we

will be accredited by that organization it is not accredited by the major

international accreditation bodies the AACSB which is the American Association

the Collegiate Schools business and a few of the other bodies equus that do

international accreditation it is not accredited by those bodies however as I

said it is accredited by in the deac

and you know would we like to be accredited by those other organizations

I'm not sure given our business model purely online that were even eligible

for accreditation by something like the AACSB but as I said we are accredited by

the appropriate organization hello Margaret

again hello and thank can you tell me if you have a percentage of the ages of

your students who take this program I assume you mean the MBA program I

actually do not know you know obviously they have to be older because they all

have undergraduate degrees a soft or somebody in the office will send you a

distribution of Ages of the current students I know stuff is listening in

you're going to not write you will do that Raphael is it easier or simpler for

users to the people's students to start the MBA programs you know some people

after graduating from his administration I mean can we just continue studying in

the MBA program well you have to apply just the way you have you applied for

the undergraduate program but we certainly welcome graduates from the

undergraduate program into the MBA program and so the answer you know do we

officially get preference I don't know the answer to that but we would love to

see our students from the undergraduate program apply to our embryo / MBA

program will you put it that way okay dan I'm attending a BA and wanting to

study other fields to enhance my skills would you recommend continuing BBA or is

it find a study toward another

I assume by ABA you mean the associate's degree in bachelors administration would

you recommend continuing the BBA or study to another I would recommend

continuing to for the BBA degree you don't want to collect associate's

degrees as I you know I responded to an earlier question that I think the

associate's degree has limited value and employers these days they're looking for

students that have a good undergraduate degree education which is what we offer

so that's what I would recommend Fernanda do you think that people with

an online degree would have the same chance to get a job as some other bricks

and mortar education that that is an excellent question and we do know that

the online business is huge now not just in the US I don't know if you're from

the UK or the country there's a largest university I think in the UK is called

the Open University and that's an online education so online education is

generally well accepted today throughout the world so at one time I think it had

a rather what we might say sketchy reputation and was mainly run by profit

oriented companies but I would say today with the improvement in technology a lot

of well reputed universities are offering online degrees and so I do not

think that it is a significant handicap in the job market Mohamed how will the

MBA only complete in 15 months while required minimum 36 approved credits

which equal 12 course of three credits and nine weeks long each you know this

is a kind of a specific question I'm going to ask us off to get back to you

on that so I said most of my most of my

knowledge is sort of at a higher level a level so a sum we'll get back to you

on that with the timetable definitely we'll get back to you Muhammad if he

does not if somebody does not get back to you within a week write me directly

and I will make sure that your question is answered Oh an excellent question

our heap do you have opportunities for Refugees as a matter of fact we do we

have some refugees in the program already and we have some Syrian refugees

who I believe went to Greece who are in the program the only requirement well

not the only requirement you have to have a documented high school or high

school equivalent degree but you do need to have an internet connection right you

have to have access to Wi-Fi because our classes are run on the web all of our

materials are our open source in fact those of you that are in the MBA degree

program you know that if you're taking the marketing course I developed that

course using my textbook and it's all open source online so the answer to your

question whether we take refugees the answer is definitively yes you know I'm

open to questions about business careers MBA programs business education anything

you'd like to ask we have about another 20 minutes so please ask me questions Oh

ass off question from Facebook after I finished two years in associate business

do I be able to use my credits if I decide to continue my studies in another

country like New Zealand right now we we cannot guarantee that you can transfer

from University of the people to other universities they have their own rules

and regulations however just as a general question or response we now have

a program for accepting transfer credits for those of you that are in

that we accept transfer credits from other universities into the University

of the people okay as far as I know we cannot speak for universities in New

Zealand it is perhaps a saw for other people have some experience with that if

so he will get back to you from Facebook Thalia can you please explain what

exactly are we going to study because business is a very open field give me an

example of a class topic okay why don't I give me an example for marketing right

one of the class topics and marketing is understanding consumer behavior all

right one of the things that any marketing manager needs to understand is

how consumers are behaving towards a product or service and so you would have

an exercise for example in taking a product for example maybe a haircare

product shampoo and discussing right what do we need to know about consumers

in that market right how often do they purchase what product features are they

looking for what's customer satisfaction in that

industry so that's a specific example from marketing in finance you'd study

the stock markets in accounting you study you know you know assets or debits

and credits those are all specific topics from business okay Reuben is it

possible is there any opportunity for job training before graduating from the

earth people we do not do classic job training in the sense that you do an

internship with a company in the business in the business administration

program we are trying thinking about with the MBA program having field

project or other things that will help give you

specific skills but we do not have a very formal internship program at the

undergraduate level where you stop schoolwork in a company and then come

back to school I would like to know more about the

partners with the organization so they accept interns from the ER through the

people is there any program of which we can get close to those partners if

you're speaking about our corporate partners like IBM and hewlett-packard I

know they have accepted interns into those companies in the past obviously we

cannot guarantee for any individual student

but our corporate partners have been very generous in providing you know jobs

and perhaps access to speaking with some of their people to help you prepare for

the job so our corporate partners have been very

generous in those areas well I'm speaking about this topic in terms of

looking for jobs all of you should have a LinkedIn profile the main way that

companies are hiring people these days is through online applications so we do

not have a Career Center LinkedIn is a global Career Center so you should all

have a LinkedIn profile and you should be looking for opportunities and

companies where they take applications either online or through LinkedIn and

some of them post internship opportunities as well I know that from

my experience here at NYU Stern Asaf from Facebook Maria hi what can I work

after graduation on during my studies thank you for this opportunity well you

know it depends upon your interest so you know when you enter in a Business

Administration program there are lots of opportunities that you can have when you

graduate you can work in marketing you can work in accounting you can work in

finance you can work in human resources these are

there are all great opportunities that students with Business Administration

degrees can have as I said before I really emphasize a four-year degree or a

Bachelor of Science it may take you five or longer but the

Bachelor of Science degree is really your key or ticket to getting a good job

these days especially in business all right

the Business School and many universities is often the largest in the

university in fact at NYU the Business School is the most difficult to get to

students apply to NYU from high school after their four-year degree and they

apply to different units in the university and Stearn or the business

school is the most difficult to get into because of the demand for business

degree you're fortunate to have access to a high quality business degree at a

very low cost at the University of the people you all should take advantage of

that all right the courses have been developed by regular professors at other

universities the materials are all up-to-date we monitor them and it's a

wonderful opportunity for many of you that can't get access to a classic

brakes a mortar degree to get a first class business degree from an accredited

institution if I can add something to that if you take a look at the people

that are involved with the university the three deans all are at first class

universities I'm at NYU computer science Dean Alex to Zealand is at NYU the Arts

and Sciences Division I probably miss naming it is Tom Connelly as a faculty

member professor at Princeton the the Provost the University David Cohen was

the chief academic officer at both Northwestern and Columbia universities

Roxy Smith our deputy Provost Provost was also at Northwestern in Columbia so

the the chief academic officers of the earth people that many years of

experience at some of the best universities in the world here's a

question for Myrtle will all resources mentors and student adviser be available

24 hours or just at certain times you know again I don't know the answer

to that Assaf will get can easily answer that question and we'll get back to you

very quickly again I apologize I don't know the answer to some of the very

specific questions but we do have answers to those obviously and we will

get back to you okay how does from Lucas how does the MBA compare to other

universities you're welcome I have thank you for being involved with

this university and helping many people as I said before I developed the

marketing course the marketing course for example is based on the marketing

course that I teach the MBAs here at NYU the textbook that's being used as my

textbook it's at the NBA level and we've really tried to make sure that the

courses at the NBA level are graduate level courses they're not easy okay but

then they shouldn't be easy at the graduate level so I would say that you

know is the MBA at university people equivalent fully to the NYU MBA no it's

not all right you know we have to tailor our program to our students needs and

abilities is it a first-class degree I would say yes

the courses were developed by the top people in their fields and you should

feel good about getting an MBA degree from the University of the people from

Facebook thora does your show that people have a

plan to pursue one of the three largest and most influential Business School

Accreditation associations such as the AACSB for its MBA well you know I I

would say in the short run the answer to that is no all right I've gone through

AACSB accreditation at several schools and some of the requirements the AACSB

has are things that we just cannot you know supply as an online university you

know we for example library we try to provide we do provide library resources

but the library resources yours too the people supply

are not at the level of Columbia Business School or Stanford Business

School or one in Business School we don't have a permanent faculty all right

a ACS CSB requires permanent faculty our faculty we have instructors that

administer the courses but people like me

our volunteers develop the courses so to be perfectly honest we are not a

substitute for a top 50 or top 100 business school all right

we are business school that is targeting people who cannot afford or get access

to the more traditional schools and we offer what we think is the best

education within that niche okay teeka with regards to accreditation

especially for Africa how acceptable is universal people degree certificate or

is it possible to complete in a BA from University people and transfer credits

to partner universities like NYU to complete an undergraduate degree

alright that's a multi multi-part question all right I would we we only

have a limited amount of evidence for the ability to transfer with an

associate degree to a four-year institution that's not the University of

the people alright if you want specific data on how many people have been able

to do that in which schools they've done it for you should ask us off for the

universe of people Administration second part of the question can you transfer to

schools like NYU there's a very limited capability to do that I would not assume

that you could get your associate degree and transfer to a four-year degree at a

school I can't want you we have very limited opportunities for that from

Facebook Janelle when I pursue an MBA will be recognized in Barbados

all right well all I can say is that it's an accredited school accredited by

the distance Education Association it is if a potential employer asks right or

says they've never heard of the University of the people you should

direct them to our website you should direct them to the parts of the website

to show the kind of people involved with the university it may take a little bit

of education but we're an accredited online university that offers a

first-rate education and hopefully over time more employers will recognize that

including those in barbados by the way I hope you are safe and sound

I know that the Caribbean area took a lot of a lot of rain and flooding so I

hope you are well I'm interested in logistics this is from Ahmed what do you

recommend to pursue after I'm done with the bachelor's degree in Business

Administration Thanks well logistics is an area that we offer

coursework in our MBA program I let me tell you frankly logistics is one of the

hottest theory is out there for jobs Amazon is hiring thousands of people

with logistics experiences I don't know what country you're in but Amazon has

global operations one of the the son of one of our friends here in New York

works in logistics for Amazon here in New York and I strongly encourage you to

stick with it and try to get a job in one of the major

online companies that have logistics operations around the world whether it's

Amazon or Alibaba or companies like that you're in a terrific field and I would I

would strongly encourage you to stay in it

let me just iterate reiterate if anybody out there that can hear me would like to

contact me directly I know some of you go in and out my email addresses are WI

n'yar our whiner at Stern ste RN NYU edu so feel free to directly contact me if

you would like to ask questions offline or other things that you think about see

we have about five minutes left are there more questions okay Fernanda if we

apply for yours is and why you were Berkeley er than when we get a wreck is

there any way you could get a recommendation letter from the deans or

counselors related directly to the University as far as I know the answer

to that is yes let me also say that I would be happy to meet with any of you

if you happen to be in New York send me an email we can set up an appointment

and again I'd be happy to talk to you about careers or aspects of business

then okay under Wally what is the difference between an online MBA degree

and one obtained with the four walls of the school it's captured on a

certificate issued or what's the distinction when you graduate from the

ears of the people you get a university of people degree doesn't say on there

that it's an online university if people ask you can say it's an online

university in in response to a question or a few minutes ago I said that at one

time online did not have a strong reputation I would say that that is not

the case today I would say that there are a large number of universities

including Stanford Georgia Institute of Technology Open University in the UK

other universities around the world that offer degrees I know you ever see of

Illinois just started offering an online MBA degree it's a lot more expensive

than ours but I my opinion the reputation of online degrees is much

better than it used to be and so you do not have to feel disadvantaged by

getting your degree from an online University all right so thank you very

much again if you have any questions my email address is our WI NER at Stern as

te RN nyu edu thank you for your attention today hope you enjoy the

back-and-forth and I'm delighted that you're all interested or some of you are

actually the University our goal is to offer as I

said a first-rate unit university experience online all right with a

degree that employers will find valuable and you can ultimately contribute to

your community and to your countries thank you very much

For more infomation >> Dean of Business Administration, Dr. Russel Winer of New York University - Virtual Meet-Up - Duration: 50:04.

-------------------------------------------

Saint Francis bests Huntington University 3-1 in women's college volleyball on 9/27/17 - Duration: 0:35.

For more infomation >> Saint Francis bests Huntington University 3-1 in women's college volleyball on 9/27/17 - Duration: 0:35.

-------------------------------------------

ALERT Undergraduate Research in the AIT Lab at Northeastern University - Duration: 2:55.

Hi everybody, my name is Daniel Castle.

Just finished my first year here at Northeastern studying electrical

engineering.

Planning to graduate in 2021.

My name is Jacob Londa.

I'm from Northeastern University in the computer

engineering major and year 2021.

Hi, my name is Nikhil Phatak.

I'm a sophomore computer engineering and computer

science major here at Northeastern.

so our main project here is AIT or advanced imaging technology.

We essentially have been able to 3D render

a bunch of images using transmitters that transmit at millimeter waves which

is pretty cool and it enables us to essentially find bombs before they go

boom if they're attached to people and under clothing or concealed in some way

we'd be able to figure that out without being too invasive like with x-rays.

Some of the projects that I've been working

on here are being able to use an FPGA to control the overall system that we have,

to be able to turn off the transmitter and receiver, turn them on again.

It's important to be able to detect emerging threats at airports for various

reasons.

First of all I don't think we do a good enough job detecting threats at

airports and I also think we need to take better care of people who go

through airports to make it more comfortable for them and make it safer

for everyone.

So far on the project I've been contributing a lot of my knowledge

into the code that we use to process the signals that we get from the

transmitters and receivers that we use to image things.

I've contributedsome ideas on how to better reconstruct images, how

to detect what we think are explosives or explosive materials which are

materials with specific dielectric constants.

So this project feels pretty important because I know that if this

becomes you know way better than the systems that we have now it can become

way cheaper and way more efficient and ultimately make people's watch safer in

the process.

It's a pretty wonderful I do a lot of scanning in the future I hope to be able

to work with a lot of the FPGA stuff do a lot of encoder information to make

sure all of that is exactly what we need it to be.

I've learned a lot from this project I learned signal processing,

different things about Fourier analysis topics that I wouldn't really have

covered until later in my undergraduate career and it's been really interesting

to be able to learn so much just as a sophomore over the summer.

For more infomation >> ALERT Undergraduate Research in the AIT Lab at Northeastern University - Duration: 2:55.

-------------------------------------------

Fashion CEO Neri Karra discusses her experience at the University of Cambridge - Duration: 2:46.

For more infomation >> Fashion CEO Neri Karra discusses her experience at the University of Cambridge - Duration: 2:46.

-------------------------------------------

John Mielke - School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo - Duration: 1:55.

The relationship between a mother's nutrition during pregnancy and the

health of her baby is well established. But the impact of her social experience

is less well understood. My name is John Mielke and I'm a researcher in the

School of Public Health and Health Systems. I'm interested in how a person's social

experiences become biologically embedded. In particular experiences during the

very earliest parts of life. I think in part what's going to come out of our

work is in a deeper understanding and appreciation for maternal newborn and

child health - a recognition that if we want to truly target to reduce adult

levels of disease we need to think decades before they actually appear.

I think supervising graduate students is important because certainly in

biomedical research the vast majority of what's done is as a result of the input

effort and time of graduate students. Graduate studies in neurobiology is

important because really the brain is the most fascinating organ system in the

body - and of course I'm biased - but when you think about it the brain is truly

the only organ that we have that is more than the sum of its parts.

It really is everything that composes you. Teaching is the reason I came to the

University of Waterloo. Before this I was a government scientist for five years

and while that was interesting I really felt as though something was missing and

what that missin part was is the opportunity to work with students.

I've decided to make the University of Waterloo my academic home because I feel

that they have a very strong student base they have wonderful support for

research and I feel that the School of Public Health and Health Systems in

particular is a very unique place because it has great support for a

multidisciplinary view of health.

For more infomation >> John Mielke - School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

Bilkent University BIM 416 Negotiation Skills Project - Duration: 10:47.

Baris who has newly graduated from Bilkent University needs an investor for the project that he is developing.

Baris will meet 4 different investors to ask investors to invest to his project.

These meetings will not be too diffucult for Baris because he passed BIM 416 Negotiation Skills with A.

[Baris]: Hello!

[Baris]: Mert Bey?

[Mert]: Welcome Baris!

[Baris]: Hello!

[Mert]: You are from SEYISCO right?

[Baris]: Yes. Have you examined our files?

[Mert]: Yes I've examined it but there are some points that I did not understand.

[Mert]: First of all how was your journey?

[Baris]: Yes that was pretty cool. Today Bosphorus was empty and I passed smoothly.

[Mert]: Yes Bosphorus is awesome. Sometimes I go fishing.

[Baris]: It is a good thing that we are in Ankara.

[Mert]: Yeah that's right. Okay. Let's get to business.

[Mert]: Well, I've examined your files.

(Paper Noises)

Messy Table

Yozgat 2013 Tennis Tournament 4th Place

Anger Management Issues

Mert Bey

Likes Fishing

Messy Table

Sports Achievements

Anger Management Issues

Might be Expressive type...

[Mert]: As I said I have examined your files

[Mert]: Well, I liked your project.

[Mert]: I'm sure that if we work together in the future we will be pretty successful.

[Baris]: Thank you.

[Mert]: Also I think we will be unique in Turkey and in the near future we will expand to whole world.

[Baris]: Let's see we are also hopeful.

[Mert]: For the short term, I found these data quite rational.

[Mert]: However, I am not sure whether you have an exit-point or not, in the long term. Can you explain it?

[Baris]: Uh, we have been thinking about that exit for a long time (phone rings)

[Baris]: I can talk after your phone call…

[Mert]: Yes. Is it lacking again?

[Mert]: It is the third trial until the morning, I cannot understand that failure! How is it lacking?

[Mert]: I will not talk with you anymore about that issue, just talk with my secretary, I will inform her. Thank you! Thank you… Do not call me again.

[Baris]: If there is a problem...

[Mert]: Sorry. As I said Baris, can you explain your long term plan?

Mert Bey

Future-Oriented

Cavalier

Unhinged

Yes! He is definitely Expressive type!

[Baris]: Uhhh, actually, you might also examined, Bolivia market is growing rapidly.

[Baris]: We think that internet need to be provided to Bolivia and working on it.

[Baris]: Accordingly, when we go to Bolivia, in any case someone from Cuba will buy us. There are already 3 people that we have been negotiating.

[Baris]: Uhh, consequently, we believe, we can handle it.

[Mert]: Okay.

[Baris]: We could not finalized the names, so I cannot tell you clearly.

[Mert]: I see. It is necessary to think on that much more, as there are some details that are not rational enough.

[Mert]: But I am sure, you will solve them in long term.

[Baris]: Sure. [Mert]: Because, I liked you.

[Baris]: Thank you. [Mert]: I want to work with you.

[Baris]: I also admire you.

[Mert]: However, to be honest, that doesn't work like that.

[Mert]: I am sorry, I am a bit outspoken.

[Baris]: Uh, namely, it is ok but…

[Mert]: Let's talk about that.

[Baris]: Uhh, are you playing tennis?

[Mert]: Ahh, yeah!

[Baris]: I am form the old Backhand players.

[Baris]: You can't believe how well my Backhand is.

[Mert]: Ah, but my Forehand is albeit strong!

[Baris]: Really? Let's play some time.

[Mert]: Yeah, it is possible.

[Mert]: Ok, here is my suggestion if you want.

[Mert]: Think on that a little more, check your plan again.

[Baris]: I can make some research again.

[Mert]: Because, you might have some other plans

[Mert]: Then we can negotiate again and compromise if we can.

[Baris]: It will be so nice.

[Mert]: Ok? [Baris]: Yeah, thank you. [Mert]: Ok, that's the deal. Take care.

[Toygar]: You can come in.

[Baris]: Hello Toygar Bey. We have an appointment at 2 p.m.

[Baris]: Hello again Toygar Bey

[Toygar]: Hello Baris.

[Baris]: How are you?

[Toygar]: I'm fine thank you Baris.

[Baris]: You are very stylish today.

[Toygar]: Thank you very much. My suit is in dry cleaning sorry for that.

[Baris]: No, no. It is not a problem.

[Baris]: Well, have you examined our files?

[Toygar]: Yes Baris. I have examined your files.

[Toygar]: But I have some questions about project. Before you come I have examined your project

Scientific Number Oriented

[Toygar]: What is the error rate of your sensor. Could you please extra information about your sensors.

Math competition 2nd place [Toygar]: Because I think the information that you have given is not sufficient.

Toygar Bey

Scientific

Number Oriented

Math Competition Reward

Conservative Dress

Might be an Analytical

[Baris]: Well actually my purpose is to show you that our sensor has a tolerance between 0.5 meters and 7 meters.

[Baris]: Also considering all our 49 rivals and we designed a sensor to have the best values in all and this means that all the others' sensors are worse than us.

[Baris]: But according to the Turkish Standards Institution, TSE 1358 clause ...

Neat Table

[Baris]:... the TSE 1358 clause restricts the tolerance between 0.5 meters and 9 meters and our value is below that range already.

[Baris]: Actually I did not think that I should go in detail that much, if you want I can explain in a detalied way.

[Toygar]: Okay then.

Toygar Bey

Detailer

Wants Evidence

Not Emotional

Neat Table

He is an Analytical type

[Toygar]: I did some research about your sensor and make some calculations according to some formulas written in this page.

[Toygar]: However in order to do some more research about your project need a couple of days more. If you want tomorrow or the day after we will arrange a new appointment.

[Baris]: Sure. I will give you 48 hours for you think about our project. After your decision you can connect me via email.

[Toygar]: Okay that would be nice.

[Baris]: Okay thank you very much.

(Door knocked)

[Selen]: You can come in

[Baris]: Hello Selen Hanım [Selen]: Hello

[Baris]: How are you?

[Selen]: Fine and you?

[Baris]: I'm also fine thank you. Let me put the flower there.

[Selen]: Thank you you are very kind.

[Baris]: Well, Have you examined the project?

[Selen]: Actually I did not examine it because I wanted to examine the project face to face. One moment please.

Books about empathy

[Selen]: Okay Let's start.

[Baris]: If you have any question I can answer them.

[Selen]: Actually I have a question about the place of the project.

[Selen]: Wouldn't it be better if the project is conducted in Nigeria? What do you think?

[Selen]: Generally people thought in that way.

[Baris]: Yes that was correct but if we think, Nigeria is a new and niche market to us and so that it not perfectly operating yet.

[Baris]: By the way you have also read that book "5 Languages of Love" which I like German the most

[Baris]: And as we analyze Nigeria, the strategy is not applicable.

[Baris]: However when we consider Bolivia , German is more commonly spoken and this makes easier to apply our strategy.

[Baris]: Because of that Bolivia will be the best choice I guess.

(Phone rings) [Barış]: Your mobile is ringing.

[Selen]: Hello!

[Selen]: Hello my princess. How are you? Her Daughters Photo

[Selen]: Yes. Are you at school?

[Selen]: Ohh, you are at home I see.

[Selen]: Have you arrive home easily?

Selen Hanım

Warm

Likes to listen people face to face

Family Photo

Sensitive to others' feelings

Reads books about empathy

Casual Dress

She might be an Amiable

[Selen]: I see. Are you hungry?

[Selen]: Yes there is food in the fridge. Heat them up and eat it do not stay hungry honey.

[Selen]: Okay,I will not be late my dear. Kisses.

[Selen]: Bye Bye

[Selen]: Sorry for this.

[Baris]: Is she your daughter?

[Selen]: Oh yes she is my daughter.

[Baris]: She is so cute.

[Selen]: Thank you.

[Baris]: In addition, you know we also do business on security...

[Baris]:...and comparing both Nigeria and Bolivia, Bolivia is more secure than Nigeria especially for families.

[Selen]: So you say it is more risk-free?

[Baris]: Yes exactly. In the future when we set our business to there, you can have vacation in there and it will be a better place for you and your family.

[Selen]: Of course that is very important for me and for my family.

[Baris]: This is our project. If you want we can start the project soon.

[Selen]: Umm...If you think that the project is risk-free than it is okay for me.

[Baris]: I can guarantee that if you visit Bolivia with your family, there will be no risks.

[Baris]: Afterwards it will be more steady...

[Baris]:...and we can use the 5 Languages of Love skillfully.

[Selen]: Then I can say we agreed.

[Baris]: Thank you. [Selen]: Thank you too.

[Alisan]: Come in.

[Baris]: Hello Alisan Bey. Thank you for your time.

[Baris]: Hello AlisanBey. I'm from Seyisco. Did you examine our project?

[Baris]: I did, however I have some points that I would like to change.

[Baris]: Actually, the team-

[Baris]: Let me tell you the things that I would like to change.

[Alisan]: First of all I think this project should be executed on Cambodia, not Bolivia.

[Alisan]: I want this to be like I said...

Sivas body building championship 1st place

[Alisan]: ...I think Cambodia has a better market.

[Baris]: I assume you think about Cambodia in order to get to the top faster...

[Baris]: This is actually a good idea.

[Baris]: We'd love to enter the Cambodia market under your leadership.

[Baris]: However we can stay at the top of the market in Bolivia.

[Alisan]: I see, adding this to our checkpoints...

[Alisan]: ...another matter that I would like to change is this.

[Alisan]: Using my engineering expertise I calculated that the error rate...

[Alisan]: ...of this sensor can be reduced to 0.5cm from 0.9cm...

[Alisan]: ...and I believe that as an engineer you can also achieve this.

[Baris]: Actually this is the case, I see that you are driving Bentley. It is obvious that you don't like any calculation errors.

(Phone rings)

[Alisan]: Sorry.

[Baris]: And If we look at TSE 1358 we are currently above average. And the digi-

[Alisan]: I mean I don't want to think this as above average...

[Alisan]: ...I would like you to reduce the error rate to what I have in mind

Businessman of the year prize CEO books

Alisan Bey

Serious

Control Freak

Technical Background

Insists on His Requests

Present Focused

"My Word is Absolute" Type

Definitely a Driver

[Baris]: As I see one of your characteristic quality is to play the best.

[Alisan]: A little bit.

[Baris]: Then I would like to say this. We will try our best to produce a product well high above average and which will be the market leader.

[Alisan]: I understand. If we can stay agreed on these two points that I mentioned. I want to work with you.

[Baris]: We will try our best. If you'd like let me give you my business card.

[Alisan]: Sure.

[Baris]: And we can keep in touch.

After his observations Baris analyzed all the investors correctly.

Baris got offers from all investor in very short time.

There only one question left for Baris:

Whom he should choose?

[Alisan]: If you don't have many business cards, keep it is not a problem.

[Baris]: No, no I have 2000 more. Thank you.

[Alisan]: Okay then.

The End

For more infomation >> Bilkent University BIM 416 Negotiation Skills Project - Duration: 10:47.

-------------------------------------------

Monster University Best Cartoon For Kids & Children Part 1 - Red Dog - Duration: 18:59.

Please LIKE, SHARE, COMMENT And SUBSCRIBE Video! THANK YOU!

Oh

Mike Wazowski

No

Great choice. She's a good egg Russell

Mike

Wazowski

Come on Karen falling behind

Please don't call me Karen

And can anyone tell me whose job it is to go get that screen

That's right. Now, which one of you can give me the scariest war

Monsters University

It's the best scaring school. There is you wish via text let's okay?

You guys watch us and tell me which school is the best all right?

You don't belong on a scare floor I

Didn't even know you were in there Wow I didn't even know you were in there

Well everyone I don't mean to get emotional, but everything in my life has led to this moment

Let it not be just the beginning of my dream, but the beginning of all of our dreams now get off

Oh

a

Super-intense scary competition, they're crazy dangerous so anything could happen

Don't force it just let it happen your lifelong best friend is right behind this door

You just disappeared sorry if I do that and scaring class I'll be a joke no, it's totally great

You gotta use it really yeah, but lose the glasses

Thank you better way graduate with honors and become the greatest era ever boy

I wish I had your confidence Mike aren't you even a little nervous actually?

No

I've been waiting for this my whole

Ha, man, I can't be late on the first day

You gotta be kidding me. I'm so nervous I

Just thought I'd drop by to see the terrifying faces joining my program

Well, I'm sure my students would love to hear a few words of what kind of a monster are you?

It's my job to make great students greater not make mediocre students

So I should hope you're all properly inspired

Well sorry I heard someone say roar, so just kind of went for it I

Should have known I expect big things from you. Well you won't be disappointed. I'm sorry

Sorority party we have to go stay out of trouble well, man

Hey

Why is it here

Gonna, take it to the roar the what roar Omega roar neat opportunity on campus

Take it from here gentlemen

Johnny Worthington president of roar Omega roar what's your name big blue Jimmy Sullivan friends call me Sulley?

Oh, sorry killer, but you might want to hang out with someone a little more your speed. They look fun

This is a party for scare students. I am a scare students. I mean for scare students who actually you know never chance

Ready position common crops I wanna see matted fur

Give me another one

The second theater see Thanks well done mr.. Wazowski a bowl of spiders running in the dark

Roars are the best scarers on campus Sullivan can't have a member getting shown up by a beach ball

I'm gonna destroy that guy then you get this back right away

The child's sensitivity level will be raised from bed-wetter a heavy sleeper

I'm a five-year-old girl afraid of spiders and

Santa Claus, which scare do you use?

Yes

Accidents happen don't they

The important thing is no one got hurt

You're taking this remarkably well now let that is a shadow approach with a crackle holler demonstrate

Stop thank you, but I think I've seen enough

Him scream it would make him cry

alerting his parents

exposing the monster world

Destroying life as we know it and of course we can't have that so I'm afraid I cannot recommend that you continue in this

And mr. Wazowski what you laughed is something that can I doubt that very much

Unchallenging a waste of a monster's potential

Open your textbooks to Chapter three

We have special guests evander the games Dean hardscrabble

Good often

As a student, I created these games as a friendly competition, but be prepared

To take home the trophy you must be the most

You have to be in a fraternity to compete behold the next winning fraternity of the scare games

If I win it means you kicked out the mascara in the whole school that won't happen

How about a little wager?

If I win your entire team into the scare program

But if you lose you will leave monsters University

Sorry

I need you on my team

Sorry, I'm already on a team, but we have to move on your team doesn't qualify

What's the plan

This is a fraternity house party here yet, but when we do

I

Guess we just weren't what old haired Scrabble was looking for John Carlton mature student

Thirty years in the textile industry and an old Andy Don got down-sized

Gonna be cool. No one said this was gonna be cool

You should wake up, and yes that leaves me ah my name's Scott Squibbles my friends call me squishy. I'm undeclared unattached

and unwelcome

Pretty much everywhere flash Lee I think I bring the whole package

Your very own

We're sharing this room we'll let you guys get separate great

Guys

Anybody home

Do you pledge your souls to the oozma, Kappa

Brotherhood do you swear to keep secret all that you learn no matter how?

This is my mom's house do you promise to look out for your brothers?

We know where no one's first choice for a fraternity so it needs a lot to have you here with us

Grab the couch cushions gentlemen cuz we're building a fort

You're a princess, and I'm just a stableboy

Pause in my bed

Morning in the house. That's good in the album Thomas. We got a letter oh

Sorry

Of all the sewers on campus this one has always been my favorite art

You've been here before I have a life outside of the house. You know

I want to touch him. This is the starting line the light at the end of the tunnel is the finish line

Is eliminated from the game all right all right, that's very cute

What are you gonna do Roy I can get through faster than you little guy

Scares work in the dark

Across the finish line

Don't look so surprised mr.. Wazowski

Your luck will run out eventually

What is it we've made a list of our strengths and weaknesses in high school I was the master of the silent scare

Sneak up on a field mouse in a pillow factory. I have an extra toe

Not with me of course guys one slip-up on the next event and we're goners so for this to work

I'm gonna need you to take every instinct you're wasting your time

We need a new team

I checked this morning. It's against the rules what if we disguise the new team to look like look?

This is not gonna work. Where are you going? We're training? I'm a Sullivan. That's not enough

You're all over the place if a kid hears you coming. They'll call mom or dad, then you better run faster things will get bad

The child takes the dirt

For more infomation >> Monster University Best Cartoon For Kids & Children Part 1 - Red Dog - Duration: 18:59.

-------------------------------------------

Ritah's University of Portsmouth - CCI - Duration: 2:05.

For more infomation >> Ritah's University of Portsmouth - CCI - Duration: 2:05.

-------------------------------------------

University of Tasmania Field Trip: Dr. Anita Prabhakar-Fox - Duration: 1:37.

For more infomation >> University of Tasmania Field Trip: Dr. Anita Prabhakar-Fox - Duration: 1:37.

-------------------------------------------

Capital University students push for concealed carry on campus - Duration: 1:44.

For more infomation >> Capital University students push for concealed carry on campus - Duration: 1:44.

-------------------------------------------

All-Steinway School Journey | Westfield State University - Duration: 4:02.

(gentle music)

- My name is Andrew Bonacci.

I'm Professor and Chair of the Music Department

at Westfield State University.

It's been an amazing five months since we learned

of this gift.

We have a nationally accredited program in music,

and great faculty, and great students, and now added

to all that, we have a world class piano in every room.

We got two Steinway D Concert Grands, seven foot B pianos

in the larger rehearsal spaces, and the piano studio,

and all of the practice rooms have

small grands and uprights.

- To have the pianos to perform on, but to not have

pianos to practice on would not be the same.

It's like having training on a Prius to do the Indy 500.

To go into a practice room, and to be able to hear

all the nuances for playing what you're gonna

be performing is incredible.

- In Boston, we were at the M. Steiner and Sons showroom

where we selected 13 small grand pianos.

We were looking for instruments that were responsive,

that had a deep, low register, and a singing top register,

and that's exactly what we found.

- I always thought that these pianos are gonna be here

for at least a hundred years, because that's how well

they are made.

And we have to choose the ones that we feel

really great about.

- Going to Boston was really neat because the first

room you walk into is just pianos pretty much as far

as you can see down one end, and it's just beautiful

to look at, and it's overwhelming.

But then after Galina, and Dr. Bonacci showed us

what to look for in the base, and in the higher register,

started to become a little bit easier to really see

how the different pianos felt different, and sounded

different from each other.

- Westfield State is a wonderful institution, and

these pianos are just gonna match that reputation.

And it's gonna help Westfield to put itself on the map

and let people know that we're committed to excellence,

not just in the music department, but across the board.

The Steinway name is not just a name.

It's a brand that's known throughout the world

as the standard of excellence.

So when our school becomes All-Steinway, that brand

transfer really is on everything at the institution.

- A large group of us in the university went

to New York City, to the Steinway factory, and

we had a terrific time.

It was great to see President Torrecilha there,

working on bending the rim of a Steinway D.

- It was very educational to tour the factory

and to learn the way in which these world class

instruments are put together.

Delighted that our students will be able to

work and learn with world class instruments

from here to the future.

- Looking at the pianos in the different steps was amazing

'cause you went from it being nothing, but looking just

from wood into, you saw it in the first stage,

the second stage, and then you saw the people making it,

which was special 'cause you know that your piano is

being made there by those people.

- I think perhaps the best part of this process

is watching the students and faculty walk into this

building and see these new pianos in all the rooms,

and see the new life it's brought to the program.

It's super exciting.

- You know, I think it also will really help

our current students and upcoming students in the future

to reach their greatest potential.

I really believe in that because when you have the best

you wanna be the best.

- Westfield State will be the only public university

or college in New England that's an All-Steinway school.

So it's a pretty exceptional distinction.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét