Shortage of doctoral faculty predicted By Dionne Searcey Staff Reporter A wave of faculty members with doctoral degrees could retire from the University of Ncbraska-Lincoln, officials said, making a pipeline of students entering doctoral programs essential. Marijane England, academic systems coor dinator for the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said 45 of 1,213 tenured or tenure-track faculty members at UNL arc age 65 or older. “These people eventually will need to be replaced by a pool of new Ph.D.s,” she said. John Vaughn of the Association of Ameri can Universities in Washington said the large number of retiring doctorate professors stemmed from an increase of doctoral graduates who entered the work force 20-30 years ago. In the ’60s and ’70s, the number of doctoral graduates in America increased from about 10,000 to roughly 26,000, he said. In subsequent years, students turned away from an academic market that was filled, Vaughn said. Now, the people who made up the surplus of doctoral degrees are retiring, he said. Replace ments for those professors may not be easy to find. Merlin Lawson, associate dean of graduate studies at UNL, said half the people with doc torates in the United States are age 45 or older. “There will be an abrupt shift in the market from oversupply to undcrsupply,” he said. James Gricsen, vice chancellor for student affairs, said demand for university faculty members with Ph.D.s has prompted more stu dents to seek doctoral degrees in education. Sixty of 208 doctorates awarded at UNL from December 1989 to August 1990 were obtained in the area of education, he said. And, Lawson said, the overall enrollment for the doctoral program at UNI. is up 9 per cent, from 1,246 enrol led in the fall semester of 1989 to 1,357 students enrolled this fall. “Students are recognizing that graduate work is important to achieve career goals,” Lawson said. Despite a growing number of students seek ing doctorates in education, Griesen said, the academic world doesn’t have a surplus. “We’re all competing for a fixed number of them,” he said. Vaughn said universities need to start in creasing enrollment in doctoral programs so graduates with Ph.D.s will be available to the job market as faculty members begin to retire in the next five to eight years. “If we wait until a demand appears... then we’ll be a decade out of phase,” he said. A shortage of doctoral graduates is expected in all disciplines within five to 10 years, Vaughn said. Roger Bruning, associate dean of graduate studies, said one way to increase enrollment in doctoral programs is to improve minority re cruiting efforts. The graduate student office is working with other departments to recruit ethnic and racial minority doctoral students, he said. “One of the goals of UNL’s graduate pro gram is to increase ethnic and racial diversity of students obtaining Ph.D.s,” Burning said. Lawson said that of23,172 doctoral degrees earned in America last year, only 2,124 were obtained by Asians, blacks, Hispanics and American Indians. Another way to encourage students to seek doctorates, Vaughn said, would be to increase available financial aid. In 1969, the federal government financed about 60,000 doctoral fellowships. This has dropped to 13,000, Vaughn said. But, Bruning said, financial support isavail able to students who look hard enough for it. Students can cam stipends from research obtained in education, he said. “Many students don’t realize the kinds of support available in getting financial help,” he said. Maintenance priorities listed1 By Adeana Leftin Staff Reporter A recent survey conducted by the •University of Nebraska-Lincoln has provided the university with a list of maintenance priorities that must be met, an official said. Rich McDermott, UNL director of facilities management, said the sur vey, which was conducted overa five month period, checked all the pri mary university facilities. Now, McDermott said, urgent projects must be sorted out and listed for funding. McDermott said renovations must be made to Burnett and Richards halls and campus buildings must be re paired to meet building codes. Elevator repair and improvements to fire or life-safety systems are ex amples of priority maintenance that can’t be deferred, McDermott said. Heating, ventilation and air condi tioning will be on the deferred list, but “really need a lot of work,” he said. Facilities management is able to do everything that must be done, he said, “but we aren’t able to get to a lot of things that ought to be done.” And, McDermott said, it’s the deferred list that’s causing the back log of needed maintenance at UNL. “My concern,” he said, “is how long can we let the building deferred maintenance backlog grow before we seriously impede program delivery?” If maintenance keeps putting off what should be done, McDermott said, those projectscventually will become “must be done.” “It would be cost effective for the state to increase routine maintenance at UNL and avoid the higher cost of breakdown maintenance,” he said. McDermott said he is under pres sure to make existing resources go further. “Facilities management is continu ally striving to optimize the use of what resources we have, but to fully accomplish our role, we need help,” he said. According to the University of Nebraska capital construction request for 1991-93, UNL requires mainte nance funding of about $4.6 million. This year, UNL facilities manage ment received S2 million from the state through the operating budget and $1.7 million from the Deferred Maintenance Task Force set up under LB309. LB309 was passed in 1978 and allocates funds for university mainte nance, said H.L. Pete Petersen, ad ministrative consultant to the gover nor for deferred maintenance. McDermott said this year’s allo cation was “the strongest support we’ve gotten from 309 in a long time.” “Right now, they (the Deferred Maintenance Task Force) represent the gap between being able to get ‘must’ requests done or not.” In 1989-90, UNL received $ 1.409 million from the task force. That amount was up from $685,(XXi in 1988 89. Because funding from the task force changes annually, support for UNL fluctuates, he said. “Our real hope is that 309 will expand and we’ll be able to get more done at UNL,” McDermott said. He said that currently, funds from the task force arc for the envelopes of buildings, like doors, windows and walls. McDermott said he would like to sec an expanded scope for the task force so funds could be used for inter nal subsystems such as classrooms. “They can only do that if they receive more funding support from the state of Nebraska,” he said. “Whenever we get the chance to talk to people at 309, we tell them it’s critical money for critical projects at UNL.” 5j>}3h3»}»j3^»j>3>j»S»33KSsSs»3S!->f3>}Ss-S}>}>}3»}»5 Used, rare & out of print books in all fields. J&j Happy Holidays $ from 5 Bluestem Books | Gift certificates available. I| 712 "O" Street (Under the viaduct.) (402)435-7120 # mm .... ■iiwiim i iimi n ■ COMPUTERPROGRAMMING^^^H BASIC, COBOL, DATABASE III, C LANGUAGE, l ASSEMBLY. 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