HPU President's Report 2019

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2018-19 PRESIDENT’S REPORT AN INSIDE LOOK


TABLE OF CONTENTS

LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

Our students are at the center of everything we do at Hawai‘i Pacific University. This year, we are enhancing the student experience in transformative ways — in the classroom, throughout our campus, and across our community. Our vision of a unified downtown campus is close to being a reality. We’re moving all of our colleges to downtown Honolulu, which means closer proximity between colleges that will result in more interdisciplinary collaboration and hands-on experiences. Close proximity to many of the state’s largest hospitals, clinics, businesses and government offices improves internship and post-collegiate job opportunities for our students - and informs marketreadiness of our programs. Downtown Honolulu is not just where our campus is located, it’s our classroom. Our faculty and staff - from our accounting department to our professors - are uniting to propel HPU forward. In the classroom, our faculty are helping students to engage deeply with curricula and understand how it fits into their future careers. On our campuses, staff are HPU ambassadors who support our students throughout their academic journeys. Our diverse learning community actively fosters an entrepreneurial mindset, one that is ready to address the challenges and take full advantage of the opportunities the future holds, within the context of a global perspective. My goal with this report is to give you an inside look from the eyes of a student at the innovative evolution happening at HPU and its effect on our future alumni, and the world. With aloha,

John Y. Gotanda


A University On The Move................................................................2

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Cultivating The Most Diverse Student Body Of Any Nonprofit Private University In The U.S................................... 4 A Marine Laboratory............................................................................6 Educating Competent And Caring Professionals......................8 Delivering A Personalized Educational Experience............... 10 Beyond the Classroom..................................................................... 12 Leading The Way In Higher Education........................................14 Enrollment Trending Up................................................................... 15 Congratulations, Graduates! .......................................................... 16 The Education Effect..........................................................................17 Learning and Living by Our Values.............................................. 18 University Leadership...................................................................... 20


A UNIVERSITY ON THE MOVE CREATING A STUDENT-CENTRIC UNIVERSITY HPU is moving forward to provide a world-class urban campus, where our students will live, learn and pursue their life passions while engaging more with our community. Central to our vision is delivering on the promise to provide a hub of student life at Aloha Tower Marketplace with centers for student learning in close proximity at Pioneer and Waterfront Plazas.

“Securing new facilities at Waterfront Plaza and Pioneer Plaza is a monumental step in fulfilling HPU’s vision of a world-class urban campus,” said John Y. Gotanda, president of Hawai‘i Pacific University. “Our buildout will focus on student-centric enhancements, further delivering HPU’s promise of hands-on, innovative programming for market-ready education.” New state-of-the-art facilities will include over 30 classrooms promoting active, personalized education, enriched distance learning and a one-stop student center with registrar, financial

aid, academic advising, career and other services centralized for convenience. Dedicated science and nursing labs will offer hands-on learning and first-class research space, and the new library will provide research, study and meeting spaces for both students and faculty. “As one of the largest leaseholders in downtown, HPU draws thousands of students and faculty members into the neighborhood,” said Steve Metter, CEO and Principal of MW Group, Ltd. “By diversifying use and driving economic activity, HPU will greatly influence the commercial and residential future of downtown Honolulu.”

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“Since the beginning, HPU has been a vital part of the city’s center, working together to groom the next generation of global leaders,” said Richard Hunter, chairman of the board of trustees for HPU. “This move will be a poweful integration of resources for business development and diversity in our state.” HPU expects to move into the majority of new classrooms, labs and offices at Waterfront Plaza and Pioneer Plaza as early as July 1, 2019 with the full move completed in 2022.

A UNIVERSITY ON THE MOVE 2


HPU PRESIDENT’S REPORT

A UNIVERSITY ON THE MOVE 3


CULTIVATING THE MOST DIVERSE STUDENT BODY OF ANY NONPROFIT PRIVATE UNIVERSITY IN THE U.S. Hawai‘i Pacific University is one of the most diverse universities in the nation, with a student body hailing from all 50 states and over 70 countries around the world. Students enjoy a vibrant international learning environment with daily exposure to various cultures and unique ways of thinking that cultivates both open-mindedness and a global perspective.

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CULTIVATING DIVERSITY 4


BROADENING HORIZONS MAKING THE WORLD A CLASSROOM WITH INTERNATIONAL LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES HPU encourages students to go beyond the boundaries of its Hawai‘i campus and experience full immersion in a new place and culture. It offers a wide array of study abroad and international exchange programs, working with students to find scholarships and financial aid to fund their travel adventures. With over 400 approved programs including countries such as France and Senegal to Turkey and Mongolia, students have a chance to gain life experience, establish lifelong relationships, discover new interests, open the door to new career opportunities, learn more about a culture and even oneself.

“My first two months in Rio have been absolutely amazing: my brain has been overloaded with so much information about the music, food, fashion, politics, and lives of the people here. I have been inspired especially by the people I have met at baile funkes, street dance parties usually in the favelas, that seem to have the most eccentric styles, beautiful smiles and eye opening perspectives on life.” Alexandra Perez Brazil, PUC Rio

“We all were there to experience something new and had an interest in other cultures and seeing the world,” said Kailey Wann, a summer 2018 study abroad student to Barcelona, Spain. “It was amazing how close we had become after only knowing each other for a short period of time. It felt like I had known these friends my whole life and I am so glad to have met these people and experience once in a lifetime opportunities with them.” “While study abroad leaves you with a strengthened resume, amazing stories to tell your friends, and a poppin’ Instagram profile, my favorite part of my summer in Amman, Jordan was the incredible people I met. My host family felt like real family by the end of my stay, the other students in my class will be my lifelong friends, and my internship supervisor became one of my greatest role models.” Harley Didriksen Jordan, Middle East Internship (SIT)

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CULTIVATING DIVERSITY 5


A MARINE LABORATORY OFFERING UNDERGRADUATES, GRADUATE STUDENTS AND RESEARCHERS AN UNPARALLELED ENVIRONMENT FOR MARINE SCIENCES

Located at Makapu‘u Point on the windward coast of O‘ahu, Oceanic Institute of HPU (OI), is dedicated to marine aquaculture, biotechnology and coastal resource management. As of Spring 2019, the College of Natural and Computational Sciences offers two upper division oceanography courses for marine biology and oceanography undergraduates. With the objective to afford undergraduates more time to engage in research projects at OI, the college intends to increase the number of upper division, undergraduate marine biology courses held at the Makapu‘u campus.

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A MARINE LABORATORY 6


LEADING ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION RESEARCH ASSESSING THE INGESTION OF PLASTIC DEBRIS BY SEABIRDS AND OTHER MARINE VERTEBRATES Associate Professor of Oceanography David Hyrenbach, Ph.D., focuses his research on the ecology and conservation of large marine vertebrates — seabirds, turtles, cetaceans, tunas — and collaborates with scientists at governmental and non-profit organizations including the Bishop Museum, Monterey Bay Aquarium, Oikonos, and NOAA. Additionally, he embraces involving students — graduate and undergraduate — in his research projects. More specifically, five undergraduate students are part of the 2018-19 academic year research team, conducting research to document the diet and the plastic ingested by Hawaiian seabirds and predatory fishes. Since Hyrenbach’s arrival at HPU in 2008, three undergraduates have co-authored research articles with him.

HPU PRESIDENT’S REPORT

A MARINE LABORATORY 7


TABLE OF CONTENTS

EDUCATING COMPETENT AND CARING PROFESSIONALS OFFERING REAL-WORLD EXPERIENCES IN THE FIELDS OF NURSING, PUBLIC HEALTH, AND SOCIAL WORK THROUGH HANDS-ON LEARNING IN APPLIED PRACTICE SETTINGS DISTANCE LEARNING FOR DOCTORAL CANDIDATES The way we live and work has changed. At Hawai‘i Pacific University, the way our students learn has evolved, too. In Fall 2017, we introduced a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program for master’s-prepared nurses who are seeking a doctoral degree. The online program - approved by the WASC Senior College and University Commission - is a practice-based doctoral program that prepares expert clinicians to develop, implement, and evaluate nursing practice using research knowledge and methods to improve patient and population-based care. Students attend a one-week, mandatory, face-to-face intensive on the HPU campus and complete all other courses online in eight-week sessions, which allows nurse practitioners to continue working while earning their doctoral degree. Candidates graduate as highly qualified, certified practitioners specialized in advanced nursing practice.

HPU PRESIDENT’S REPORT

EDUCATING COMPETENT AND CARING PROFESSIONALS 8


GRADUATING THE PROFESSIONALS OUR COMMUNITIES NEED MOST Social work is one of the fastest growing professions with demand for social workers projected to grow 15 percent from 2016 to 2026. To address this growing demand, HPU has expanded its Master of Social Work program to West O‘ahu. Designed to meet the needs of working adults, the program offers flexible scheduling options and delivers courses on the westside of O‘ahu. Students proceed through the program in cohorts and are led through courses by committed faculty in the MSW program, who are veteran practitioners. As a result of learning in the most diverse nonprofit private university in the country, students graduate with a focus on culturally relevant practice, having experienced providing services to diverse populations.

EXPERIENCED FACULTY HALAEVALU “VALU” VAKALAHI, PH.D., leads the College of Health and Society (CHS) as its dean. An extremely active researcher with a passion for community service and its effectiveness in the community, Vakalahi helps students develop as culturally-responsible and community-engaged leaders. From aiding Ebola clinics in Africa to supporting natural disaster areas in Asia and the Pacific, HPU’s CHS graduates go on to improve lives around the globe.

HPU PRESIDENT’S REPORT

EDUCATING COMPETENT AND CARING PROFESSIONALS 9


DELIVERING A PERSONALIZED EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE HPU FACULTY ARE RESEARCHERS, EXPERIENCED PROFESSIONALS, SCHOLARS, AND LIFELONG LEARNERS, HELPING OUR STUDENTS EXPLORE THEIR POSSIBILITIES

RANDOLPH GOLDMAN, PH.D., associate professor of mathematics, is passionate about mentorship of students, providing ambitious and talented students the opportunity to master high-level undergraduate and even graduate material, equipping them for transition into prestigious graduate programs. Since joining HPU in the Fall of 2004, he has taught more than 20 different prep classes, created several new courses and built an outstanding logic program that offers more courses than most universities.

COL. (RET.) JOHN HANSEN (MA Diplomacy and Military Studies ‘13) teaches an eight-week, hybrid, international relations course at Hickam Air Force Base through the HPU Military Campus Programs. To prepare his students for their term papers focused on international relations in and around the South China Sea, Hansen arranges for guest speakers including CDR Jonathan Odom (pictured) from the Daniel K. Inouye Asia Pacific Center for Security Studies. Commander Odom’s insights on the role and rule of maritime law and issues within the maritime commons provided invaluable referential information for the students.

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DELIVERING A PERSONALIZED EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE 10


ADAM BURKE, PH.D., assistant professor of anthropology/global leadership and sustainable development, and REGINA OSTERGAARD-KLEM, PH.D., associate professor of environmental science, collaborate and teach the course “Plastic Fantastic?” to sophomore Residential Honors Program students. The class participated in an annual restoration and marine debris removal event hosted by two community organizations, collecting micro plastics and planting native Hawaiian plants at Kahuku Point.

CHRISTIAN GLORIA, PH.D., associate professor of public health, serves as a co-investigator, collaborating with faculty from Angeles University Foundation and the University of the Assumption in the Philippines, for a two-year research project titled “Mental Health Across Ages: Identifying Issues and Trends.” As the public health expert on the project’s interdisciplinary team, Gloria’s role is to provide guidance over the field data collection methods, the development of community- and workplace-based wellness programs.

HARM-JAN STEENHUIS, PH.D., professor of management, international business, and LARRY ROWLAND, ED.D. (pictured with students), associate professor of information systems, published a book entitled Project-based Learning, How to Approach, Report, Present, and Learn from Course-long Projects. Through project-based learning — the HPU College of Business approach to teaching — students are confronted with the complexities of real business situations.

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WENDY LAM, PH.D., associate professor of hospitality and tourism management, engages her students in project-based learning — the HPU College of Business approach to teaching — giving students the opportunity to work on a realbusiness challenge, creating excitement and a deeper learning experience. Lam’s hospitality marketing class students partnered with Paradise Bay Resort, developing a marketing plan for the business.

DELIVERING A PERSONALIZED EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE 11


BEYOND THE CLASSROOM STUDENT SUCCESS ON THE COURT, TRACK, STAGE AND MORE

GO SHARKS!

1

11

3

NCAA Division II National Championship in Men’s Tennis

PacWest Conference Championships

PacWest Hawai‘i Challenge titles

PacWest Conference Diversity Awards

44

All-Americans

4

Google Cloud Academic All-Americans®

1

1

0.22

2

NCAA Division II Woman of the Year Award Finalist

Nominee for the Honda Division II Woman Athlete of the Year

HPU PRESIDENT’S REPORT

increase in combined grade point average among student-athletes

BEYOND THE CLASSROOM 12


2017-2018 FIVE FIRST TEAM ALL-AMERICANS OCEANE ADAM WOMEN’S TENNIS MAKAYLA GARLAND ACROBATICS & TUMBLING DAISHA PAULINO ACROBATICS & TUMBLING LENA LUTZEIER WOMEN’S TENNIS LARA MECCICO WOMEN’S TENNIS

JIMMY AND JOSEPH CHAGOYA CO-CAPTAINS, HPU MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY TEAM ROLE MODELS ON AND OFF THE COURSE Led 4th place finish at the PacWest Championships, participated in community service events with Special Olympics, Girls on the Run, Habitat for Humanity and more.

SOUNDS OF HPU As the Director of Choral Activities at Hawai‘i Pacific University, ALEC SCHUMACKER, D.M.A., is dedicated to providing a worldclass chorale experience. He conducts the HPU International Vocal Ensemble, a group of recruited and auditioned singers who perform a diverse array of global music. The group has toured internationally and is one of the few choral groups in the world made up of non-music majors who receive scholarships for participation. An award-winning composer and arranger, active educator, and sought-after presenter, Schumacker’s works have been performed by prestigious ensembles across the country, even featured at the NFL’s Pro Bowl in 2016. Schumacker most recently won the 2018 World Projects Composition Contest with his choral composition, “A Slumber,” which will be performed at the 2019 Sounds of Summer Festival at the Walt Disney World Concert Hall in Los Angeles. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Williams College and completed his D.M.A. and master’s degree in choral conducting from the University of Miami.

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BEYOND THE CLASSROOM 13


LEADING THE WAY IN HIGHER EDUCATION

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LEADING THE WAY IN HIGHER EDUCATION 14


MOST DIVERSE PRIVATE NONPROFIT UNIVERSITY IN THE COUNTRY

HPU IS ONE OF THE TOP 8% OF PRIVATE COLLEGES FOR GRADUATES’ INCOME MOBILITY

The New York Times 2017

The Chronicle of Higher Education 2017

HPU HAS BEEN NAMED “BEST IN THE WEST”

HONOLULU IS THE HAPPIEST MAJOR CITY IN THE U.S. Gallup 2016

Princeton Review 2016

HPU IS THE TOP COLLEGE IN HAWAI‘I FOR RETURN ON INVESTMENT

PayScale.com 2017

ENROLLMENT TRENDING UP

First-time, full-time freshmen enrollment increased 17.4 percent from Fall 2017 to Fall 2018, and overall enrollment increased 12 percent. The University is also improving access to higher education through dual-degree programming, and three-year degree programs. We’re proud of our HPU graduates who have spent countless hours studying, gaining real world experience in internships, completing research projects and more. Our graduates set the foundation for their future and the promise of a better tomorrow through the skills honed in and out of the classroom and experiences had at HPU.


CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES!

OPENING THE DOOR TO BRIGHT FUTURES ONE STUDENT’S JOURNEY TO HPU VIA THE AIR FORCE After graduating from high school, Kandace L. Morrell (BSBA ‘18) joined the U.S. Air Force, becoming an airfield systems technician and reaching the rank of SSgt before making the decision to change career paths and to enroll at HPU. As an undergraduate, Morrell not only managed her own business, she embraced campus life, including serving as downtown senator of the Student Government Association and vice president of the Rotaract Club. She is continuing her studies at HPU, pursuing a Master of Business Administration.

MAKING A COLLEGE EDUCATION ATTAINABLE FOR ALL LOCAL STUDENTS HPU now offers the Holomua Commitment, an unprecedented promise to meet 100 percent of unmet tuition need of all first-year, full-time students from Hawai‘i. The pilot program increases accessibility of a college degree and empowers students to pursue a brighter future.

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CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES 16


THE EDUCATION EFFECT MEASURING ALUMNI SUCCESS BRIGHT LIGHTS, BIG CITY Since leaving HPU’s Visual Communications Department for Los Angeles 13 years ago, Actor/Writer/Producer/Director Adam William Ward ‘06 has experienced both the highs and lows of Hollywood from scoring early gigs at DreamWorks and Warner Bros. to a failed sitcom. Through it all, Ward never wavered on his passion for his craft, using his talents and work ethic to build on the strong foundation gained at HPU. “HPU encouraged a zeal for learning and I intentionally soaked up as much knowledge as possible at every job I did, knowing it would one day serve me well,” said Ward. That day has arrived as Ward just released his first, very wellreceived, feature film, “Wally Got Wasted,” which he co-wrote, produced, directed and starred in. Though Ward and his business partner had the option to release the movie through conventional distribution outlets, they opted for the route that kept control in their hands. In charge of distribution, marketing, promotional efforts and more, Ward was able to create an amazing film he is truly proud of. LIFELONG LEARNERS ALUMNI COUNCIL Hawai‘i Pacific University’s first Alumni Council is 21 members strong with representatives from Brazil, California, Illinois, New York, Norway, Sweden, Washington, Washington D.C., and, of course, Hawai‘i. The council keeps alumni around the world informed and engaged so it can collectively support the next generation of HPU Sharks.

There are few bonds stronger than those within nursing student cohorts. Norma Joy Agbisit ‘17 is no stranger to this bond, now sharing a Northwest Pacific life with Shainette Agrade ‘17, Janice Morales ‘17, Ishly Ann Agbayani ‘17 and Tiffanie Morales ‘17, all of whom studied together in the College of Health and Society from 2013-2017. A Waimanalo native, Agbisit always intended to move to the continental U.S. after graduating from HPU and was fortunate to find nursing classmates on the same trajectory. “It was one of my goals in life to be able to live and work with my nursing friends,” said Agbisit. “HPU really encouraged us to continue learning and to explore our greatest potential, and I am happy we are able to do that together.”

ONCE ‘OHANA, ALWAYS ‘OHANA HPU provides more than 40,000 alumni all across the globe with programming and events that advance our core mission—to serve all alumni by connecting them to the University and to each other, today and throughout their lives.


LEARNING AND LIVING BY OUR VALUES OUR EDUCATIONAL APPROACH IS BUILT ON OUR SOLID FOUNDATION OF VALUES: ALOHA, KULEANA AND PONO

AMPLIFYING ALOHA Celeste Cravalho (BS Biology ‘18) chose HPU because our small class sizes provided her with hands-on learning opportunities and the attention and experiences she needed to succeed. With family roots in Hawai‘i, Cravalho has a natural inclination to care for and give back to her community wherever she can. At HPU, she was a senator in our Student Government and president of Alpha Epsilon Delta, our honors society for pre-professional healthcare students. Cravalho even made time to volunteer as a peer mentor and participate in our Hawaii Spotlight Program cultural and ‘āina events, pulling weeds in O‘ahu’s lo‘i (taro patches) and working at loko i‘a (ancient Hawaiian fishponds). Students like Cravalho make HPU a university unlike any other. Now participating in a two-year National Institutes of Health Postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award Program in Bethesda, Maryland, Cravalho is one of more than 40,000 alumni amplifying aloha in communities around the world.

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THE EDUCATION EFFECT 18


DEVELOPING COMMUNITY STEWARDS Randy Gonce (BA ‘16, MA ‘18) moved to Hawai‘i after six years of honorable service with the U.S. Air Force, seeking direction and a sense of place. He chose HPU because he could learn here and grow by serving others. In addition to his graduate coursework, Gonce volunteered at the Kāne‘ohe Homeless Fair, for restoration projects on Uncle Keoki’s kalo farm in Hakipu‘u and with the KEY Project serving food at their Kūpuna Breakfast and annual turkey imu. He is actively involved in Papahana Kuaola, a nonprofit in Ha‘iku Valley, which provides ‘āina-based learning for O‘ahu’s keiki with school trips and community work days restoring the Ha‘iku Stream and lo‘i in the valley. In Hawai‘i, Gonce has nurtured his own community and land; with his HPU master’s degree in global leadership and sustainable development, he can apply those skills and experiences anywhere in the world.


UNIVERSITY LEADERSHIP

HPU HPUPRESIDENT’S PRESIDENT’SREPORT REPORT LEARNING UNIVERSITY AND LEADERSHIP LIVING BY OUR 20 VALUES 20


JOHN GOTANDA, J.D. PRESIDENT SUSANNE WOODS, PH.D. INTERIM PROVOST AND VICE PRESIDENT OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS JAN BOIVIN, J.D. SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL DAVID KOSTECKI SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER BROOKE CARROLL, M.B.A. VICE PRESIDENT OF ADVANCEMENT GREG GRAUMAN, M.ED. VICE PRESIDENT OF ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT

STEPHEN WARD, M.A. VICE PRESIDENT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND MARKETING JAMES BRESE, M.B.A. ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT AND CONTROLLER CODY DOWN, M.S.I.S. ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER KEVIN MATSUKADO, CSE, M.A.ED. ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT OF FACILITIES, SAFETY AND SECURITY SARA SATO, M.A. ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT OF ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT

SAM MOKU, M.B.A. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS AND COMMUNITY RELATIONS

LYNETTE HI‘ILANI CRUZ, PH.D. KUPUNA IN RESIDENCE

LINDA LINGLE

JAMES A. AJELLO Treasurer

JOHN A. LOCKWOOD Trustee Emeritus

MARTIN ANDERSON Trustee Emeritus

VIOLET S. LOO JAMES C. POLK HENRY F. RICE Trustee Emeritus

JOACHIM P. COX

JAMES S. ROMIG Trustee Emeritus

LAYLA J.L. DEDRICK

DONALD M. TAKAKI

JOHN Y. GOTANDA President

RAYMOND P. VARA, JR.

KAREN L. HUFFMAN Vice Chair

PAM LOUGH, MLS, PH.D. DEAN, LIBRARIES AND LEARNING COMMONS

ALLISON GOUGH, PH.D. DEAN, COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS

RICHARD C. HUNTER Chairman

FRED P. (GUS) GUSTAVSON

HALAEVALU VAKALAHI, PH.D. DEAN, COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND SOCIETY

SHAUN MOSS, PH.D. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OCEANIC INSTITUTE OF HAWAI‘I PACIFIC UNIVERSITY

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

MICHAEL J. CHUN, PH.D Trustee Emeritus

MANI SEHGAL, A.B.D. DEAN, COLLEGE OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES

MARITES MCKEE, M.A. ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT AND DEAN OF STUDENTS

BRENDA JENSEN, PH.D. DEAN, COLLEGE OF NATURAL AND COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCES

JEFFREY M. BOROMISA

WILLIAM RHEY PH.D. DEAN, COLLEGE OF BUSINESS

LANCE K. WILHELM ALLEN L. ZECHA, PH.D. Trustee Emeritus


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