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Continuous Education and
Distance Learning
To enable Rutgers to more fully address educational
needs of the state and region, a Vice President for Continuous
Education and Outreach was appointed. This action was taken to
complement and strengthen the university's existing continuing
education structure which functioned to meet very specific needs
of constituent bodies. The new office of the Vice President for
Continuous Education and Outreach catalyzes more broadly based
continuing education development and is responsible for the university's
initiatives in continuous education and distance learning emanating
from all three campuses.
Continuing professional education is crucial for
an increasing number of Americans. With its long and distinguished
history of professional service, Rutgers will continue to play
a vital role in providing continuing education programs to prepare
and maintain a work force for a competitive global marketplace.
Through enhanced continuing education programs, developed in
collaboration with business, industry, and labor unions, as well
as education, health care, and government institutions and agencies,
the university will become increasingly responsive to the educational
needs of New Jersey adults. Rutgers already has a distinguished
history of outreach in specialized areas, such as government
service, management education, environmental sciences education,
and agricultural education. Exemplary programs provided by such
units as the Center for Government Services, the Graduate School
of Education, Cook College Continuing Professional Education,
the Center for Management Development, Nursing Continuing Education,
and summer sessions offered by faculty at all three campuses
are characterized by clear missions and excellent relationships
with constituent audiences.
Through increased incentives specialized units
will be encouraged to define their continuing education missions
more broadly and thus serve the university and the state more
effectively. The office of the Vice President for Continuous
Education and Outreach will establish university-wide standard
practices and uniform financial reporting oversight. This coordination
will result in uniform measurement of performance and cost-effectiveness,
consistent standards, and a unified vision of the mission and
the resources required. The office will serve as a clearinghouse
for existing programs and will encourage services to new audiences
and nontraditional constituencies. Coordinated planning will
provide the flexibility required to serve the diverse needs of
professional groups and individuals throughout New Jersey.
A coordinated continuing education operation will
allow for rapid response to new opportunities. For example, planned
initiatives in the international arena, including instruction
in critical foreign languages not currently taught at any of
our campuses, can be supported by a continuing education structure
that is not limited by affiliation with any single existing university
unit.
The response by the university to the need for
a high-speed data network is RUNet2000. A comprehensive voice,
video, and data communications network to connect all three campuses,
RUNet2000 has been in the research and planning stages by the
university since 1994. The transformation of computer and information
technology at the university is recreating a university in which
communication will be facilitated by a high-speed data network
that extends the network backbone both between and within campus
buildings including all appropriate offices, all dormitories,
and all libraries. Completion of the RUNet2000 voice, video,
and data communications infrastructure is a critical institutional
priority. There is widespread institutional support and recognition
of the priority nature of this major project, with a strong relationship
between the university's information technology infrastructure
and the priorities of the Strategic Plan. The university-wide
Project Advisory Committee has been identifying and prioritizing
the university's voice, video, and data communications requirements
for the next 15 years. It has been determined that the best strategy
for RUNet2000 is to proceed with procurement in three phases.
The first two phases involve the design, construction, and implementation
of a state-of-the-art, university-wide communications infrastructure
including all external and internal voice, video, and data wiring
plus core network data electronics and video equipment. The third
phase involves recommendations on a range of communications services
and is projected to go forward in 1998. In addition, Rutgers
currently is collaborating in an Internet 2 regional network
on a high-speed point of interconnection with the University
of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, Lehigh University, and
the University of Delaware.
The development of the information network will
have profound consequences. The ability to deal with information
and an understanding of the increasingly complex system for its
creation, analysis, organization, and dissemination are already
essential prerequisites for any educated person. Emerging technologies
offer us the opportunity to actualize the concept of one university.
Intercampus integration will be buttressed significantly through
the appropriate use of information technology, and especially
through the development of new modes of distance learning. For
example, information technologies, including desktop video-conferencing,
could improve coordination between the law schools in Camden
and Newark. With investments in technological infrastructure,
law library resources could be shared. Sharing courses via electronic
media would increase options for students on both campuses.
New technologies not only promise more effective
use of resources among the three campuses, but offer the possibility
for significantly enhanced outreach efforts throughout the state,
and indeed potentially worldwide. |