UA Strategic Plan Earns Unanimous Acceptance from Arizona Board of Regents

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UA President Robert C. Robbins presented the university's strategic plan to the Arizona Board of Regents during a four-hour session Friday, Nov. 16.

UA President Robert C. Robbins presented the university's strategic plan to the Arizona Board of Regents during a four-hour session Friday, Nov. 16.

(Photo: Christopher Richards)

The Arizona Board of Regents unanimously accepted the new strategic plan for the University of Arizona following a detailed presentation by UA President Robert C. Robbins.

The plan capitalizes on the research and discovery strengths of the university in tackling global grand challenges, while ensuring students are prepared to be innovative, adaptive learners in an ever-evolving world. It also embraces the UA’s original mission as a land-grant university – to serve the diverse population of our state in ways that meet the unique needs of Arizonans.

“Over the past year, more than 10,000 students, faculty, staff, alumni, elected officials and supporters shared their time and talents in collaborative dialogue about our future as an institution,” said UA President Robert C. Robbins. “I am incredibly grateful for the collective insight that has led to a bold, distinctive and differentiated vision for the UA.”

“This is really an inflection point for this university and southern Arizona,” said Arizona Board of Regents Chair Ron Shoopman. “The University of Arizona means everything to Tucson and southern Arizona. You have so much influence on our future, so we’re counting on you to do the things that are necessary to make this plan a reality.”

The plan is built on preparing students to thrive in the Fourth Industrial Revolution – a time of augmented intelligence and the fusion of the digital, physical and biological worlds. As a leading research institution, the University of Arizona will invest in programs and people in signature research areas while also providing transformative learning experiences for students.

The University of Arizona Promise:

  • Develop innovative, adaptive learners and disruptive problem solvers who are prepared to lead meaningful lives and improve society in the Fourth Industrial Revolution economy.
  • Invest in the discovery, research and creative endeavors that address the world’s grand challenges.
  • Leverage the UA's unique assets and diversity as competitive advantages, and be an integral and collaborative member with the local and global communities.

The student-centric plan has five distinct pillars with more than 90 initiatives in total:

The Wildcat Journey - Driving Student Success for a Rapidly Changing World

The University of Arizona is educating a diverse generation of high-potential learners who will reinvent their careers several times over their lifetimes. The plan is built on providing students with an environment and support system to develop the skills and mindset to thrive in the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

Grand Challenges - Tackling Critical Problems at the Edges of Human Endeavor

The UA will continue to advance its heritage as a pre-eminent research institution that fully leverages the Fourth Industrial Revolution advancements to lead in the university’s distinctive areas of expertise: space; natural and built environments; health; humans, society and intelligent systems; and data, computing and network sciences.

The Arizona Advantage -  Serving Arizona by Advancing Our Land-Grant Mission by Driving Social, Cultural and Economic Impact

The University of Arizona will advance its land-grant mission to serve the state of Arizona in order to drive social, cultural and economic impact throughout the state and country. Plans include growing the Arizona economy by becoming one of the top five research institutions for key commercialization metrics, such as invention disclosures, licenses and startups. The UA will expand its arts infrastructure to establish the university as an arts destination with ever-increasing regional and national awareness.

“The arts need to permeate everything we do across the curriculum, across the culture of the university,” Robbins said. “We need to invest in the arts. This place has a soul to it and part of it is the creativity that helps our students become better at what they’re going to do as they go out in the world.”

UA Global - Setting the Standard for a Global University in the Digital Age

The UA will set a new standard for a global university in the digital age. The university is reconceptualizing micro-campuses, the study abroad program and also the global experience on campus, in addition to preparing students and scholars to thrive in a global world.

Institutional Excellence - Ensuring the UA Lives its Values and Innovative Culture

The UA will commit to living its unique values and innovative culture to enable an efficient, high-performing academic and administrative enterprise. The UA will be a dynamic educational and research institution that operates as a best-in-class place to learn, conduct research and work.

Highlights of the stated goals for 2025 include:

  • Grow student retention rates to 91 percent
  • Attain 90 percent employment or enrollment in an advanced-degree program for all UA graduates within six months of commencement
  • Grow research and development expenditures from $622 million to $800 million, placing the UA in the top 25 for research and development activities
  • Create a College of Data, Computing and Network Science, which integrates five areas of excellence for UA
  • Develop the university as a leading Hispanic-Serving Institution and American Indian Alaska Native-Serving Institution
  • Launch the UA as an arts and humanities destination that focuses on partnerships to fuel social impact, cultural development and economic growth
  • Establish 20 micro-campuses with up to 10,000 students and become a top-10 national research university for study abroad students
  • Engage 40 percent of faculty in active-learning teaching
  • Implement large-scale renewable-energy projects

Among its strengths, the University of Arizona is a leader in space, optical and environmental sciences with internationally known researchers and facilities. The first U.S. mission to return a sample from an asteroid to the Earth is led by UA. The world’s largest mirrors are built and managed by the UA and Biosphere 2 is a one-of-a kind, living laboratory for environmental research. The university also has a unique partnership with Banner Health, one of the country’s largest health care systems. This partnership provides medical research opportunities to tackle pressing health challenges in our communities.

“We will have to every day, step-by-step, do the hard work of recruiting those students and getting them here and helping them be successful – and the long hours of writing grants and of winning grants to advance our research,” Robbins said. “There’s no magic bullet. It’s just a lot of hard work.”

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