Shots in the Dark

Tuesday, 22 May

Drew Faust's Dean Problem

On Gadfly, Adam Goldenberg suggests that, with Jeremy Bloxham having turned down the FAS deanship, Drew Faust is going to have a very difficult time finding a replacement. I agree—though not for all the reasons Goldenberg states. They are:

    • Deal with Harvard’s faculty. Every single day. Forever.
    • Deal with FAS’ budget deficit. More than $75 million in the hole, at last count!
    • Deal with someone else’s Curricular Review. Explain how the new curriculum is not the Core, redux. (It is.)
    • Give up one’s academic vocation and instead become an administrator.

I don't think 1, 2, and 4 are such a big deal. The FAS deanship is still a prestigious and desirable job, especially for professors who might want to become college presidents. You also get a big raise. And let's face it, leaving scholarship behind for a while isn't always the worst thing.

Finally, I'm inclined to think that the FAS deanship under Drew Faust is going to be a strong position. She needs strong deans, and she's smart and secure enough to realize that.

No, the problem seems to me to be #2—budget issues. What if the new dean is going to have to operate in a time of shrinking resources? Trying to manage the relationship between science and Allston at a time when FAS is facing budget cuts could be a nightmare.

It's a lot more fun to be dean when you can say yes than when you're constantly telling people no.

I suspect that this is the real issue here, and it is a big problem for Drew Faust. She obviously wanted a scientist for the deanship. But will any scientist take the job if he or she has to pick and choose among the various science factions because of budget cuts?

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