Four strategic priorities drive Fairfield University. Amid the powerful forces shaping higher education today, we strive to ensure the transformative learning experiences necessary for our students to meet the world as it is and will be. Chief among these interconnected forces are:
Demographic changes, including a steady decline in the college-aged population The economics of supply and demand coupled with the economics of the labor market that will increase the cost of delivering a college education Advances in technology, particularly related to expanding the graduate student market
Overall, demographic trends forecast shrinking demand for the expansive and expensive supply of higher education as it races to keep up with rapid advances in technology. These forces, decades in the making, currently compound each other to create pressures that threaten the existence of certain institutions.
To meet these forces, Fairfield can harness its innovative spirit so that we can grow in reputation and national prominence, grow in connection with community and industry, and grow in educational offerings. Related to these growth avenues, four strategic priorities shape our collective pursuit over the next three to five years: preparing for the advent of big data, engaging industry and community partners, extending our geographic reach, and exploring new instructional modalities.
Big Data
Advances in technology disrupt the world in which we live and work, as we become saturated in data. Fairfield already is responding to the need to educate students in interpreting and using big data to inform decision making. These include a slate of new programs related to data analysis. In addition to a new Master’s of Science in Marketing Analytics and Strategy in the Dolan School of Business, the School of Engineering has a set of five-year programs in Applied Data Analysis, including tracks in Psychology, Sociology, and Biology. We will build on this strength to position the School of Engineering as our nexus for big data in ways that will grow our reputation. Also essential to the School of Engineering’s growth will be increased emphasis on applied research through enhanced industry partnerships.
Industry and Community Partners
Meaningful connections with community and industry partners in ways that shape our student learning experiences is an important differentiator for programs across the University. The College of Arts and Sciences’ Departments of Communication, Visual and Performing Arts, and English are developing opportunities for their students with an eye to engage industry partners in the field of media. The new Media Center represents one way that growth in communication and media studies will build Fairfield’s reputation and national prominence. The Center for Social Impact, among other Centers and Institutes, connects academics to the community to create deep, reciprocal, and sustainable partnerships grounded in shared mutual learning.
Geographic Expansion
We will pilot opportunities to bring the excellence of a Fairfield education to new geographic areas around the United States. The Egan School of Nursing and Health Studies has, for instance, partnered with Creighton University on midwifery training. The Egan School also pioneers our efforts at geographic expansion as we look to establish our second-degree nursing program in an area of the country facing a nursing shortage. Moreover, we hope to use the learnings from the geographic expansion of nursing to identify other distinctive Fairfield programs well-suited to help meet urgent community needs around the country, and, in doing so, grow Fairfield’s impact. We have restructured Global Fairfield to advance our reach well beyond national borders to the international community.
New Modalities
Our fourth strategic priority is to explore delivering a Fairfield education to new populations of graduate students through online and hybrid programs. Over the next five to seven years, we aim to build the infrastructure at Fairfield University to grow our graduate online program offerings from current programs serving approximately 100 students, to 15 to 20 programs serving approximately 2,000 students. The curricular development, vetting, approval, and delivery of these programs is being done by Fairfield faculty. To support our efforts to recruit and admit online learners, we are working with an online program manager for a specified time period. Simultaneously, we are building our internal capacity to develop, launch, and deliver online instruction. Critical to this effort are advanced capacities in marketing, recruitment, and admissions.
These four strategic priorities position Fairfield University to meet a daunting future, a situation which presents us with both the responsibility and opportunity to continue Fairfield’s growth trajectory. Emerging from our collective work, these priorities focus our efforts and broaden our horizons – positioning our School of Engineering as the nexus for big data and applied research; connecting with community and industry to enhance student learning through our Centers and Institutes and in communication and media studies programs; expanding our geographic footprint, nationally through the Egan School, and internationally through Global Fairfield; and exploring new modalities as we enlist partners to help recruit and enroll students in our uniquely developed online graduate programs. These four guideposts will chart our course through uncertain times while we keep our eyes clearly set on the horizon, on the magis, as we always strive for the more.