{"id":14989,"date":"2015-09-01T09:16:10","date_gmt":"2015-09-01T13:16:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/news\/article.php?ArticleID=14989"},"modified":"2018-09-13T09:11:12","modified_gmt":"2018-09-13T13:11:12","slug":"14989_president-s-opening-day-address","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/president\/2015\/09\/01\/14989_president-s-opening-day-address\/","title":{"rendered":"President’s Opening Day Address, 2015"},"content":{"rendered":"

Welcome to the Opening Day of the 2015-16 academic year. It is always a pleasure to see you all on the first day of the year, looking energized and ready for anything. Being ready for anything is a good thing, because anything is usually what we get.<\/p>\n

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The start of this academic year is particularly exciting because it marks a gigantic step forward for the University, as we simultaneously open two major new facilities, the new School of Business and the new Center for Environmental and Life Sciences. The faculty have been moving into their outstanding new offices and laboratories over the summer, and the students will start pouring into the instructional spaces and occupying the lounges and study spaces when classes begin tomorrow.<\/p>\n

Some of you will remember this photo from 2009<\/a>, when the faculty of the School of Business claimed their rights to the land. I don\u2019t know how many actually believed this day would come, but here it is. The new School of Business is a $66 million, 143,000 GSF building that provides a state-of-the-art teaching and learning environment for our approximately 2,800 students pursuing undergraduate and graduate degrees in the business disciplines. Our business programs have long struggled with an undersized and technologically inadequate building, and they will now have the opportunities offered by a facility that provides everything necessary for a forward-looking program, for meaningful collaborations with the business community, for a full array of student support services and student study and project spaces, and plenty of room for growth.<\/p>\n

The School of Business was the beneficiary of two recent and very generous gifts. An anonymous and extraordinary $20 million gift (the largest single gift in the University\u2019s history) will support the academic programs of the School into the future. A $600,000 gift from Ellyn McColgan will contribute to the support of the Ellyn McColgan Student Services Center, which will provide support services for business students from admission through their transition to graduation and careers. Ellyn McColgan graduated from Montclair State in 1975 with a degree in Psychology, went on to get an MBA from Harvard, and had a great career in business, rising to the position of President of the Brokerage Group for Fidelity Investments. The formal opening and naming ceremony for the School\u00a0of Business will take place on September 10. And, by the way, the new building will provide another dining opportunity on campus, The Venture Caf\u00e9, conveniently located just off the south entrance to the building.<\/p>\n

The amazing twin project also opening this September is the $55 million, 107,000 GSF Center for Environmental and Life Sciences. This building literally doubles the University\u2019s research laboratory space. The College of Science and Mathematics received close to $4 million in externally funded research awards last year, and they have gotten off to a good start this year, with three new awards received just last week, two from NSF and one from NASA, totaling more than half a million dollars. As visitors have toured these labs from other universities and from the state\u2019s pharmaceutical and health sciences organizations, everybody has been incredibly impressed with their quality and future-oriented design. The building will house a significant number of faculty from the life and environmental sciences, and will be home to the PSEG Institute for Sustainability Studies, the Passaic River Institute and the Sokol Institute for the Pharmaceutical Life Sciences. The new CELS building provides extraordinary spaces for students, both within and outside the labs for gathering, project work and study. The new building will be celebrated through a formal lecture series on emerging science throughout the year, beginning in October. The view of the New York skyline from the building is absolutely spectacular, and I suggest that when you are looking for a space to meet with a colleague, you might want to suggest meeting in the atrium lounge or its outdoor terrace, where you can enjoy the view.<\/p>\n

It is a very unusual occasion for any university to undertake the simultaneous construction and opening of two such major facilities, and I want to thank the extraordinary work of Vice President Greg Bressler and his team and Vice Dean of the School of Business, Kimberly Hollister, and her team, and Associate Dean of the College of Science and Mathematics, Jinan Jaber, and her team who were instrumental in this incredible success, from design through opening. Tomorrow, Wednesday, September 2, from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m., all members of the University community are invited to a campus opening celebration where you will be able to explore the two new buildings and enjoy some music and food.<\/p>\n

Even as we open these two very important new facilities, we are not, of course, done. The rather noticeable construction site on the east side of the campus is the new facility for the School of Communication and Media. That new School\u2019s mission is to offer cross-platform media and communication curricula that stay at the front edge of these rapidly changing fields. A renovated Morehead Hall opened last year to house the offices of the School, and this new $53 million, 105,000 GSF project will be equipped with the School\u2019s state-of-the-art multimedia studios and laboratories, including a leading-edge, multi-platform \u201cnewsroom of the future.\u201d Some key spaces include a 150-seat presentation hall, broadcast studios, radio studios, an integrated media lab, film screening room, classrooms and computer labs. As part of the project, the new connections and spaces attached to Life Hall will also provide some new theater and dance studios.<\/p>\n

Other important ongoing construction projects include the complete renovation of Partridge Hall, which will house The Graduate School, which will at long last have a real home base, and the new School of Nursing. Construction is scheduled to begin on Partridge by the end of October, and the newly renovated building is scheduled to open in fall 2016. Partridge as you see it now will look like this<\/a> by next fall.<\/p>\n

In regard to the creation of the new School of Nursing, there continues to be both a regional and a national severe shortage of qualified nurses in a health care environment that is undergoing radical changes. In addition to the simple demand for seats in strong nursing programs, a new program, such as the one we will build here, has the very significant advantage of being able to align itself fully with the new directions of the profession without the burdens of a legacy program. The plan for the development of the School calls for the recruitment of a founding dean, a search which is ongoing as we speak, the subsequent recruitment of faculty, and the launching of an RN to BSN degree program in fall 2016, a full BSN program in fall 2017, followed by an MSN, a five-year BSN-MSN and a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP). The Nursing portion of Partridge Hall will include mediated classrooms and specialized spaces, such as a nursing skills lab, an anatomy lab, high-fidelity simulation labs outfitted with state-of-the-art computer interfaced mannequins, a home care lab, a mock quarantine room and computer labs, as well as faculty offices and student and faculty\/staff gathering and meeting spaces. A good portion of the ground floor of Partridge will be devoted to a very nice gathering and study space for graduate students and nursing students. I want to thank Vice President Jack Shannon and Associate Provost Fred Bonato for their excellent leadership in moving forward the development of this new School, as well as the Task Force assembled by Provost Gingerich that analyzed the developmental plans and met with consultants. The Task Force was chaired by Dr. Bonato and was composed of: Professor Amanda Birnbaum, Health and Nutrition Sciences; Professor Ada Beth Cutler, College of Education and Human Services; Professor Saundra Collins and Professor Kenneth Sumner, Psychology; Dean of The Graduate School, Joan Ficke; Professor Lisa Hazard, Biology; Dean of Libraries, Judith Lin Hunt; Professor Christine Price, Family and Child Studies; and Professor Diana Thomas, Mathematical Sciences.<\/p>\n

Another important ongoing construction project is taking place at the Ward site off Clove Road, just past The Village. While the University has been able to provide excellent clinical facilities for the programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders at a specially designed facility at 1515 Broad Street in Bloomfield, the other growing clinical programs in both the College of Education and Human Services and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences have lacked adequate facilities. That deficit will now be solved with the ground-up renovation of the east wing of the Ward facility, which will be turned into a modern, integrated clinical services site.<\/p>\n

There are six programs, with well over 500 students in training, that will use the new Ward clinical facility, including:<\/p>\n