Final Communication
6-22-23
Dear Faculty and Staff,
We write today to provide you with a report on the Board’s deliberations on Better Lesley, an initiative to identify how we create the best experience for our students that is consistent with the Strategic Framework but allows us to live within our means. We are grateful for the broad participation of the community in this process to face our challenges and understand our opportunities together. We understand that considering changes that may need to happen in the future can be difficult but having an open way to obtain input has been and will continue to be critical to making the best decisions.
How We Arrived at This Moment. In May 2021, faced with the challenges of the pandemic, we developed a way to balance our budget over three years. Following this plan, we were able to reduce a pre-existing budget gap from $7.5 million to $2.5 million, despite the effects of COVID, by investing in better enrollment, financial aid and marketing. We also invested, among many other things, in our students’ mental health, a chief reason students leave higher education, by partnering with Riverside Community Care to open the first mental health clinic on a college campus in the Commonwealth. At first, the strategy was working, as we experienced the anticipated slow return to pre-COVID enrollment levels and narrowed the budget gap. For a variety of reasons, mostly external, in Fall of 2022, we saw that these trends were shifting significantly and that we faced an operational deficit that was structural. Under these circumstances, we recognized that incremental change was not an option. We needed to re-think our offerings and the way we operate to work with more effectiveness, simplicity, and attention to changing student needs. We, of course, are not alone in this. Others in higher education, particularly in our sector, and in other sectors, such as retail, finance and tech, face similar challenges in rapidly shifting marketplaces.
Strengths. Fortunately, we come at these challenges with strength. We have a strong reputation as a leader in the education of teachers, mental health professionals, artists and professionals in related fields, like the business of these and similar professions. We have a healthy endowment thanks to generous donors. We have made improvements on which to build, including a unique general education program, the opening of the Riverside Outpatient Center, new technology and systems, a collaboratively created Strategic Framework and a thoughtful campus plan that will serve our campus and the greater Cambridge community.
Better Lesley Process. To build on these strengths and create a foundation for the future, we began in January engaging cabinet leaders, management faculty leadership and other key academic and administrative leaders to look at how to optimize five areas: enrollment, academic, non- academic, financial and campus plan. More than 100 faculty and staff across the university convened to discuss how to improve Lesley’s student experience while living within our means. Out of the work of these groups, eight cross- university task forces were formed to look in depth at emerging ideas.
Those task forces have shared recommendations ranging from thinking about how to build on our strong experience supporting student cohorts, to imagining new structures, to streamlining and better supporting partnerships that help our students. The willingness of community members to consider combining areas and structuring programs to provide students the most flexibility is appreciated, and we have heard the desire for those closest to programs—academic and non-academic—to be involved in planning those changes and incorporated that into the plan ahead. We also considered the recommendations of academic leaders and administration, reviewed data on many trends related to our academic offerings and drew on our long understanding of the institution and the many things that have been considered and debated over the years.
Goals. At the center of this work are our students and community. We understand that students seek an experience that is more convenient, less expensive and more flexible to meet their academic interests and career and other needs. We know that faculty and staff seek support in making necessary changes as well as professional and career development. We see the role we play and can continue to play in our broader community in supporting the employers who hire our graduates, providing access to services and enrichment opportunities and developing our campus to be an urban oasis and place of gathering. We look forward to providing stronger support to our alumni through lifelong support programs, help in developing their own practice and providing ways to come together to make and display art.
What We Will Change. The Strategic Framework and the work of Better Lesley have provided a path on how to achieve these goals. The Board of Trustees has charged us to do the following:
- Re-focus on Lesley’s core strengths, invest in their growth, and move away from low-enrolled programs,
- Operate as one university, academically and administratively, and
- Continue the work of the Strategic Framework and the Campus Plan
So What Will This Mean? For students, we will focus on making a Lesley education more convenient and accessible by re-imagining online and other modalities, the timing of courses, dual degrees and how non-degree seekers can take Lesley offerings as and when they desire. To make our programs more student responsive, we will invest in work for our faculty to create more streamlined inter-disciplinary pathways and more flexibility in how our programs can be completed over less time. To make the personalized education that Lesley provides more economic, we will continue to price Lesley at or near the low to mid-end of our private competitors and develop partnerships and donors to offer scholarships, like those now available to Riverside Scholars@Lesley, combine stronger financial aid, guaranteed internships and cohort support. We will also invest in making advising and student services more proactive, building skills outside classroom work that provide the basis for shining in course work, including piloting a cohort model to connect students with common interests to each other.
For our faculty and staff, we will prioritize ways to help manage the work of change, planning with you and addressing key stress points. We will institute professional development about Lesley and its work and move to more cross-disciplinary and institutional understanding in new structures we design in conversation. The structure of the university will become less complex, and increasingly facilities and systems will be improved to provide greater support.
For our alumni, we will be an engaged and helpful partner over the arc of their careers, offering professional development opportunities in the form of weekend courses or retreats, certificates and professional credentialling and affordable opportunities to pursue advanced degrees through partnerships. For alumni from our Threshold program, and other neurodiverse adults, we will offer lifelong support, whether for career or for social and residential life. We seek new ways to bring alumni together like Alumni Weekend, spaces for alumni artists to work together and an art store.
For our community, we are continuing to develop affordable pipelines that diversify and expand the ranks of critical professions, such as education and mental health, like Riverside Scholars@Lesley and the Cambridge paraprofessional program. We envision the Doble campus developing into a learning-by-doing campus with aligned partners, such as a pre-school or a daycare facility or an art studio.
What We Will Do Next. With these goals in mind and with the Board’s support, we will do the following:
To re-focus on Lesley’s core strengths, invest in their growth, and move away from low-enrolled programs, we will:
- Plan over the summer, and launch in the fall, four management faculty teams to re-define how our core academic offerings are structured: to combine programmatic areas, to transition non-core, low-enrolled programs, to create more opportunities for dual degrees and to develop program structures with greater flexibility, efficiency and accessibility in time and format (including online and offerings for non-degree students), with a draft strategic plan for each area by mid-fall.
To operate as one university, academically and administratively, we will:
- Launch over the summer four administrative teams to implement this charge, re-imagining advising to more proactively support students throughout the university and develop cross university understanding of programs, developing unified processes around all enrollment channels, implementing a Green Carpet experience for employees and re-designing registration and scheduling to improve the scheduling of classes so it is clear from the outset—to the maximum extent possible— what classes will run at what times and in which modalities.
- Work with the four management faculty teams to define a way to unify academic work and look across the university in academic planning.
- Develop over the summer, and launch in the fall, a cross-university, inclusive NECHE self-study.
To continue the work of the Strategic Framework and the Campus Plan, we will:
- Continue the work on the campus plan, selling buildings that we no longer use or no longer suit our needs-including the President’s House- and investing the proceeds in renovating the South campus, University Hall and a learning-by-doing environment on our Doble campus.
- Accelerate processes and procedures, and build ties to employers who hire our graduates, and to grants and gifts, so that Lesley students and alumni have more financial aid, guaranteed internships, and a supportive cohort experience around their professional pathways.
By re-imagining our university at this critical time, we are making the difficult but strategic moves to overcome a near-term challenge and position us to serve our students and communities well into the future. Our university has a key role to play in education, mental health, the arts and related fields, like the business of these and similar professions. We must continue to educate and support the teachers, counsellors, therapists, social workers, artists, policy makers, writers and business leaders who practice these arts and act as catalysts for a more connected and just world.
Kind regards,
Hans D. Strauch
Chair, Lesley Board of Trustees
Janet L. Steinmayer
President, Lesley University