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Setting Stretch Goals: Sustainability as the Organizing Principle for a Strategic Plan AASHE 2012 October 15, 2012 Matt Mayberry, Brennan Professor of.

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Presentation on theme: "Setting Stretch Goals: Sustainability as the Organizing Principle for a Strategic Plan AASHE 2012 October 15, 2012 Matt Mayberry, Brennan Professor of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Setting Stretch Goals: Sustainability as the Organizing Principle for a Strategic Plan AASHE 2012 October 15, 2012 Matt Mayberry, Brennan Professor of Business William M. Throop, Provost Green Mountain College Poultney, VT

2 Two storms converging Crisis in Higher Education Global Sustainability Crisis

3 While real wages have remained flat over the past 25 years, the real costs of higher ed have increased by a factor of 3. With escalating costs, graduate underemployment, and studies showing poor student learning outcomes, families are reasonably questioning the value of a college degree. The Crisis in Higher Ed

4 The global sustainability crisis We’re on the wrong development path and it does not appear this will fundamentally change any time soon!

5 The natural response Focus on short-term fixes: survival Treat the challenges as technical problems Allocate specific issues to different disciplines Emphasize incremental change Avoid options that support a particular view of the good life; adopt the ideal of academic neutrality

6 The opportunity in these crises It’s natural to try to separate the problems, but the overall system cannot be described purely in terms of its individual parts This motivates radical transformations that have the potential to address both crises... starting with how we live and work together within our own college communities. Examples of organizational rebirth by dealing with crises holistically: IBM (1993 – 2000), Apple (1998 – 2005), Microsoft? (2009 - - ?) Fugiwhara Effect Global sustainability crisis crisis Crises in higher ed The opportunity is in understanding the interactions between the two crises—to see the whole

7 Green Mountain College Quick Facts: Founded 1834 in Poultney, Vermont 155-acre main campus in Poultney with Georgian style architecture 800 students from 33 states and 26 countries (33% growth in enrollment over past 9 years) 20 academic majors, including flagship sustainability programs Three master’s degrees Environmental liberal arts theme National recognition for sustainability – AASHE, Sierra magazine, PR Green Honor Roll $41,000 total price; 30% Pell eligible students

8 Green Mountain College’s initial focus on the first crisis – the long range plan Board of Trustees Strategic Planning Working Group Develop a second academic emphasis Build enrollment and strengthen quantity Diversify the delivery of educ. programs Strengthen the sustainability leadership Increase affordability Enhance facilities & town- gown relations

9 Questions that demanded more radical answers 1.How can we increase learning and make it more relevant to students needs, given our best predictions about the future? 2.How can we address affordability and indebtedness while maintaining a high touch, non-industrial form of education? 3.How can we move sustainability from a set of activities and institutional initiatives to a cultural reality? 4.How can we create an inspirational vision for education and human well-being that motivates a paradigm shift?

10 Reframing the strategic plan Natural capital Adaptive systems Goal: Sustainability 2020 Social capital Financial Strength Telling our story Human health and quality of life Student and employee engagement and well-being Community partnerships Entrepreneurial spirit Low-residency academic programs Residential enrollment and retention Robust culture of philanthropy Enhanced environmental programs Career prep: Green jobs Positive environmental impact Organization structure Clear measures of progress Facilities IT infrastructure

11 The stretch goal – authentic sustainability Objective: Through our innovative education and research, Green Mountain College will achieve authentic sustainability by the end of this decade. Put simply, we’re going to make things better in three ways: ecologically, socially and economically. Authentic sustainability: “Enhancing our well-being without depriving others of the capacity to enhance theirs.” Requires us to see sustainability not as “sacrifice,” but as a way to improve our quality of life. We don’t just aim to survive in the coming decades; we aim to have a net positive impact—to thrive.

12 First steps in plan implementation 1.Create a set of metrics focused on outcomes rather than activities (AASHE STARS and beyond) 2.Rethink the aims, content and pedagogy of a liberal arts education; emphasize applied skills, timely knowledge and the cultivation of virtues (grit, adaptability, frugality…) 3.Define “sustainability” and “well-being” in concrete, achievable terms 4.Reduce costs and reframe the value proposition in terms of navigating the sustainability transition

13 Objections We do not know how to achieve authentic sustainability The goal is too ambitious The plan is not focused on improving education This can only work at a small college


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