Senate duties
extend beyond undergraduate issues
To the
Editor
The Reporter account (Nov. 14 issue) of the Nov. 6 Faculty Senate
meeting ends with the comment that the senate's principal concern is UB
undergraduate programs. This is inaccurate and misleading.
It is inaccurate
in its implication that the proposed limit of 25 percent Senate membership
for units whose student enrollmentundergraduate, graduate and professionalis
less than 20 percent of the university total is based on supposed senate
concentration on undergraduate programs. It is misleading in its suggestion
that senate concerns with research, libraries and information technologies,
student life, educational programs and policies, academic planning, academic
freedom and responsibility, affirmative action, budget priorities and
facilitiesto list several but hardly all areas addressed by senate committeesare
considered by the senate only to the extent they affect undergraduate
programs.
The Faculty
Senate is the means whereby the faculty of the university participate
in its governance and guidance as these affect all the university's instructional,
research and public-service programs and activities. The proposed limit
of 25 percent membership rests on recognition that no one of these areas
should dominate Faculty Senate activities.
William
H. Baumer
Professor of Philosophy
College of Arts and Sciences senator
CAS representative to the Faculty Senate Executive Committee
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