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State Board
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Agriculture
AY
9/10
1979
___________ Meeting
Fort Lewis College
University of Southern
Colorado
Colorado State University
Report of the Secretary
to the
State Board of Agriculture
and
General Board Business
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REPORT OF THE SECRETARY COMMITTEE REPORTSGENERAL BUSINESS TO THE
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
MAY 9-10, 1979 FORT COLLINS, COLORADO
LIOOM!ES
COLORADO ST"-TE UN IVERSITY
I N D E X
PAGE Election of Officers of the State Board of Agriculture 1-1 Approval of the Minutes of the March 16, 1979 Meeting 2-1
Dates and Locations for Future Meetings 3-1
Amendments to the Rules and Procedures of the State 4-1 Board of Agriculture
Horticulture Greenhouse Renovation Project CSU 5-1
Ratification of Executive Committee Action - Public 6-1
Office Candidates
Correction to December 13-14, 1979 minutes of SBA System, 7-1 PVCC-Dr . Gerald Caduff
Report of Land Corrnnissioners on Agricultural College Lands 8-1
Reports of the Committees of the Board 9-1
Articles of Interest 10-1
Sale of Residence 11-1
,.
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9-10-79 1-1
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Election of Officers of the State Board of Agriculture ·
RECOMMENDED ACT ION:
Election of the President Election of the Vice President
Appointment of the Third Member to the Executive Committee
Election of the Secretary Election of the Treasurer
Election of the SBA Representative to the CCHE Advisory Committee Election of an Alternate to the CCHE Advisory Committee
Expanation:
In accordance with the Rules aP ~ Procedures of the State Board of
Secretary's Report
Connnittees and General Business 2-1 SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Approval of the minutes of the March 16, 1979 meeting of the Board, as reported by the Secretary.
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
MOVED, the Board approve the minutes of the Secretary, the Committees and General Business of the Board, SBA Systems, Fort Lewis College, Colorado State University and the University of Southern Colorado in the form in which they were mailed to the Board.
EXPLANATION:
I
I
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Rusiness 3-1 SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Dates and locations for future meetings RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Information only
EXPLANATION:
The following meetings have been set for the State Board of Agriculture:
June 21 Pueblo USC, System, FLC Business July 18-19-20 Keystone Seminar for All Institutions August 16 Fort Collins
September 20 Durango October 18 Denver November 15 Pueblo
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79 4-1
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Amendments to the Rules and Procedures of the State Board of Agriculture.
RECO~NENDED ACTION:
MOVED, that the Board approve the following amendments to the Rules and Regulations of the State Board of Agriculture:
1) Amend items 2 and 3 of Section 2, designation of Standing Committees, Article V, Committees of the Board by:
Deleting Item 2 "Committee for Finance, Campus Planning, Buildings and Grounds
Deleting Item 3 "Committee on Faculty and Staff Affairs" Adding Item 2 "committee on csu"
Adding Item 3 "committee on use" Adding Item 4 "committee on FLC11
2) Amend Items 2 and 3 of Section 4, Article V "Particular Standing Committees - membership; deleting and adding the aforementioned committees; and
4b Duties: by combining the powers and duties of the Finance and Faculty Staff Affairs into the duties of the newly designated Institutional Committees.
*
3) The Executive Committee membership shall be divided among the three institutional committeesSecretary's Report
Committees and General Business SBA MEETING 5/9--10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
5-1
Horticulture Greenhouse Renovation Project RECmNENDED ACTION:
MOVED, that the Board ratify the Executive Committee's action approving the award of a construction contract to Reid Burton Construction Company in the amount of $412,233 for the Horticulture Greenhouse Renovation Project at Colorado State University.
EXPLANATION:
With the cancellation of the April meeting of the board, the approval of the bid had to be accepted prior to April 26, 1979.
Secretary's Report
Connnittees and General .Report SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
6-1
Ratification of Executive Committee Action
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
MOVED, the Board ratify the action granting permission for the following individuals to seek public office:
Ron Millar, Extension Farm Agent to run for School Board in Yuma, Colorado
Robert J. LaRocque, Government Supply Officer in the Office of the Vice President for Research CSU to run for City Council of Fort Collins
EXPLANATION:
Board policy requires employees of its institutions to seek approval from the board before running for public office.
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79 7-1
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Correction to December 13-14, 1978 minutes of SBA System, page 10, Vol. 203.
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
MOVED, that the minutes of the Board's December 13-14, 1978 meeting concerning ·the "Appointment of Acting President of Pueblo Vocational Community College
-Approved" , be amended as follows:
Upon motion by Mr. Norris, seconded by Mr. Breeze, the Board appointed Dr. Gerald Caduff to the position of Acting President of P.V.C.C. for the period January 1, 1979 through June 30, !9~9-89 (1979), with a
!9~9-89 (1978-79) salary at the current level of $33,024. The Acting
President will report to the SBA System. It is further understood that the appointment of a permanent president will be the responsibility of the board designated to govern P.V.C.C. after June 30, 1980.
EXPLANATION:
See attached memorandum dated December 4, 1979.
It is anticipated that Dr . Caduff's salary will be set at the May meeting of the board.
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA G 5/9-10/79 7-l(a)
TO:
FROM:
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE SYSTEM
Fort Col lins. Co lorado 80523
Colorado State University, Fort Collins University of Southern Colorado, Pueblo Office of the President
(303) 491 -6212
December 4, 1978
M E M 0 R A N D U M
A. R. Chamberlain
E.T.
Petrone
J. R. Schoemer
SUBJECT: Error in Dec
~Board item: SBAS 1-1
Board item SBAS 1-1 erroneously indicates a
111979-80 salary at the
current level of $33,024.
11The item should read with a 1978-79 salary
at the current level of $33,024.
It is anticipated that Dr. ·caduff's 1979-80 salary will be set
by
the SBA sometime this spring.
cc: Gerald Caduff
Secretary's Report
Connnittees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79 8-1
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Report of the State Board of Land Commissioners on Agricultural College Lands for FY 1977-78 pursuant to CRS 1973 36-1-143.
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
None - for information only - receive and place on file.
EXPLANATION:
I
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
9-1
Reports of the Committees of the Board
RECOMMENDED ACTION: None, information only
EXPLANATION:
Faculty Reports Student Reports
Report of the Subcommittee on Affirmative Action Report of the USC Liaison Committee
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business 10-1 SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Articles of Interest RECOMMENDED ACTION:
None - informational items only EXPLANATION:
Secretary's Report
Connnittees and General B11siness
SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79 10-1(~)
We trained hard . . . but every time we were beginning to form up into t eams , we would be reorganized . I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing . and a wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress while producing inefficiency and demoralization.
Secretary's Report
r.nJTlillittees
&
General BusinessSBA MEETING . S/'9-10/79 10-l(b)
'~'ackers
Say
Regents GoOfed
•' By ART BRANSCOMBE
and SHARON SHERMAN
De6v~ Poli Staff Writers
University · of Coloraao· .regents, by "going public" with their "alternative" to ' leglslatJve Joint Bud&e* Committee 9ro-t poeals for higher education budget and ' enrollment cuts, may have blown any chances for a comi>romlae, say the
chair-men of the Color.ado Houae and Senate education c:ornmlttllel.
Sen. Hugh Fo.Ier, R·Llttleton, and
Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Arvada, who
con-sider themselves the best friends hither education has in the Legitlaiurt,
-were
livid Friday over the regents' attempt th. dey before to seize the initiative in tlleir struggle with the budget committee. · ·_And Sen. Bill Hughes, R-Colorado
Springs, Budget Committee chairman,
said he expects the committee to go
for-ward with budget-cutting propoHl1,
de-spite the regents' action.
THE BOARD OF REGENTS, meeUnc In _Denver Thurtday, asked fonnally tbat hlaher education receive Its full 7 percent
share of funding Increases allowable under state law and that colleit and uni-versity governing boards "be given
max-imum budget flexibility to admlniater all funds under their control.'' .Fowler and Tancredo aald they have been workiDI with Gov . . Dick Lamm ..
.m
- aome Budaet Conunlttee membert on
aome of the same compromiH ideaa the
regents 1uue1ted. . .. . .If thole ideal
aet labtled ..
"the · re1enta' plan," 11ven the low credlbtlitythe
retenta
have in tbe Leitllature, tbeycould be doomed, Tancredo and Fowler
Yid. .
"You know how tbt caucus 11,"
Tancredo added. "'Ibey ·(Republicans, who control both houses of the Lelf1la· ture) like to believe they're the ones run-ning things.
"If they think they're being backed Into
a comer by the re1ent1, they'll lint· ·up
behind the JBC," he ltlid.- • - .. ·' "1
Backers
Hit Regents 'Public' Move
Continued from page 2. ommended cuttlng enrollment ceilings -to the comfuittee last fall proposing a and faculty positions - at CU-Boulder, · llJ>E!nding increase of about 16 percent, Colorado State UnivP~:;~ty and the
Univer-, "which indicated to · me they weren't all sity of Northern C.otorado, in an attempt ; that serious about inana · g their budg- to divert ·students· to other state colleges.
e " , Further faculty cuts would result from . The General Assembly, in an approprl- use of a new "productivity'' formula : atlon amendment passed last year, man- designed to force professors to spend :: dated that general fund spending this ore time with students.
I year can increase only up to 7 percent And the c:ommJttee proposes to transfer
r
overall. . . 9 "duplicative" undergraduate programsf "If they had come _in with. this 7 per- t QU-Denver to Metropolitan State
~
cent (raise) level to atart with," Hughes lfege.·mdde«I, "the committee would have ~ The·'fegents Thursday opposed all these
"IU! Interested. moves.
'"lbfnp like that Qproposed 16 percent Speaking of the cuts Jn enrollment
raise) lowered our. Confidence level" in ceilings at CU-Boulder and CSU, Hughes _:_;th~em~,~h~eS:sai~d.rt:;;;-;;;~;;;;;;:::;::---;---- tenned that "an Issue of access" to
ClOMMITI'EE ·has rec- higher education.
"What are we ·supposed to uy IA> our caucuses now? That we've thouiht thi•
ov1r and we aaree with the re1ents?".
Fowler asked. . .
The two said Regent Peter Dietze, who ur1ed the regents to take the initiative in
their dispute with the lawmaker1, Is "~n·
titled to a little naivete," being a new re1ent: But Fowler •Id that, as a law· yer, Dietze ought to have known you
don't talk publicly aboUt delicate 11110Ua·
tion1 until agreemenf1 afe firm.
JIVGHES, INTER11E'VED 1eplrately
frOln -Fowler and· ¥ecredo, uld 1t 11
much too ·late tor tht
cu
regents to bepuWng forward their alternative to tht Budpt Committee propoea111. ·
"l think we've decided to go ahead with our recommendat10111, . although we fully .
e~t the caucua to modify some of
them," Hughes aaerted. "I feel our
reC-ommendatlona were inade oo a IOWld
diti
bal!le." . .And Sen. Ruth Stockton, R-LaK.ewoOd, anOther memb« of ·the budget comm1t-1ee, Indicated she didn't expect ·the GOP
caucuses to modify tile recommendatlona
very much. '
"We've got plenty of support," she
aald. "We're 1ettln1 letters 1aylng we're rJgbt."
Secretary's Report
Committees
&
General Business SBA MEETING 5/9-10/79MATTERS FOR ACTION: Sale of Residence
RECOMMENDED ACTION: None.
EXPLA...~TION:
Per the request of Tom Farley
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9/79
MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Pending Litigation
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
No action required - report only.
EXPLANATION:
See attached -pages for report.
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9/79 12-l(a)
REPORT TO THE STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
ON PENDING LITIGATION
A. Litigation Pending in Federal Court.
1. Mary Alice Hill v. Colorado State University, et al.
I will discuss this case with the Board at the meeting.
2. Keith R. Grebe v. the State Board of Agriculture, et al.
A settlement conference has been scheduled by the Court on April 30,
1979.
B. Litigation Pending in State Court.
1. The Painter Estate
No change.
2. Colette v. the State Board of Agriculture, et al.
This case has been continued indefinitely. I will discuss the
case with the Board at the meeting.
3. Alvin Miller v. the State Board of Agriculture
No change.
4. Espey v. the State Board of Agriculture
The plaintiff has voluntarily dismissed this case and dropped his
allegations against the State Board.
C. Cases in which Counsel for the State's Insurer Is Representing the
University.
1. Tompkins v. the State Board of Agriculture
No change.
2. James A. Nelson v. the State Board of Agriculture
No change.
3. Tracey Mumey and Vernon Porter v. Colorado State University
No change.
Secretary's Report
Committees and General Business
SBA MEETING 5/9/79 12-l(b)
C. Cases in which Counsel for the State's Insurer Is Representing the
University (cont'd.).
4. Beth Margaret Kubly v. the State Board of Agriculture
Plaintiff claims $100,000 in damages for a fall which she allegedly
sustained on an icy stairway outside the University health center.
Report of Fort Lewis College
to the
State Board of Agriculture
/
FORT LEWIS COLLEGE REPORT OF PRESIDENT BERNDT
TO THE
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE April 10-11, 1979
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page SECTION I - PERSONNEL ITEMS
Resiqnations - Housing Personnel
Angstadt, Peter • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • . • • • • • • . • • . 1-1
Connors, Mary L. ••. .•••••.••••.• .• . .•• .•••. 1-1
Walthers, Bruce N. ••••••••••• ..••••••• ••••• 1-1
Modification of Contracts
Proqram - National Youth Sports
Gier sch, Marvin L. • . • • • • • • • • . • • . • • . • • • • 1-2
Program - Campus Recreation - Intramurals
Roach, Barbara • •.••.••.• .• •.•••.••••••• 1-2
Proqram - Athletics/Wrestling
Steinle, Harlan • • • • • • . • . • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • 1-2
Program - Student Union Board - Concert
Zeisler, Dennis •••••••••••••.• . ••••• • • . 1-2
SECTION II - GSNSRAL ITEMS
Candidates for Degrees April 1979 •• • • • •..•••••••• 2-1
Spring Trimester 1979 Staffing Pattern for
the Division of Cultural Studies, Title III ••. 2-6
Authorization to Make Supplemental Request
to Joint Budget Committee ••••..•..•••••••••••• 2-7
SECTION III - VERBAL REPORTS TO THE BOARD SECTION IV - REPORT ITEMS
Joint Budget Committee Request for a Survey
of Faculty Productivity . • • • • • • • • • . • . • • • • • • . • • • 4-1
Continued Undergratuate Accreditation of the School of Business Administration, Fort Lewis College, by the American Assembiy of Collegiate Schools of
Business ...
O., •(! •••••".,,...
4-2Enrollment Summary for Winter 1979 •.•• • •••••••••• 4-3
A Report on the San Miguel Allende
Program 1975-1979 • • • • • • • • . • • • . • • • • • . • • • • • • • . • • 4-4
Colorado Commission on Higher Education
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting April 10-11, 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section I - Personnel Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Resignations - Housing Personnel RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Page 1-1
MOVED, that the following recommended action be and is hereby approved: Approval of resignations as outlined below.
EXPLANATION: 1. Angstadt, Peter 2. Connors, Mary L. 3. Walthers, Bruce N. Position Coordinator, Centennial Apartments Coordinator, East Complex Coordinator, West Complex Effective Date March 31, 1979 April 21 , 1979 April 21 , 1979
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting April 10-11, 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section I - Personnel Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Modification of Contracts - Faculty and Professional Staff RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Page 1-2
MOVED, that the following recommended action be and is hereby approved: Approval of modifications of contracts as outlined below.
EXPLANATION:
Rank/Position Program - National Youth Sports Program
1 • Giersch, Marvin L. Assoc. Professor of
add $900.00
Physical Education Reason for Modification: Activity Director and
program 1-1-79 through 5-31-79. Liaison Officer of this special
Program - Campus Recreation - Intramurals
2. Roach, Barbara Asst. Director, Outdoor
Pursuits Program add $248.90
Reason for Modification: Teaching a modern dance class. Program - Athletics/Wrestling
3. Steinle, Harlan Supervisor of Admissions add $175.00
Reason for Modification: Referee for wrestling matches. Program - Student Union Board - Concert
4. Zeisler, Dennis Asst. Professor
of Music add $30.00
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting - April 10-11. 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section II - General Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Candidates for Degrees in April, 1979 RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Page 2-1
MOVED, that the following recommended action be and is hereby approved: Authorization to confer the appropriate degree upon each of the
following candidates, providing requirements for the degree are completed prior to Commencement on April 21, 1979.
EXPLANATION:
The following students will have completed the requirements for graduation at the end of the current trimester. They have been approved by the faculty as candidates for degrees upon the c~ndition that each • ompletes satisfactorily
the courses now in progress and has the required hours and required gradepoint average by the end of the current term.
Alexander, Sandra Joyce Amundson, Kathleen Marie Anderson, Dana
Anderson, Rona Lee Arnold, Douglas Joel Bailey, Phyllis Irene Baysdorfer, Becky Jo Beaty, Richard Robbins Beck, Peter Aymar Belger, Amy Louise Bell, Jeffrey W. Bell, Michael Louis Bennalley, Betty A. Bernard, Gerrie Byford Bida, Carolyn
Blais, Ellen Louise Blake, Marsha Suzanne Balle, Beverly Sue Brabant, Paul David Bradley, John Patrick Branch, Debra Merie Brittain, Steven Wayne Brown, Deidra B.
Brown, Deidra B.
Bumguardner, Kim Arlene Burdin, Linda Louise Burke, Lynda Sue
Campbell, Angus MacKenzie Carapella, Jeffrey J. Degree B .A . B.S. B.A. B. S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. A.A. B.A. A.A. B.S. B. A. B.S. B.S. English Biological Science Sociology Biological Science Business Administration Elementary Education Elementary Education Anthropology
History (American Concentration) Biological Science
(Sociology & Human Services (Humanities Physical Education Physical Education Elementary Education Biological Science Business Administration Spanish Elementary Education Biological Science Political Science Psychology Psychology Secretarial Science Business Administration Secretarial Science Biological Science Spanish Geology Geology
Card, Kathleen Dorothy Carine, Jeffrey Peter Carpino, John Patrick Chambers, Brian Scott Chapman, Peter Lee Chee, Marilouise T. Chittum, Diane Clarine Clarke, Jolie Ann Class, James Alan
Collard, Douglas Edward Collard, Sondra Anne Cordalis, Charles J. Corliss, John Donald Cox, Kyle
w.
Crawford, Edwin Charles Crook, Judy Lee
Crum, Kathy
Davidson, Keith Stewart Day, Stephen Aldrich Dean, Russell,Joseph Decastro, James Abdon Denbo, May Cecelia Dewell, Robin Ann Dexter, Deborah
c.
Dias, Gayle A.Dickenson, Gerald Eugene DiPeitro, Dennis James Doge, Roselyn
Downs, Star Cymantha Dufva, Russell D. Duran, Yolanda T. Egger, Joan Marie Erickson, Andrew Eric Erickson, Gary Allan
~ubanks, Wayne
·c.
Federspiel, Nicholas B. Felice, James Michael Fleming, John
Fleischer, Susan Janie Foster, Jody Lynn
Fountain, David Freeman Franklin, Russell J. Frisby, LancQ. William Gadd, Powys
Gallavan, Gay L. Gantt, Rodney
s.
Giff, Gregory H. Gilchrist, Thomas E. Gillentine, Kay Lynn Glover, Grant Norman Goetzmann, Michael E. Golden, Mary Linda Grasso, Kathleen Illia Greenspan, Kim Stephen Grim, Scott B. Degree B.S. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. A.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B .A. B.A. A.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. A.A. B. S. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. Page 2-2 Biological Science Business Administration Music (Instrumental) Biological Science Business Administration Secretarial Science Biological Science Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration English Geology Business Administration Business AdministrationStud. Const. Mass Media/English SW Studies Spanish Emphasis Business Administration Geology History (European) Elementary Education Accounting Accounting Anthropology Secretarial Science Mathematics Psychology Business Administration English Geology Anthropology Physical Education Secretarial Science Biological Science Biological Science Psychology Business Administration Physical Education Elementary Education Biological Science Elementary Education Business Administration Geology Biological Science Anthropology Elementary Education Humanities Political Science Chemistry
Stud. Const. Graphic Arts Business Administration
Stud. Const. Legal Environment English
Biological Science Humanities
Grimm, Lori Gail Groody, Diane
Guthrie, Kathleen M. Hagedorn, Gene Harry Hall, Thomas Christopher Hamilton, Mark Wayne Haning, Gene Stephen Hanyu, Aiko
Harris, Terry G.
Havens, William Michael Hembree, David Reed Hensler, Kay Marie Herman, Gail M.
Hermann, Paul Matthew Hett, Marion E.
Hickey, Lawrence L. Hill, Steven James
Hillenburg, David Robert Hittenrauch, Kathryn Mary Holguin Salcedo, Marcelo Hollingsworth, Janet Holmes, Larry Dean Holt, Timothy N.
Honeycutt, Laura Dee Horan, Mary Eileen Hughes, Michael Dale Hutchinson, Andrew K. Hutton, Richard
c.
Isom, Thomasw.
Janus, Debra Lee Jenkins, Lyn Louise Joe, Jeffrey James Johnson, Erin Janine Jones, Kathleen Sue Kammin, William Robert Karl, James Donald Kemple, Stephenc.
Kengott, Pamela King, Evelyn King, Ronald L.Klingener, Gerard Van Kollar, Rudi A.
Kuroki, Gary William Kurtz,
c.
Scott LaPrade, Eric Leisz, Debra Anne Lewis, Pamela I. Lloyd, Mary Elizabeth Luekens, Debra Renee Lykins, Stephen Marshall Lyon, Andrew StephenDegree B.A. B.S. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B. S. B .A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B. S. B.A. B.A. B.A.
s.s.
B.A. B.A. B.A. A.A. A.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.S. B .A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A.a.A.
B.S. B.A. B.A. B. S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. Page 2-3 (Elementary Education {Art Geology Biological Science Business Administration Psychology Business Administration Biological Science Psychology Biological Science Elementary Education Geology Elementary Education Art Anthropology Chemistry Accounting Political Science Anthropology Biological Science Business Administration(History - American Concentration (Political Science Business Administration Agricultural Science Secretarial Science English Biological Science Art Biological Science Anthropology Elementary Education Biological Science Art Art Business Administration Chemistry Business Administration Biological Science English Elementary Education
History - American Concentration History - American Concentration Psychology
Biological Science Political Science
Stud. Const. General Agriculture Physical Science
Stud. Const. Writing, Editing & Reviewing Children & Young Adult Literature
Business Ecucation Physical Education Accounting
~
Lyon, Scott Bennett McCarthy, Dennis Timothy McClellan, Ginger Lee McDuffee, Robert J.
McEwen, Rise Marie Rhodes McGinty, Phoebe
McGraw, Terese Anne McKee, Vern M.
McKeever, Robert Charles McKenna, Marc Edward McMordie, Cynthia
MacKenzie, Timothy Koch Martin, Susan Elizabeth Martinez, Brenda Janet Martinez, Gary
Martinez, Mary Joe
Matney , Patrick Franklin Medlock, John III
Merry, Lawrence James Metcalf, Rebeca
Mohney, Lawrence J. Morgan, Frank
Mounts, Cynthia Kay Mulkey, Marsha D. Mustoe , Kathryn Jo Nagle, Edward Finck II Nelson, David P.
Nelson, Laura Elizabeth Nichols, Gary E.
Nordin, William Carl Osborne, David McGinnis Oxtoby, Michael Barthalf Pacheco, Margaret Lorrie Palmer, R. Nicholas Parcell, Robert L. Parkinson, Jean E. Peart, Barbara Jean Pekeris, Sarah Helen Perlmutter, Joe K. Peterson, Gerald L. Peterson, Kathryn
v.
Pierce, LeePolak, Paul Stephen Pond, Mary Estelle Prouty, Kent Thomas Rawson, Laurel Jane Reinhart, Angela Kae Richardson, Vickie Lynn Ripp, Michael L.
Roastingear, Julius, Jr. Rogers, Carol Jeanette Romero, Mark A. Degree B.A. B.A. A.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B. S. A.A. B.A. B.A. A.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B .A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B. S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B,A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. 6.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B,A. B.A. B. S. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. A.A. B.A. Page 2-4 Major Business Administration Music - Instrumental Secretarial Science Business Administration Elementary Education English Art Accounting Anthropology Biological Science Secretarial Science Humanities English Martinez, Secretarial Science Accounting Physical Ecucation (Political Science (English Physical Education Physical Education Accounting (Anthropology
(History - European Concentration Psychology Art Business Administration Accounting Political Science Business Administration Accounting Biological Science Music - Instrumental Business Administration Hamanities Art Political Science Biological Science Elementary Education (Art (English
(Stud. Const. Southwest Studies (Anthropology English Business Administration Accounting Business Administration Business Administration Psychology
Elementary Education & Humanities Biological Science
Business Administration English
Geology & Chemistry English
Secretarial Science Spanish
Name Roy, Gayleen Lisa
Rudisaile, John Charles Rudisaile, Kim Stacey Ruetschle, Suzanne Marie Rush, Michael R.
Sailor, Roy Thomas Salvi, David
Sam, Roberta
Sanchez, Louella M. Sanders, David
Sandlin, Richard Neal Sandoval, Rosie A. Sargeant, Sharon Jean Schalk, Susan Ann Schild, Katherine B. Schlessman, Gary Lee Schmidt, Beatrix R. Schultz, William Schwindt, Albert P. Sharp, Bruce G. Sites, Carolyn A. Smith, Louis Lee, Jr. Smith, Scott Edwin Sommer, Daniel R. Spaulding, Kathleen Spirek, Deborah Lee Stanton, Mark Edward Stevens, Barbara Jean Strauch, Deborah Elaine Sultemeier, Beth Lynn Sundust, Laurie A. Swaney, Kevin Bradford Taylor, Elixabeth M. Thies, Cynthia Lynn Thomas, Paula Frances Timmons, John
Ukestine, Danny
Vander, Heiden, Kent
c.
Vinyard, Guy Frank Walton, John Guy Webb, Retta Louise Weberg, Lynn H. Welgos, Jill Allyson Whitley, L. Val Whitney, Gary Alan Williams, Deborah Willman, Robert B. Wonderly, David Mark Worley, Ross Allan Wright, Joseph Paul Yoshihiro, Ayumi
Young, Andrew N.
*Blakley, Kelly Ann
tSchiola, S~eye~r~:~
* Out of Alpha order
Degree B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. A.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. :A .A• B.S. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B.
s.
B.A. B.A. B. A. B.A. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.A. B. S . B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. B.A. Humanities Chemistry Art Spanish Page 2-5History - American Concentration Business Administration
English
Secretarial Science
Elem. Educ. Bilingual/Bicultural Business Administration
Stud. Const. Southwest Humanities
Sociology & Human Services
Accounting Mathematics
Business Administration Business Administration
History- European Concentration Accounting Political Science Business Administration Chemistry Accounting Political Science Geology Elementary Education Physical Education Geology Elementary Education Business Administration ' Phy sical Education Elementary Education Accounting
Accounting Mathematics
Elementary Education
Stud. Const. Pre-Med Biology &
Chemistry Humanities
Mathematics & Political Science
Geology English
Elementary Education Accounting
Music - Instrumental
Anthropology & Spanish
Biological Science Humanities
Business Administration
Stud. Const.Engr. & Physics
Humanities Elementary Education Humanities Political Science Business Administration Elementary Education
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting April 10-11, 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section II - General Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Page 2- 6
Spring Trimester 1979 Staffing Pattern for the Division of Cultural Studies, Title III
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
MOVED, that the following recommended action be and is hereby approved: Approval of the Title III staffing pattern for the 1979 Spring Trimester as outlined below.
EXPLANATION:
DIVISION OF CULTURAL STUDIES
First Five Weeks $ Allen, Paula G. 835 Capp, Clifford .B. 965 Cargile, Ellen Y. Simmons, Linda L. 200
TOTAL DIVISION OF CULTURAL
STUDIES $2,000 Second Five Weeks $ 835 890 $1,725 Third Five Weeks $ 965 890 $1,855 Total $ 1,670 1,930 1, 780 200 $5,580
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting April 10-11, 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section II - General Items MATTERS FOR ACTION
Page 2-7
Authorization to Make Supplemental Request to Joint Budget Committee RECOMMENDED ACTION:
MOVED, that the following recommended action be and is hereby approved: Authorization to submit a supplemental budget request in
the amount of $25,000-$35,000 to the Executive Budget Office and the Joint Budget Committee.
EXPLANATION:
The winter of 1978-79 was unusually severe in terms of the high costs incurred for snow removal. Ordinarily, the Fort Lewis College snow removal budget will run from $20,000-$28,000. This year the cost will exceed $60, 000. These costs include overtime, equipment rental, and con-.:. .. stant attention to maintenance and repairs on the heavily used equipment. It is recommended that the Board authorize the Fort Lewis College
administration to submit a supplemental request for funds based on the unusual snow removal costs. This supplemental request will run in the
vicinity of $25,000-$35,000. The timing of the introduction of this request to the Executive Budget Office and the Joint Budget Committee will be
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting - April 10-11, 1979
Fort Lewis College
Section III - Verbal Reports MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Verbal Reports to the Board RECOMMENDED ACTION:
No action required - reports only
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE Page 4-1 Regular Meeting April 10-11, 1979
Fort Lewis College
Section IV - Report Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Joint Budget Committee Request for a Survey of Faculty Productivity RECOMMENDED ACTION:
No action required - report only EXPLANATION:
The attached survey request from the Joint Budget Committee sent to all colleges and universities concerning "faculty productivity" and the Fort Lewis Co~lege response is presented for your review.
SENATORS REPRESENT.- Tl VES
BILL HUGHES. Ch a1m>.;n
RUTH S. STOCKTO N JAMES M. KAO LEC f:.;
341 ST AT <. C A PITOL BUIL DING DENV Eh', C O LORADO 8 02 03
3 03 /8 39-2061
ROBERT E.OENIER. 1/1~~ Chairman /
BETTY NEAl E JEAN MAFl!-'.S I
l
TO:
R O SE RT G. MOORE Sraff DirectorDecember
19, 1978
--~-
__ -:___
~l " ---~ ~
i
j IFROM:
PreslJftjs, :-i igf~ Educati on Ij~~Ju ti ons
John
1Br1 ss, Beth "RObinson, And!J1t1
~/all achJoint Budg 2t Committee Sta ff
The Committee
h~ sr equested t hat we survey t he number of hours yo ur
hi ghE.:s t paid (top
10 ;~ )and lm·1est paid (bottom
10%)
full- time faculty
spend with students. To assis t i n this r eview, we ha ve deve lo ped the
a tt 2c hed forms fo r us e by the
ind i vi dua 1 f acul ty and for your summa r
i-za ti
onof the dat a. Th e
survey
cffaculty s hould be done fo r on e rou tine
week during t he rwin'.h s of J anuai·y or February, 1·1hen schoo i i s in sess i on.
·The ·in dividual
fo r:::;and summar:, are due
ba c~~.IL'! l aterthan February
16 ,1979.
One copy
s /:(~ ·1l dbe
pro vi c::~ dto the
CCflE.
r or the purpo s es of this rc;Jr t , the
foll o~i ngdefinit io ns will be usrd:
fa culty Members
Tq p
10%
of Fa culty
Bo ttom
10%
of Fac ulty
Profe ss ional exemp t full-ti me
Sta t e emp loyees whose salari es
a r e fonded in v1hol e or in pa rt
in
Ue"Res ident Instruction
Pro fes s ional Sta·ff
11line items
an d who are not reported on
sc hedu le
00011
of
t he
budget
und01 academic adm inistra tio n
an d
21' enot depa rtmen t or div i si on
chairma n nor in the "Administr at ion "
lin e item (schedule 450).
Th os e full-time fac ulty, as de fi ned
above ,
who recei ve in the
1978-79
academic year , s al aries
in
t he
to p
10%
of all full-time facu l ty
- s a
1
a ri
es . -
- -
--Those full-ti me f a culty, as defined
above ) who recei ve in the
1978-79
acac!C:ii1ic yea r, s alaries in th e
bo t tom
10%
of al l
full-ti~ef acu lty
Page
T1·10. Cl assroom Student Con tact Ho urs
Indepe ndent Study Stude nt .·
Contact Hours
Studen t Contact Off i ce Hours
Res earch Student Con ta ct Hours
Speci al In structi ons
Hours spent in direct con ta ct
- with students duri ng regul ar ly
schedul ed cla sses or la bs .
Hours spen t in direct con t ac t
with studen t s enro ll ed in
independen t s tudy cours es,
thesi s , or o•hcr forms of credit
generati ng
i,.dependent study
(Student
T e,:i. :~ 1 ing, Practi ca,
Clinic s, et c , )
Hours spen t i n direc t con tac t
with
stu de n t~during regul arly
posted
of fi c ~hours.
Hours spent in di rect contac t
with
stud en t ~as part of a researc h
project fo r
;•rlich the facul ty
member is
b e : ~ gpaid from
non-state fund s.
Faculty on sabbatical leave durin g t he period co ve r··:d sho uld ha ve th eir
Survey to rm reported as ''o n sabbatical " .
Fa cu-1 ty on other fo rms of leave with pay shoul d
h,1'/<their Survey fo rm
report
U:0type of such -leave .
Facui ty on leave \'Ji t ho ut pay for t he period co ver '•.1 need not be i'ncl uded.
Fo r fo rma lly sc hedu l ed classrobr.i hours , use the
CCdefiniti ons of a
class hour . (approxi ma t ely 50 minutes), For all ot he r .1Jurs , use cl ock hours .
If yuu have any qu esti ons, please conta ct the
a p p r ~li r iateJBC Staf f
·y
port below the hours spent during each day of the
ek ending
in the following
t i\tities .
!
Monda~I
TuesdaJ'.
NuLlber of Students Contacted
: d~pe~1dent
Study Student
C;:rntact Hours
: 'ur.1b~,
of
S .: udent s Co~ tc c t~d. udent Contact Office Hours
Number of Students Contacted
search Student Contact Hours
1lumber of Students Contacted
... .
TOTAL
COtlTACT HOURS I '.
I::er
Wednesday
l
I
o• , c•be
by Jt:t ; cc:Faculty Member ____________ _
Academic Year Salary
---Academic Dept. or Div.
---Portion of FTE
Reported in Instruction
·~---Sponsore d
Resea rch
---Other Area (specify
by footnote below)
---~
Th
urs av
d F . d ·naJ'.
S
a ... u
~rday
To
ta lfor
Week
I
I
-
--~.l
---·
~-~I
---,, 'I'his form was s ent to faculty members selected f or participationi in the survey.
(• .
,,. I
,.
:it?..MARY . ·. ~ '
.
Student Contact
Hour Survev
Insti tution
Fort Lewis CollegePeriod Co vered-Heek Encti ng
February 9, 1979ttumber of
! n divi~ualsi n t he
too 10:
12·Their ave:· .ge salary
$
22,525The highest of this group
s_::::.
605)he lowest of this group
tlur.iber
of individuals i n the Bottom-10%
s
21_l 07012
Their avel·2ge salary
•
$_1}'
569·i.ie
highest ·af
t
ii
s
group
S
13 , 930. -die lowest of
t ii"i·3 group
S
13, 020·· Aver2ae
~~'."!'_·--:' c:fSt!..!d£:it ..
C on-t~ ctbv
Cat:::i:-·or v on He2di:a un t
Facu·l tv 825i s
. .. .
... · -
Classra o~~: .'i ~ t.:dentCont2 ....
~:Hours
~ Indep end ~n~
Study Studen t Contact Hdurs
_·.Student r. n~~ tact
Office .l-.!C!urs
- ··.Research '.)
;~ d dentContact Hours
· TOT. '. AVERAGE HOLJR°'i
~ -· -· Bottom 10% -· 29.0 ., . . ~ .·\,
Top
- ·.<.' J. .1.1•
16.3
1. 8 11. 8 29.9 . -. ··-. .•·
.Averc oe
lfcurs of
Student Contact
bvCateoorv of
FTE oriResident In struction Basis
.. Bottom 10%
Top
1 0-~:classroor;;
~;t udent Conta c t Hours
17. 3 . 16. -3._ · ·' .. - . 1. 8
--11~ .8
.- ,.Jndependen t Study S tuden-:. Con tact
Hours .
2. OStuden t
Cor: t act
Office Hours
-· --·
--- ·· ··-~ -9.
1 -- ·Research
S~u dentContact Hours
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting - April 10-11, 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section IV - Report Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
Page 4-2
Continued Undergraduate Accreditation of the School of Business Administration, Fort Lewis College, by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business RECOMMENDED ACTION:
No action required - report only EXPLANATION:
E~
~~
AMERICAN ASSEMBLY OF COLLEGIATE SCHOOLS Of BUSINESS
Director Don L. James
School of Business Administration Fort Lewis College
Durango, Colorado 81301 Dear Director Lewis:
February 2, 1979
It gives me a great deal of pleasure to inform you that the Continuing Accreditation Committee, at its recent meeting, recommended the continued undergradaute
accredi-tation of the School of Business Administration, Fort Lewis College, following the review of your 1978-79 Resurvey Report. This recommendation was concurred in by the Operations Committee of the Accreditation Council.
In reaching its recommendation, the Committee wishes to r~cord
its concern that because of the very narrow margin of compliance on the overall adequacy measure of Standard III, continued at-tention should be given to the maintenance of adequate faculty and support staff resources.
Sincerely,
7
/?!1J?~f.:vJ;,I
R.H. Mitchell President
HHM: jvj
cc: President Rexer Berndt
Dean Lawrence E. McKibbin, Chair man Continuing Accreditation Committee
11500 Olive Street Road • Suite 142 St . Lo uis, Missou ri 63141 • (314) 872-8 48 1
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting - April l0-11, 1979
Fort Lewis College
Section IV - Report Items
!V~ATTERS FOR ACTION:
Enrollment Summary for Winter Trimester 1979
RECOI"iMENDED ACTION:
No action required - report only EXPLANATION:
See attached Enrollment Summary
Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Enrollment Summary
Classification Male Student Body 1443 Comparison of Student Body with Previous Years
Winter Trimes.ter 1966-67 Winter Trimester 1967-68 Winter Trimester 1968-69 Winter Trimester 1969- 70 Winter Trimester 1970- 71 Winter Trimester 1971- 72 Winter Trimester 1972- 73 Winter Trimester 1973-74 Winter Trimester 1974-75 Winter Trimester 1975-76 Winter Trimester 1976-77 Winter Trimester 1977-78 Enrollment Analysis of Student Body by Class Freshman (12+ Hrs.) Freshman (9- 11 Hrs.) Freshman (Part-time) Total Freshman Sophomore (12+ Hrs.) Sophomore (9 - 11 Hrs.) Sophomore (Part-time) Total Sophomore Junior (12+ Hrs.) Junior (9 - 11 Hrs.) Junior (Part-time) Total Junior Senior (12+ Hrs.) Senior (9 - 11 Hrs.) Senior (Part-time) Total Senior Unclassified (12+ Hrs.) Unclassified (9 - 11 Hrs.) Unclassified (Part-time) Total Unclassified Winter Trimester 1978-79 Prepared Jan. 26, 1979 Femare 1203 Male 847 900 1011 1054 1181 1247 1349 1333 1454 1584 1539 1446 537 25 22 584 319 4 7 330 224 10 4
- -
238 221 21 18 260 14 17 31 % Change From Previous Total Winter Term2646 +1.5 Female Total 398 515 564 657 739 793 871 974 1071 1140 1143 1161 443 18 29 490 244 8 8 260 196 8 5 209 172 13 16 201 9 4
30
"-43
--1245 1415 1575 1711 1920 2040 2220 2307 2225 2724 2682 2607 980 43 51 1074 563 12 15 590 420 18 9 447 393 34 34--
. 461 23 4 47 74 Budget Cre.dit Hrs. 39,341 %Change From Previous Winter Term -2.5 ·-13. 7 +11.3 ·-8. 6 .:-12. 2 i-6.3 +8.8 ·3.9 +9.4 +7.9 -1.5 -2.8 continuedFort Lewis College
Off ice of Admissions and Records Enrollment Summary
Winter Trimester 1978-79 Prepared , .Jan_. .. ?6, 1979 Enrollment Analysis of Student Body . .
by Tuition Classificat ·I on Statu·s Students (In-State) • ~ .. 6,.
Students (out-of-State)
Analz:sis hy Registration Status. Continuing S·tudents (In-State) Continuing Students (Out-of-St.ate) " '-,.:
For;n~r . ~~~denta*(In-State)
Former, Students·:; (Out-of- State) New-Students: .. Fi!'.'st-Time (In-State) Fi :·st-Time (Out.:.of-State) .. •.
..
.. ) Transfer (In-State) Transfer (Out-of...; State).
',,
Special Students (In-State) Special Students (Out-of-State) Total New Students
American Indians: New Indians
Full-Time Indians (12 '. Hrs.) Part-Time Indians(6
-
11 Hrs.) Part-Time Indt-an~ (5 Hrs . or Less). ,
Credit Hours
. .
F.T.E. American Indian( ~30)
Student Body Enrollment by Ethnic Background Black Americans Oriental American
Mexican American or .. Jlispano American Indian Foreign ;
.
I~' . , . . : ·, ~ : Male i ~ 10"20 ' .. . . 423 871 349 1220 70 26 96 41 l4 55 . ) 26 31 57 12 . 3 15 127 55 8 . : 51 3 1 756 25. 2 20 8 54 55 24 Female 845 358 735 292 1027 46 16 62 21 16 37 26 28 54 17 6 23 114 106 23 103 1 2 1536 51. 2 2 5 40 106 4 Total 1865 781 1606 641 2247 116 42 158 ·62 30 92 52 59 111 29 9 38 . • .. 241 .. ~ 161 31 154 4 3 2292 . . 76 .4 22 13 94 ' 161 28""~Former--ordinarily students who have .. not been
College during either of the past two terms. in attet:idance at F?rt
i .. .. ' ~ · -- · · '
...
•'..
; Lewis .,Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Enrollment Sununary
Winter Trimester 1978-79 Student Body by Credit
Hours Enrolled
Full-time (12 Hrs. or more) Part-time (Less than 12 Hrs.) Full-time for Tuition Purposes Part-time for Tuition Purposes Student Body by ~overnment Benefits
Chapter 31, Title 38 Chapter 34, Title 38 Chapter 35, Title 38 State Rehabilitation S.ocial Security V.A. Pension Male 1315 128 1375 68 3 101 17 11 99 13 Female 1064 139 1115 88 12 17 1 77 10 Sununary of American Indian First Time Other F:eshmen Sophomores Juniors Seniors Unclassified T.cansfers Colorado Alaska Arizona California Kansas .North Dakota New Mexico Nevada Oklahoma Virginia Wyoming Total Total · 1 22 23 11 9 10 2 55 2 13 Out-of-State 2 13 1 1 23 1 1 42 7 45 52 19 15 20 106 6 12 Indians By 2 25 1 1 62 2 1 ~ Total 2379 267 2490 156 3 113 34 12 176 23 Enrollment 8 67 75 30 24 30 2 161 8 25 State 4 38 2 1 1 85 2 1 1 1 136
Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Winter Trimester 1978-79
Enrollment Summary by Schools and Majors SCHOOL OF ARTS & SCIENCE
Major Freshman Soehomore Junior Senior Unclassified Total
Anthropology 15 7 14 14 2 52
Art 44 29 13 18 2 106
Biology
-
';en. Bio. 63 48 30 47 2 190- Nat. Hist. 8 12 10 8 38 Total Biology 71 60 40 55 2 228 Chemistry 4 13 . 16 13 46 English 11 17 23 19 5 75 ';eology 33 29 31 39 132 I. History -
u.
s.
6 4 6 7 1 24 - European 1 2 3 6 - Asian 1 1 - No Cone. 7 5 4 2 2 20 Total Hist. 14 12 10 12 3 51 Humanities ·15 6 7 14 42 r ~athematics 7 10 8 4 2 · 31 Music-Intrumental 13 5 5 5 28 -Vocal 5 3 2 1 11 Total Music 18 8 7 6 39 Physical Science 6 3 3 4 16 Political Science 23 8 10 13 2 56Soc.& Human Services 38 18 19 7 3 85
Southwest Studies 5 2 6 2 15 Spanish 2 3 1 3 9 Pre-Agriculture 25 14 5 1 45 Pre-Engineering 35 12 10 57 Pre-Forestry 68 29 7 1 105 Total School of
Arts & Science 434 280 230 224 22 1190 SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AmaNISTRATION
Accounting 58 28 25 28 5 144
Business Ad. 217 111 86 73 5 492
Business Ed. 11 3 2 16
Economics 2 2 . 2 1 1 8
Secretarial Science 17 9 4 2 32
Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Winter Trimester 1977-78 Enrollment Summary by Schools and Majors (continued)
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
'Major Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Unchassified Total
Elementary Ed. 33 29 25 46 5 135
Physical Ed. 50 24 15 23 2 · 114
Psyc~ology 36 26 15 21 ' .. 98
76
-Total School of Ed. ~ ' : 119 1 55 90 7 347
Other . . 46 19 8 14 2r- . 0 . 113 Undecided 157 57 21 10 8 253 Student Constructed 13 8 13 17 51 Total 216 . ~
42
4134
417 ~RAND TOTAT~ 1074 590 447 461 74 ' 2646 'SUMMARY OF STUDENT BODY BY ~EO '.;RAPHIC
LOCATION
Total
%
ofStuderits Student Body Five County_ Denver Metro. Area 746 28.2 Five County San Juan Basin Area 660 24.9
Other Colorado 459 17.4
Sub-total Colorado 1865 70.5
Out-of-State American Indians 136 5.1
Other Out-of-State 61}5 24 .4
Sub-total Out-of-State 781 29.5
Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Winter Trimester 1978-79 In-State Enrollment Distribution by Counties
M A -'L E F E M A l. E Counties F S J S· U . ,
I .
F S J S U T Total Adams 8 7 5 9 2~ 11 8 13 1 33 62 Arapahoe 55 30 18 21 l · 1~5 53 21 . 13 7 94 219 Boulder 20 ll 5 10 46 9i2
5 7 3379
Denver 47 13 12 25 - 97 28 19 9 14 70 167 Jefferson -"~;o..;:_.__;::....;____:::...=_~~__;:::.:::::._~..::...::.~.::.::..--:~--==:.=_~~---'~~__!::.::_::_ 48 35 24 18 125 34 21 18 21 94 219 Sub-total penver Metro . Are:a 1.7 8 96. 64 83 Archuleta Dolores La Plata Montezuma San Juan Sub-total San Juan Basin Area Alamosa Bent Chaffee Cheyenne Clear Creek Conejos Costilla Custer Delta Douglas Eagle. Elbert El Paso Fremont Garfield '. "'.!ilpin ~ rand -::unnison Huerfano Kiowa Kit Carson TJake Larimer T~ as Animas l.incoln-Logan Mesa Mine ra l Mo ff at Montrose Morgan Otero Ouray Park 3 2 81 49 14 12 98 63 2 L . -1 3 1 5 2 4 1 : 3 3 26 26 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 14 4 3 2 1 2 2 6 7 5 1 1 1 67 7 76 3 1 65 10 1 80 1 1 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 1 2 3 lL 11f .
3 . 2 1 1 1 1 2 8 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 14 3 17 1 2 422 7 4 276 . 46 1 334 4 1 9 1 1 1 11 8 11 76 4 8 1 2 2 2 1 3 28 5 2 6 2 2 16 7 1 135 81 58 50 324 8 1 2 3 14 2 2 ( 1 5 87 ' 42 47 54 .· 32 262 18 6 11 6 1 42 1 1 1 - - 3 -1T6-50-- 63--~34·- -3~26--· 2 3 2 2 3 1 3 1 1 11 10 4 ' ' 1. 2 3 4 1 2 9 ,6 1 2 2 3 8 3 1 2 1 .L 3 1 - -1 2 1 3i
1 3 6 5 7 l . 1 1 4 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 3 6 . 5 1 3 7 2 3 1 30 5 17 1 4 3 1 3 20 2 2 1 9 1 16 3 1 3 746 21 9 538 88 4- 66'0
10 1 14r
1 3 1 1 18 10 14 1 106 9 25 1 3 6 5 1 4 3 48 7 2 3 15 2 3 32 10 1 1 3 . ,·.
I continued)Fort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Records Winter Trimester 1978-79 In-State Enrollment Distribution by Counties (continued)
Counties F
s
j MALEs
0 I F FEMALEs
js
0 I TotalPhillips 1 1 1 1 2 Pitkin 1 1 1 3 1 3 2 2 8 11 Prowers 1 2 3 1 1 2 5 Pueblo 4 1 1 6 1 3 4 10 Rio Blanco 1 1 2 1 1 3 Rio '; rande 2 3 2 7 1 1 2 9 Routt 1 1 1 1 2 4 5 Saguache 1 1 2 2 3 San Miguel 3 2 3 8 2 1 1 4 12 Summit 2 2 2 1 3 5 Teller 3 2 5 1 1 6 Washington 1 1 1 Weld 5 1 1 2 9 6 3 1 10 19 Yuma 1 1 2 2 3 Sub-total 106 69 40 46 3 264 83 47 31 33 1 195 459 :;RAND TOTAL 382 228 180 209 21 1020 334 178 152 146 35 845 1865
..
·
Fort Lewis Colle:;e
Office of Admissions and Records Winter Trimester 1978-79
DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENT BODY BY STATES
&
FOREI~N COUNTRIESMAL E FEMALE States F
s
Js
u
T Fs
Js
u
T Total Alaska 2 3 5 1 1 2 7 Arizona 17 4 8 10 39 22 3 3 6 34 73 Arkansas 1 1 1 1 2 California 17 10 9 7 43 15 4 7 5 1 32 75 Connecticut 4 1 3 8 3 1 4 12 Delaware 1 1 2 2 Florida 14 7 2 1 1 25 1 6 1 1 9 34 Hawaii 2 1 3 2 2 5 Idaho 1 1 1 3 1 1 2 5 Illinois 20 9 5 6 1 41 11 4 3 1 19 60 Indiana 1 2 3 2 4 1 7 10 Iowa 2 5 1 8 5 2 7 15 Kansas 2 1 2 5 1 1 2 7 Kentucky 1 1 1 Louisiana 1 1 1 Maine 1 1 1 1 2 Maryland 2 2 2 1 7 1 2 1 1 5 12 Massachusetts 1 1 1 3 1 1 4 Michigan 4 2 6 2 1 3 9 Minnesota 3 1 1 5 1 3 4 9 Mississippi 1 1 1 Missouri 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 3 7 Montana 1 1 1 1 2 Nebraska 2 2 1 2 2 1 6 8 Nevada 1 1 3 3 4 New Hampshire 1 1 1 New Jersey 5 7 2 3 17 3 3 1 7 24 New Mexico 32 15 9 8 64 50 25 19 28 122 186 New York 9 3 2 1 15 12 5 3 1 21 36 North Dakota 1 1 1 Ohio 4 3 3 10 5 2 2 3 12 22 Oklahoma 2 2 1 3 1 2 7 9 Oregon 2 1 3 3 Pennsylvania 9 2 3 2 16 3 4 3 1 1 12 28 Rhode Island 1 1 1 1 2 South Carolina " L 1 3 3 South Dakota 2 1 3 1 1 2 5 Tennessee 1 1 1 1 2 Texas 20 9 4 2 1 36 6 2 3 1 12 48 Utah 1 1 1 Vermont 1 1 1 1 2 Vi rginia 2 1 3 6 2 1 3 9 Wis coi'.J.Gin 1 1 2 1 1 3 Wyomirig 1 1 1 Sub-total 189 96 56 50 8 399 154 82 56 54 8 354 753 ContinuedFort Lewis College
Office of Admissions and Record~
Winter. Trimester 1978-79
Distribution of Student Body by States
&
Foreign Countries (continued)Foreign Countries Caroline Is lands China Colombia Ecuador France Honduras India Iran Japan Libya F 5 1 5 1 MALE
s
Js
2 1 1 1 1u
1 1 T 1 1 6 1 1 7 2 1 Norway 1 1United Arab Emi.cates-~~~~~~~~~~~-.. 3 3 Su b~total 13 6 2 1 2 24 F E MA ~ . E F
s
Js
1 1 1 1 2 1 ';RAND TOTAL 202 102 58 51 10 . 423 156 82 57 55u
T 1 1 1 1 8 358 Total 1 1 1 6 1 1 1 8 3 1 1 3 28--781STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE
Regular Meeting April 10-11, · 1979 Fort Lewis College
Section IV - Report Items MATTERS FOR ACTION:
A Report On the San Miguel Allende Program 1975 - 1979 RECOMMENDED ACTION:
No action required - report only EXPLANATION:
Page 4-4
Attached is a ~eport on a special program developed by the Department
of Foreign Languages of Fort Lewis College. This report covers the years 1975-1979.
Page 4-4a
A Report On The San Miguel Allende Program
1975-1979
Submitted by:
Miguel Federico Cano
Associate Professor of Foreign Languages (1974)
B.S. University of Mexico 1956
B.s.
Saint Louis University 1963 M.A. Saint Louis University 1966 Ph.D.Saint Louis University 1973Page 4-4b The San Miguel Allende Program in San Miguel Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico, was established in September 1975 with the approval of the Administration and the Study Abroad Committee. This program was established to replace the previous program
located at Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico. It was the general feeling of the faculty of the Department of Modern Languages that there existed serious weaknesses in the Oaxaca Program and that students were not adequately prepared and had not progressed enough in the command of the language after one trimester of study abroad. Among the weaknesses of the Oaxaca Program were irresponsible faculty who would not show up for class. The director was a lawyer working for the University of Oaxaca on the administrative staff and was not qualified to teach the courses in language which he was teaching. The other two language instructors were students at the School of Law and they also were not qualified to teach such courses. They lacked the special training required to make the courses a success. The courses in the social sciences consisted of ten lectures by a regular faculty member of the University of Oaxaca. With such a small number of classes, the courses were lacking indepth and breadth. The result was that the students were not getting the education they were paying for and upon returning to Fort Lewis College could not continue in more advanced courses in language because their preparation was superficial. They could not take lower level courses either because they had already received credit for material they had not mastered. This lack of prepara-tion on the part of the students created frustraprepara-tion to faculty and students even though, from the students• point of view, living in a foreign country was a pleasant experience. The students felt that it was a great live-in experience with credit for academic subjects they did not master. The students, faculty of the modern language Department, and administration felt the medical facilities were quite inadequate in case of emergencies.
In 1974 several alternate programs were studied in various locations in Mexico and, with the support of the members of the faculty of Fort Lewis College, one pro-gram was proposed. This propro-gram was the one offered by Academia Hispano Americana located in San Miguel Allende, in the state of Guanajuato, Mexico. San Miguel Allende was considered the ideal place because of its central location, four hours
north of Mexico City, the center of culture and industry, and some eight hours from the United States border. The town was also six hours from either the eastern or western coasts. The program offerings were quite impressive and the faculty were well trained in their field.
San Miguel Allende was an historical treasure and would benefit the students in their studies in Mexican history. In the 19401s San Miguel Allende was declared
a national monument by the Mexican government, together with eighteen other cities. It was the cradle of the Mexican Independence from Spain and the cradle of the Mexican Revolution. Many buildings bear the historical inscriptions which have made the city famous. These are not modern buildings, all of them are from colonial times, and the newer ones have followed the architectural style of the colonial epoch. The streets are cobblestone and there is very little traffic. For all of these reasons it was considered by the faculty and administration to be a place for learning and meditation that would benefit the students in the end.
The Academia Hispano Americana is a very well run institution. The owner is a Spanish lady, who in her youth studied in the United States and is married to an artist. She is also the director of the Bellas Artes Institute (Fine Arts Insti-tute). She is the General Director of the Academia Hispano Americana. The Director, who actually runs the program, is an American born and educated person and understands the American system of education and the needs of the American students and their culture. For these reasons he is the perfect choice to adminis-ter the program. The owner is Mrs. Carmen Massip de Hawkins and the Director is Professor Gary de Mirjyn.