Revitalization project which designs an ideal postsecondary institution. Includes an organizational chart that reflects all departments necessary to facilitate operations. A PowerPoint Presentation, describing an ideal institution. Includes the mission, programs and curriculum, faculty, facilities, extracurricular activities, student services, and finances. Provides a rationale for each unit consistent with the mission.
1. ST. JOHNLAND
UNIVERSITY
A SCIENTIFIC FOR-PROFIT UNIVERSITY
2. LOCATION
Intended to be located on the
grounds of the Kings Park
Psychiatric Center on Long Island
NY.
The facility closed in 1996 and is 156 acres which sits majestically on the
currently state-own land. Nissequogue River (click on map for higher-
resolution)
(Kings Park Psychiatric Center, n.d.)
3. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
• The Kings Park Lunatic Asylum was established in
1885 on more than 800 acres.
• A self-sufficient farm community “The Society of St.
Johnland” was established, providing work for
thousands of staff members and nurses.
• The name was changed in 1895 to Kings Park State
Hospital
• In 1900, the hospital housed 2,697 patients and 454
staff members
(Kings Park Psychiatric Center , n.d.)
4. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
• In the 50s, pharmaceutical company Smith, Kline, &
French began marketing Thorazine directly through
the state governments to the hospitals.
• People who used to need constant supervision in a hospital
setting were now able to lead more normal lives.
• Eventually, with very few patients left living in the
buildings, Kings Park began closing down in the
1970s, until no one was left in 1996.
• Since 1996, several proposals have been made as
to what to do with the land (Kantor, 1999).
• No Decision has yet been made
(Kings Park Psychiatric Center , n.d.)
5. MISSION
• St. Johnland University is committed to science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)
education and innovation by enabling a first-class
experience for students through engagement with
the university‟s entrepreneurial spirit and support of
creativity, and by earning income primarily from
nongovernment sources. (adapted from Galbraith, 2010).
“There is no metric in higher education comparable to money in
business, and no goal comparable to „profits‟”
(Birnbaum, 2004, p. 11)
6. EARNING INCOME FROM
NONGOVERNMENT SOURCES
• St. Johnland is a break from traditional universities.
• The University is mapping a new model for
sustaining, and even expanding, offerings in
subjects like Optics and Photonics and applied
Mathematics (Parry, 2010).
• The University generates its operating income from
the products of faculty scholarship.
• While the faculty retains credit for the invention of a
collegial product, the university retains ownership of the
product.
7. WHY FOR-PROFIT?
• A university focused on Scholarship and Academic
Freedom
• Faculty are free to pursue any scientific arena to
uncover solutions to scientific problems (Donoghue,
2009).
• These “solutions” translate into patents, inventions,
and Intellectual property for the university.
• Patents, inventions, and Intellectual property turn
into revenue for the university
• The university will generate its operating costs based
upon the revenue generated by scholarship of its
faculty and students.
8. ORGANIZATIONAL CHART
• The university‟s organizational chart illustrates authority,
hierarchy, delegation, and decentralization.
• The chart provides a picture of the reporting structure
(who reports to whom) and the various activities that are
carried out by different departments and individuals
(Bateman & Snell, 2009)
• St. Johnland University is a dualistic bureaucratic system
(Bateman & Snell, 2009).
• Instead of having a single line of authority, the president
draws from each functional area; Institutional and
Academic
• The organizational chart the dualistic structure originates
at the highest level and continues throughout the
university.
9. Board of Trustees
Office of Ombuds
University President Services
Institutional Vice- Provost Academic
President Vice -President
Office of Human
Office of Dispute
Resource University Library
Management
Management
Office of Office of Patents,
Instuctional Invention, & Alumni Affairs and
Materials and Intellectual Development
Technologies Property
Office of
Office of Research
Academic
and Development
Strategies
Office of
Office of Student Vice-President of
Marketing and
Affairs Academic Affairs
Public Relations
Office of Lobbying Dean of
Accounting ansd Dean of Optics
and Government Biomedical
Purchasing and Photonics
Relations Sciences
Admissions and Director of Applied
Financial Aid Mathematics
Dean of
Dean of Information
Engineering Systems and
Technology
10. PROGRAMS AND CURRICULUM
• Four Colleges
• College of Optics and Photonics (CREOL, 2010).
• Traditionally College of Physics
• Also the home of Applied Mathematics
• College of Biomedical Sciences
• College of Engineering
• College of Information Systems and Technology
• Traditionally College of Computer Science
The Primary responsibility for the curriculum is the authority
of the faculty (Birnbaum, 1988).
11. COLLEGE OF OPTICS AND PHOTONICS
• Optics and photonics is the science and
technology of light: lasers, LEDs, LCDs, optical fibers,
and imaging systems for applications in industry and
medicine (CREOL, 2010).
• Programs in Lasers, Fiber Optics, Nonlinear&
Quantum Optics, and Semiconductor& Integrated
Optics (CREOL, 2010).
• Course examples: Introduction to Photonics, Optical
Waves and Materials, Optical Fiber Communication
Systems (CREOL, 2010).
• Potential Patents in Telecom, Computing, Security,
Industrial, Medical, Biology (CREOL, 2010).
12. APPLIED MATHEMATICS
• Applied Mathematics is intended to provide a
broad base in applied and industrial mathematics
(Department of Mathematics , 2010).
• Program in Industrial Mathematics, Mathematical
Science (Department of Mathematics , 2010).
• Course examples: Topics in Advanced Calculus,
Measure and Probability, Complex Analysis,
Optimization Theory(Department of Mathematics , 2010).
• Potential Patents in high-technology industries,
Nanoscience (Department of Mathematics , 2010).
13. COLLEGE OF BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES
• Excellence in genetics or stem cell research, and neuroscience,
cancer biology, and immunology, or be part of the discovery
science that advances knowledge and fuels the pipeline for
breakthrough treatments (Office of Graduate Studies, 2011)
• Program Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Cancer Biology, Human
Genetics & Genomics, Molecular & Cellular Pharmacology,
Neuroscience (Office of Graduate Studies, 2011)
• Course examples: Bacterial Pathogenesis, Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology, Cancer Biology, Cardiovascular Biology (Office of
Graduate Studies, 2011)
• Potential Patents in Plant Population Dynamics, Human Genetics,
Immunology, Molecular Biophysics, Molecular Medicine,
Neuroscience, Stem Cell/Regenerative Medicine, Structural Biology,
Virology (Office of Graduate Studies, 2011)
14. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
• Premier resource in Industrial Engineering
• (Department of Engineering, 2010).
• Program in Space Systems Design and Engineering,
and Thermofluid Aerodynamic Systems Design and
Engineering (Department of Engineering, 2010).
• Course examples: Civil, Environmental, &
Construction Engineering, Electrical Engineering &
Computer Science (Department of Engineering, 2010).
• Potential Patents in Advanced Transportation
Systems, Stormwater Management, Power
Electronics, Advanced Turbines (Department of Engineering,
2010).
15. INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND
TECHNOLOGY
• Premier resource in Information Systems and Technology
(College of Information Systems 2010).
• Program in Multimedia and Visual Communication,
Software Engineering, Networking and
Telecommunications, Business Systems, Database
Administration, Information Systems Security, Web
Development (College of Information Systems 2010).
• Course examples: Application Implementation,
Programming, Engineering & Computer Science (College of
Information Systems 2010).
• Potential Patents in programming, database design,
network architecture and administration, Web
technologies and application development,
implementation and maintenance (College of
Information Systems 2010).
16. FACULTY
• Faculty will exercise primary control over the
curriculum (Birnbaum, 1988).
• Faculty will be hired on the consensus of a hiring
committee based on the boards authorization to
hire additional faculty (College Board of Trustees, 2011)
• Research is based primarily on the activities of
individual faculty members
• The source of research funding will be the responsibility of
the university
17. FACILITIES
• St. Johnland plans to propose to the state
government that it should restore the level of state
support for higher education to its highest levels,
using a combination of direct appropriations of
land and facilities, and tax credits in order to
establish the university (Hardi, 2000).
• St Johnland also proposes to make land and
property improvements to grounds that have been
contaminated from prior use as a State Hospital
facility (Hardesty, 2006).
• The University will benefit the community's way of life
and the economic well being (Hardesty, 2006).
18. STUDENT SERVICES
• The typical student at St. Johnland is brilliant,
creative, and entrepreneurial. They are the next
generational innovators and inventors.
• Student Affairs will focus on a close-supervision
approach; that is, a parental or guidance counselor
approach with students, while also focusing on a
customer service and student development (Hirt,
2007).
• Student affairs will additionally focus on student
engagement and retention (Hirt, 2007).
• St. Johnland believes an engaged student is a
productive student.
19. FINANCE
• Funds to cover operating expenses will come from
a variety of sources:
• Student tuition
• Financial Aid
• Patent revenue
• Faculty engagements
• Product Invention
20. REFERENCES
Bateman, T.S. & Snell, S.A. (2009). Management: Leading and Collaborating in the
Competitive World (8th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill
Birnbaum, R. (1988) How colleges work: The cybernetics of academic
organization and leadership. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Cantor, M. (1999, April 30). Smart growth a wise move for land use. Long Island
Business News. 46(18). Retrieved from EBSCOHost
College Board of Trustees and University - Structure and Composition,
Governance, Authority, Responsibilities, Board Committees (2011) Education
State University. Retrieved from
http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/1793/Board-Trustees-College-
University.html
College of Engineering (2010) University of Central Florida. Retrieved from
http://www.cecs.ucf.edu/research/
College of Information Systems and Technology (2010) University of Phoenix.
Retrieved from http://www.phoenix.edu/colleges_divisions/technology.html
CREOL - The College of Optics & Photonics at the University of Central Florida
(2010) University of Central Florida. Retrieved from http://www.creol.ucf.edu/
21. REFERENCES
Department of Mathematics Admission (2010) University of Central Florida. Retrieved
from http://www.math.ucf.edu/admit.shtml
Donoghue, F. (2009, Fall). Why academic freedom doesn‟t matter. South Atlantic
Quarterly. 108(8). Retrieved from EBSCOHost
Galbraith, G. (2010, December 16). Creating the Entrepreneurial University. The
Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved from http://chronicle.com/article/Creating-
the-Entrepreneurial/125730/
Hardesty, D.W. (2006). Interview with president of Kings Park Neighbors' Association.
Long Island Business News. Retrieved from EBSCOHost
Hardi, J. (2000, March 31). Land-Grant Presidents Call for New 'Covenant' With State
and U.S. Governments. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved from
http://chronicle.com/article/Land-Grant-Presidents-Call-for/21412/
Hirt, J.B. (2007). The student affairs profession in the academic marketplace. NASPA
Journal. 44(2). Retrieved from EBSCOHost
Kings Park Psychiatric Center - A Documentation (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://s.albalux.com/webpage/
Office of Graduate Studies (2011) University of Miami. Retrieved from
http://biomed.miami.edu/
Parry, M. (2010, February). Philosophy, for Profit. The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Retrieved from http://chronicle.com/article/Philosophy-for-Profit/64395/
Pitsiokos, P. (2004, June 18). SBU should shift focus to Kings Park. Long Island Business
News. 51(26). Retrieved from EBSCOHost
Hinweis der Redaktion
Intended to be located on the grounds of the Kings Park Psychiatric Center on Long Island NY.The facility closed in 1996 and is currently state-own land.156 acres which sits majestically on the Nissequogue River (click on map for higher-resolution)
St. Johnland University is committed to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and innovation by enabling a first-class experience for students through engagement with the university’s entrepreneurial spirit and support of creativity, and by earning income from nongovernment sources. (adapted from Galbraith, 2010).“There is no metric in higher education comparable to money in business, and no goal comparable to ‘profits’”(Birnbaum, 2004, p. 11)