California State University, Long Beach Policy
Statement
95-01
April 21, 1995
Discontinuance Of Academic Programs The discontinuance
of an academic program means that the sequence of instruction in
that academic area will no longer be offered in a form which will
lead to a degree or a certificate. For purposes of this policy document,
an academic program is defined as a sequence of courses leading
to a bachelor's, master's or professional degree, a formal degree
option, a minor, a certificate, or a credential. It does not refer
to the department(s) or other administrative unit(s) that may offer
the courses involved. Portions of the curriculum may be retained
if they are related to other programs.
Program discontinuance may be requested for a variety of reasons.
Typically, programs are discontinued when they no longer serve student
or societal needs, or when the University cannot provide the resources
to offer them. What is important to the process is that the reasons
for the proposed action be made explicit and that affected parties
have an opportunity to present alternative views and proposals.
This requires a process of notification and hearing which will involve
several parts of the faculty governance process.
Because program discontinuance means the elimination of instructional
areas it has two important characteristics: first, it represents
an educational policy judgment and, second, it represents a resource
allocation decision. Although the final authority to make either
of these decisions rests with the President of the University and
his or her designees, traditionally faculty are more involved in
the making of educational policy while administrators make resource
allocation decisions. In the case of program discontinuance, both
faculty and administrators must participate fully before final decisions
are made by the President.
The responsibility for recommending to the President a course of
action in any of those situations rests primarily with the faculty.
The responsibility for carrying out any course of action decided
upon rests with the administration.
As far as possible, the university shall not take any administrative
action leading to the de facto or official discontinuation of an
academic program before the discontinuance process is completed.
I. INITIATION
1.000 A program discontinuance may be requested by the following
faculty bodies: the academic area offering the program, if requested
by a majority vote of the full-time probationary and tenured faculty
of the academic area; the faculty council of the college offering
the program, if requested by a majority of those members voting;
the Planning and Educational Policies Council, if requested by a
majority of those members voting; the Graduate Council, if requested
by a majority of those members voting; and the Academic Senate,
if requested by a majority of those members voting.
1.100 A program discontinuance may be requested by the dean of the
college offering the program. Such a request may be initiated only
after consultation with the appropriate academic area or areas and
the faculty council of the college.
1.110 A program discontinuance may be requested by the Vice President
for Academic Affairs.
1.120 If the request to discontinue a program originates with a
body other than the department offering the program, all tenured
and probationary faculty members in the department(s) offering the
program must be notified of the action before it is forwarded to
the Vice-President for Academic Affairs and the Chair of the Academic
Senate.
1.200. The request to discontinue an academic program shall be sent
simultaneously to the Vice-President for Academic Affairs and the
Chair of the Academic Senate.
1.300. The request to discontinue an academic program shall be sent
to the appropriate University Councils, omitting a program discontinuance
study, when the initiating body presents evidence of one or more
of the following conditions. Even for the situations described below,
a program discontinuance study shall be carried out if requested
by any three people (students, faculty members, or administrators.
· There is no evidence that any students have been
enrolled in the program during the previous three years.
· There is so little student demand for the program
that necessary courses have not been offered for the previous three
years.
· The program is one of several alternate programs
offered within the same academic unit, and one of the alternate
programs better serves student needs.
· Faculty members needed to teach the courses for
the program have retired or otherwise left University employment,
and the academic area's long-range planning indicates that new hiring
would be better done in other areas of specialization.
· An agency external to the campus, such as a credentialling
agency or accreditation agency, required discontinuance of a given
program.
1.400. Upon receipt of a request to discontinue an academic program,
the Vice-President for Academic Affairs shall initiate a program
discontinuance study, except for those situations described in Section
1.300.
II. PROGRAM DISCONTINUANCE STUDY
2.100 Each year, the Executive Committee of the Academic Senate,
with the advice of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, shall
select a Discontinuance Study panel of at least seven (7) full-time
probationary and tenured faculty members.
2.110 No member of the directly affected department(s) or discipline(s)
shall serve on the panel while it is considering possible discontinuance
of that program. If this leaves fewer than five (5) members available
to serve, replacement members shall be named to the panel, by the
same process as was used to form the original panel. At least three
(3) members of the panel (or subgroup of the panel) considering
a given program shall be from outside the College primarily responsible
for offering the program.
2.200 When a program discontinuance study has been officially requested
as described in Section 1.400, the Vice-President for Academic Affairs
shall refer the proposal to the Discontinuance Study Panel.
2.210 The Discontinuance Study Panel shall evaluate all proposed
program discontinuances referred to it according to the procedures
detailed below. The Panel shall respond explicitly to the reasons
given by the appropriate body or individual for requesting the program
discontinuance. The panel shall make a recommendation for each program
being considered, giving the reasons for the recommendation. If
several programs are being considered at the same time, the panel
may list relative priorities for actions.
2.220 In making its recommendations, the program discontinuance
study panel shall consider previous internal and external program
reviews, and shall make explicit all other criteria and evidence
which it uses in arriving at its recommendation.
2.230 The study panel shall conduct its proceedings in public session
except that in issues of personnel the study panel may meet in executive
session. All interested parties, particularly students enrolled
in the program, shall be given reasonable opportunity to present
information they consider relevant to the question. The panel shall
have access to the data necessary to render an informed judgment,
subject to the constraints imposed by the Public Records Act*.
2.300 The study panel may recommend that the program be (a) discontinued;
(b) discontinued unless specified conditions can be met; (c) suspended;
(d) continued; (e) limited in size; (f) offered in whole or in part
only through University College and Extension Services; (g) combined
with another CSULB program; (h) offered jointly with one or more
other CSU campuses. The panel may make other recommendations as
appropriate.
2.310 If the panel recommends discontinuance or suspension, the
report shall specify reasonable mechanisms to permit students enrolled
in the program to complete their degrees.
2.320 If the panel recommends suspension, the report shall include
a recommendation about conditions for reactivation of the program
and about the maximum time to be allowed before the program must
either be reactivated or discontinued.
2.400 The study panel shall forward its recommendations in writing,
supported by a summary of the evidence, to the Office of the Academic
Senate, with copies to the Vice President for Academic Affairs,
the Dean of the college in which the program is offered, and the
chair(s) of the affected department(s), within one semester of receiving
its charge under section 1.400.
III. REVIEW OF RECOMMENDATIONS
3.100 The Chair of the Academic Senate shall have five (5) working
days to transmit the recommendations of the study panel simultaneously
to all appropriate University Councils and to the Vice President
for Academic Affairs. The directly affected departments may forward
comments and further information to the Councils within ten (10)
working days.
3.200 The University Councils shall have thirty (30) working days
to forward their recommendations to the Academic Senate.
3.210 The Graduate Council, Planning and Educational Policies Council,
or Teacher Preparation Committee, as appropriate, shall prepare
a report that includes an evaluation of the effect of each proposed
action on other programs and on the overall ability of the university
to fulfill its mission, as well as other relevant issues.
3.220 In addition, the Vice President for Academic Affairs may forward
her/his recommendations to the Academic Senate.
3.300 The Executive Committee of the Academic Senate shall collect
the recommendations from the Discontinuance Study Panel, the Councils,
and the Vice President for Academic Affairs, and shall prepare a
summary to be distributed to the Senate along with the individual
recommendations. The Executive Committee may suggest wording for
appropriate motions, for action by the Academic Senate. The Academic
Senate shall have twenty (20) working days to consider these materials
and make its own recommendations. Thereafter, all materials bearing
on the study-and-review process shall be transmitted to the President.
3.310 Any time a program discontinuance would result in the layoff
of tenured or tenure track faculty, the Provost must appear before
the Senate to present reasons for the discontinuance before the
program is discontinued.
3.400 The President's decision shall be made known within twenty
(20) working days to the directly affected departments and the Academic
Senate.
IV. SAFEGUARDS FOR STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF
4.100 If the President's response to the Academic Senate's recommendation
is a decision to discontinue or suspend an academic program, students
shall be given thirty (30) days to declare their interest in completing
that program. Thereafter, no additional students shall be admitted
to the program except by permission of the Vice-President for Academic
Affairs. To give students a fair opportunity either to complete
the program or to transfer to another program or university, the
actual termination process should be phased over a reasonable period
of time. The steps of the termination process and the schedule for
its implementation shall be included in the official announcement
of the intended discontinuation.
4.200 Safeguards for faculty and staff are contained within the
appropriate memoranda of understanding between the Board of Trustees
and the exclusive bargaining agents.
* Government Code, Chapter 3,5, Inspection of Public Records 6254.
Except as provided in Section 6254.7, nothing in this chapter shall
be construed to require disclosure of records that are any of the
following . . .(c) Personnel, medical, or similar files, the disclosure
of which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
Effective: Fall 1995
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