Universities in the US are stymieing their own development by refusing to think outside the box, slavishly copying what other institutions do and putting too much faith in tradition, according to the head of one of the biggest in the country.
Michael Crow is president of Arizona State University, which, he says, welcomed 83,000 students on to courses this semester. His tenure, which began in 2002, has been characterised by a determination to break from the norm and to create the âNew American Universityâ â a phrase used to describe the institutionâs commitment to âexcellence, access and impactâ.
âWe [Arizona State] are not constrained byâŠisomorphic replication,â he says, criticising institutions that simply recreate the status quo. â[Other] universities for the most part donât even need leaders, they just copy each other. We have moved to the notion of innovation being more important than tradition.â
Departure from the norm has meant sweeping changes. During Crowâs reign, 69 academic units, schools and departments have been, as he terms it, âeliminatedâ and replaced by 25 new ones. In the process, he says, 1,800 people lost their jobs. The new departments have unfamiliar names. Gone is the philosophy department. There is no school of sociology. But you will find a âSchool of Earth and Space Explorationâ, which incorporates aspects of physics, astrobiology and astrophysics, and you could find yourself teaching in the âSchool of Human Evolution and Social Changeâ.
Âé¶č
âThere are 400 [sociology departments] somewhere else, and theyâre basically in line like sled dogs,â Crow says, again dismissing uniformity as undesirable. âSo youâre the 10th best sociology department in the UK, and maybe youâre the 14th best sociology department in Europe, and then between Europe and North America youâre the 21st sociology department. Who cares?â
Implementing such alternatives becomes easier âonce you donât care what anyone else thinks, and realise it really isnât our job to be clonal,â he says. âClonal replications lead to really bad outcomes in nature, and they lead to really bad outcomes in markets and in economies. You need more differentiation,â he reasons.
Âé¶č
Crow also believes that tenure needs a rethink. âTenure has become this urban myth. People think it is a lifetime appointment, a lifetime job. Itâs not like that â it is a lifetime licence to pursue your ideas unencumbered by someone else who wants to see your ideas not make it.
âIt doesnât mean you donât work, that youâre not creative, and that you can be a jerk. Itâs not a licence to be a jerk.â This, he adds, is what tenure has become in some institutions.
ASU is not short on ambition. Crow sees his institutionâs aims for the next six years as ânearly impossible to obtain â which we loveâ.
These objectives include graduating 25,000 students a year while conducting $700 million (ÂŁ435 million) worth of research, which he describes as the âMassachusetts Institute of Technology level of researchâ â to be achieved without a medical school.
Âé¶č
âWhen you take out the medical research, which we donât have, we [already] have more funded research activity than Harvard, Stanford and Columbia,â Crow claims.
Such growth is not without precedent for ASU. The year after Crow took office, ASU graduated fewer than 9,000 students. Last year, that number had risen to about 20,000. Twelve years ago, the university conducted $100 million of research, compared with $420 million in the past 12 months.
Technology has been key in cutting costs and staff levels while âimproving every metric we haveâ to measure success. In one example, ASU invested $10 million in an âartificial intelligence-based electronic adviser systemâ that tracks studentsâ ability in class and plots their best academic route. âWe are simulating everything,â he says â allowing ASU to hire fewer student advisers but at a higher level. âYou donât want to sit with an adviser to work through your dreaming, you want to sit with an adviser and get a sense of where you are.â
Despite the reductions, ASU still employs 3,000 faculty members and 21,000 employees in total. Keeping them on side as the revolution continues will be a challenge, but it is one that Crow and the university board appear to relish. âASU was looking for innovative approaches to scale, to cost, to all types of things,â he says. âThe board is not only behind it, they now desire it.â
Âé¶č
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




