DATE: 19
September 2000
TO: Board
of Regents
FROM: G.
M. Dennison
President,
The University of Montana
RE: Campus Report for the
September, 2000 Board of Regents’ Meeting

·
Long-term retention data note the importance of faculty
involvement in the retention of students.
With faculty support, a comprehensive Student Retention Plan is in its
first year of implementation.
·
A broad-based faculty committee also authored a
comprehensive academic advising plan which complements the Retention Plan and
is in the second year of implementation.
·
Assessment data, including information on student
withdrawal, is providing information constantly to update and redesign
processes for student success.
·
Noel-Levitz student satisfaction data, National Survey of
Student Engagement data and UCLA Freshmen Survey data will guide future
retention strategies.
·
Gates Millennium Scholarships: Nine recipients with awards ranging from $5,124 to $8,060
(average $7,289).
·
The MBA is now offered at seven locations in Montana—Billings,
Bozeman, Butte, Great Falls, Helena, Kalispell, and Missoula. The first year is delivered via the
world-wide web and the second year is delivered by interactive TV (Metnet).
·
David Forbes, Dean of the School of Pharmacy and Allied
Health Sciences, will be honored on Friday, 22 September 2000, as the “2000
Pharmacy Alumnus of the Year” by the University of Wisconsin Pharmacy Alumni
Association.
·
UM Professor of Journalism Carol Van Valkenburg was named
Teacher of the Year by The Freedom Forum, a nonpartisan international
foundation dedicated to promoting free press and free speech. The title comes with a medal and a $10,000
award.
·
The Mansfield Center is developing a digital resource
library that will make available the history of America’s Wars in Asia over the
internet.
·
Thomas Martin, senior research scientist with the Montana
Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, has been awarded the 2000 Elliott Coues
Award, presented by the Council of American Ornithologists’ Union to recognize
path-breaking and innovative research that advances the science of
ornithology. Professor Martin earned
the award for his 20 years of research into the causes and consequences of nest
predation in birds.
·
The School of Forestry, in partnership with the U.S. Forest
Service, developed a technique that identifies specific locations and
high-quality images of forest fires and provides the information to
firefighters within two hours. Within
six months, it is anticipated that this information will be available within a
few minutes.
