Grizzoola said:
Someone with only a business and little academic background is not suitable to run a university like UM, or any university. Ambrose and Feinstein are better candidates than Bodnar, or even Martin.
The mission of any educational institution is far different from the mission of any business. Likewise w/ the government & business. Colleges and universities began out of largely religious organizations, which emphasized humanities studies to prepare their students for the ministry. Many students, who did not want to enter the ministry, desiring a general education as a basis for their professions, were accepted.
That's why we have our Harvards, Princetons, the models of higher ed., in this country. Our higher ed. institutions were originally formed with intellectual missions. In 1862, the Morrill Act basically fused the intellectual part with the vocational part (i.e., engineering, ag, etc.). It has long been held that the model of the "Renaissance Man," a person who spans both the humanities and his/her chosen profession, is the model for future leaders in both the intellectual and vocational spheres. IOW, "applied wisdom."
Let's not turn the MT higher ed. system into a purely vocational system. My 2 cents, anyway.
Oh, BS. Lots of non-academics run and have been presidents of universities. In any event, Bodnar has not only been in business, but has been in the military and has been a professor. He has had training from some of the best leaders in the US; lead people in life or death situations; is trained in economics; knows how to read financial statements, deal with numbers, and be accountable; and would be a terrific president for UM, especially at this time. My view is that Bodnar would start putting UM back on the map again, and would be very qualified to clean up the messes, which were made largely by an academic (and probably one you supported when he became president).
The board of regents specifically sought, or didn't rule out, non-traditional candidates.
See the below stats:
"The Nontraditionals"
"The American Council on Education’s 2007 report on the college presidency found that 13.1 percent of presidents came directly from prior positions outside higher education, a dip from 14.7 percent in 2001 (but an increase from 10.1 percent in 1986). Private colleges were more likely to hire leaders from outside higher education than public ones -- although, unsurprisingly, some of the most high-profile examples of late have not been the leaders of small, tuition-dependent liberal arts colleges but those of big public universities and systems."
Dartmouth once had a president who had been a CEO of a public company, Tonka Toys. Former generals and military people have been college presidents. Former politicians.
The streak continues. I don't recall a single post you have made that I agreed with. With a post like this, now I can see what the problem probably is.