Strategic Planning
  Strategic Plans
  Academic Colleges
  Administrative Divisions
  Administrative Units
  Planning Material

A.Q.I.P.
· A.Q.I.P.Home
· Timeline of Activities
· Resource Material

SPCI Resource Links

SPCI Staff

Institutional Research and Information Management
· IRIM Home
· Institutional Data

Institutional Assessment
· Assessment Home
· Surveys

 

Official A.Q.I.P. Website



   

 

 

Continuous Improvement Advisory Committee
March 2003

 

Chairperson:
-Dr. Crystal Mills, Interim Senior Executive for Strategic Planning and Continuous Improvement, and Professor of Social Work

 

Committee Members:


-Dr. Imtiaz Ahmad, Professor, Computer Information Systems, and Faculty Council Representative

Dr. Daryl Barton, Associate Professor, Marketing, and President of Faculty Council
-Dr. James Berry, Associate Dean, College of Education
-Mark Byrd, Executive Director, Institutional Research and Information Management
-Margaret Cline, Chief Information Officer and Executive Director of Information and Communications Technology
-Dr. John Dugger, Dean, College of Technology
-Rebecca Figura, Director, Housing Services
-Ellen Gold, Director, University Health Services
-Dr. Raouf Hanna, Department Head, Economics
-Barbara Hopkins, Director, Center for Quality
-Steve Holda, Assistant to the Vice President, Business and Finance
-Bernice Lindke, Director, Financial Aid
-Dr. Mary Sue Marz, Department Head, Nursing
-Dr. Enos Massie, Director, Academic Service Learning, Associate Professor, Social Work, and Faculty Council Representative
-Deborah Silverman, Assistant Professor School of Health Sciences
-Vicki Reaume Mushisky, Director, Alumni Relations
-Dr. Robert Neely, Department Head, Biology
-Bob Salisbury, Associate Director, Academic Advising
-Kathleen Tinney, Assistant Vice President, University Relations
-Dr. Sandra Williams, Director, Institutional Assessment, Institutional Research and Information Management

 






Questions/Comments/Suggestions? Email the webmaster.
Script execution time: 0.011 seconds