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Mount President鈥檚 Attempt to Improve Retention Rate Included Seeking Dismissal of 20-25 First-Year 果冻传媒app官方
Even before this year鈥檚 freshman class arrived on campus in August, President Simon Newman was developing a plan to dismiss 20-25 of them before the end of September as a means of improving the Mount鈥檚 student retention numbers.
Mount St. Mary鈥檚 University, like all colleges and universities in the U.S., is required by the federal government to submit the number of students enrolled each semester. The Mount鈥檚 cutoff date for the Fall 2015 semester was Sept. 25, and the number of students enrolled as of that date would be the number used to compute the Mount鈥檚 student retention.
The president鈥檚 plan to 鈥渃ull the class鈥 involved using a student survey that was developed in the president鈥檚 office and administered during freshman orientation.
On Jul. 27, Dr. Greg Murry, Director of the Veritas Symposium, sent an email to all Symposium instructors informing them that 鈥渙n the request of the President鈥檚 office, students will be taking about an hour鈥檚 worth of the time to fill out a survey [on Sat. Aug. 22 during orientation] which we hope will help us to develop better advanced metrics for accepting students.鈥
The introduction to the freshman survey included the following: 鈥淭his year, we are going to start the Veritas Symposium by providing you with a very valuable tool that will help you discover more about yourself. This survey has been developed by a leadership team here at The Mount, and it is based on some of the leading thinking in the area of personal motivation and key factors that determine motivation, success, and happiness. We will ask you some questions about yourself that we would like you to answer as honestly as possible. There are no wrong answers.鈥
An email exchange obtained by The Mountain Echo revealed Newman鈥檚 plan to dismiss 20-25 students by the Sept. 25 cutoff date along with the possibility of using the survey鈥檚 results to determine who would be dismissed. Both of these ideas were met with strong resistance by a small group of faculty and administration aware of the plan.
On the evening of Aug. 21, at 7:25 p.m., the night before the survey was given, Provost David Rehm emailed President Newman clarifying the 鈥減ossible uses of the survey to be administered tomorrow.鈥
Rehm wrote that he was 鈥渄eeply concerned鈥 on several fronts鈥 about how the survey might be used to 鈥渉elp students understand themselves.鈥
Rehm鈥檚 email continued: 鈥淏ut as we plan on some version of this for the coming year, I believe that there need to be more heads in the game to address the many challenges here.鈥
At 8:09 p.m. on Aug. 21, Newman responded to Rehm鈥檚 email: 鈥淚 believe we should move ahead and ask the questions but we have time to discuss how the results will be fed back to students.鈥
鈥淭he broader community can decide how best to manage the dissemination of the information. We will have about 10 days to work this out which should be ample,鈥 Newman wrote.
Newman鈥檚 email continued: 鈥淢y short term goal is to have 20-25 people leave by the 25th [of Sep.]. This one thing will boost our retention 4-5%. A larger committee or group needs to work on the details but I think you get the objective.鈥
Rehm shared Newman鈥檚 email with a larger group comprised of Murry, Associate Provost Leona Sevick, then-Dean Josh Hochschild and Fr. Jim Donohue.
In an email sent at 11:03 p.m. on Aug. 21, Hochschild responded: 鈥淎s I read this, in response to David鈥檚 concerns about how and whether survey results are communicated to students, Simon clarified a goal: to dismiss some students.鈥
鈥淭his new bit of information is deeply disturbing,鈥 Hochschild wrote. 鈥淚 already thought this survey was ill-conceived on many levels. If one of the intended uses is to identify students to dismiss, I think it is unethical. How can we in good conscience administer this?鈥
Hochschild鈥檚 email continued: 鈥淭he survey鈥檚 introductory paragraphs almost persuaded me 鈥 this could be helpful to students, as part of a project of self-discovery鈥. But now, it seems that some responses to this survey could lead to drastic decisions. 鈥楾here are no wrong answers鈥?!?!鈥
鈥淚f this is not an anonymous survey, nor even a confidential personality test, but a highly intrusive, and misleadingly framed administrative tool, can we proceed without disclosing to our students鈥 what鈥檚 at stake?鈥
The next morning at 6:31 a.m., Sevick responded to Hochschild鈥檚 email and CC鈥檈d Rehm, Murry, and Donohue.
鈥淎s you know, I share your concerns about the survey,鈥 Sevick wrote. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if dismissing students was part of the original plan for the survey, but you鈥檙e right 鈥 it鈥檚 become part of the broad rhetoric surrounding improving retention and identifying at-risk students quickly.鈥
Sevick continued: 鈥淲hen the president first mentioned to me 2 weeks ago that he鈥檇 like to 鈥榙ismiss鈥 (I don鈥檛 think he used this word) students who will not be retained into the second year anyway, I explained to him that we can only dismiss students according to our catalog, if they fail to attend classes or are creating a disturbance in the academic community.鈥
鈥淲e cannot dismiss students because we think they won鈥檛 succeed,鈥 Sevick鈥檚 email said.鈥淗e knows this and Simon Blackwell [Chief Transformation Officer] knows this.鈥
At 9:20 a.m., Aug. 22, just hours before the survey was administered, Murry wrote to Sevick, Hochschild, Rehm and Donohue that 鈥淚 think that we have to insist that the results of this survey not be used鈥 for the purpose of selecting students to leave before Sept. 25.
Newman continued to pursue the dismissal of 20-25 first-year students in the face of strong opposition from a small group of faculty and administrators, who were aware of his plan.
鈥淚t was a very aggressively pursued idea. Even when people gave him [Newman] reasons not to, he still pursued it,鈥 said a source familiar with the president鈥檚 plan.
According to three separate sources aware of the president鈥檚 culling plan, as the Sept. 25 reporting deadline approached, it was pushed back to Oct. 2 at the insistence of the president鈥檚 office to allow more time to collect the names of freshmen to be dismissed.
On Sept. 21, after giving a presentation in Knott Auditorium to a group of freshmen about the orientation survey results, Newman spoke to a small group of faculty and administrators, including Murry. According to Murry, Newman asked him to compile a list of freshmen whom Veritas Symposium professors had determined were not likely to complete their freshman year successfully.
Murry responded that 鈥渨e don鈥檛 have enough information to determine that, and you might be kicking out some students who would make it.鈥
According to Murry, Newman replied, 鈥渢here will be some collateral damage.鈥
While discussing the faculty鈥檚 likely reaction to such a move, Murry told Newman, 鈥淓ven if I had the power of mind-control over the faculty, I couldn鈥檛 convince them this would be a good idea.鈥
According to Murry, during the course of the conversation, Newman said, 鈥淭his is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can鈥檛. You just have to drown the bunnies鈥ut a Glock to their heads.鈥
Economics professor Dr. John Larrivee was also present and confirmed Murry鈥檚 account of the conversation with Newman.
Sources close to the president鈥檚 culling plan also confirm that the Mount Cares Committee was asked to provide names of freshmen to be dismissed.
Ultimately, the president鈥檚 plan was thwarted as no names were provided by the extended Oct. 2 deadline. 鈥淲e simply ran out the clock,鈥 Murry said.
The Mountain Echo contacted Newman and the Board of Trustees for comment on this story on Dec. 1. Board Chairman John E. Coyne III responded with an email within 30 minutes calling the story 鈥渄isturbing and inflammatory. It is also the product of a disgruntled employee and the creative and destructive imagination of a student being spoon fed his information.鈥
On Dec. 3 Coyne emailed a response to The Mountain Echo which is printed in its entirety in this online issue. Writing on behalf of the university鈥檚 Board of Trustees, Coyne said in the Dec. 3 response that he was 鈥渢roubled鈥 by the Echo鈥檚 report, calling it a 鈥済rossly inaccurate impression on the subject of the Mount鈥檚 efforts to improve student retention and to intervene early on to assure that incoming students have every opportunity to succeed at our university.鈥
Newman responded in an email to the Mount Community [faculty, administration and staff] on Dec. 22: 鈥淚t has never been a goal to 鈥榢ick out鈥 first year students because they were not doing well.鈥