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Minnesota State Mankato selected as engineering, manufacturing 'center of excellence'

Minnesota State Mankato is one of four universities selected by the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system to establish new centers of excellence in partnership with community and technical colleges. The Mankato center will focus on engineering and manufacturing excellence.

2006-04-09

Minnesota State Mankato is one of four state universities selected by the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system to establish new "centers of excellence" in partnership with community and technical colleges. The Mankato center will focus on engineering and manufacturing excellence.

"The Minnesota Center of Excellence in Manufacturing and Engineering will become the renowned national model for stimulating strong partnerships between higher education and industry to address workforce needs in Minnesota, and to attract new business from the Midwest to Minnesota," said President Richard Davenport.

Other centers will be established in health care, engineering and information security at three other state universities and community and technical colleges under a recommendation adopted Oct. 19 by the system's Board of Trustees.

Each center will be housed at a state university and have community and technical college partners, and each is or will seek to become regionally or nationally recognized in its area.

All the centers intend to greatly strengthen partnerships with K-12 schools and businesses and industries. Many of the centers will develop innovative curricula and offer hands-on opportunities for career awareness and readiness and for career preparation and development. Applied research to help businesses and industry associations stay in the forefront of meeting workforce challenges will be another focus.

In addition, some centers intend to enhance services to recruit and retain a more diverse student population so as to better reflect the state's changing demographics.

The centers are:

  • The Center for Engineering and Manufacturing Excellence at Minnesota State University, Mankato, with Alexandria Technical College, Anoka Technical College, Hennepin Technical College, Normandale Community College, South Central College and the Northeast Higher Education District.
  • The Center for Strategic Information and Security at Metropolitan State University with Inver Hills Community College and Minneapolis Community and Technical College.
  • The Center for Integrated Health Science Education and Practice at Winona State University with Rochester Community and Technical College, Pine Technical College, Minnesota State College - Southeast Technical College and Ridgewater College.
  • The Consortium for Manufacturing and Applied Engineering at Bemidji State University with Central Lakes College, Northwest Technical College, Northland Community and Technical College, St. Paul College, St. Cloud Technical College, Minneapolis Community and Technical College and Pine Technical College

"By building on the outstanding academic talent, programs and resources already at these institutions, the centers will establish flagship programs in areas critical for the state to maintain its competitive edge," McCormick said. "With two-year colleges and state universities working together, the centers will no doubt attract strong faculty talent that will provide Minnesota residents with best-in-class national programs and draw top students from outside the state."

The centers were selected from among 11 finalists reviewed in a two-step process by business, industry and higher education leaders. "This process encouraged our institutions to create synergies with each other, making each center greater than the sum of its parts," said Linda Baer, senior vice chancellor of academics and student affairs.

"The centers also enable a more strategic use of our resources because the winning proposals already have strong programs in place," Baer said. For example, Minneapolis Community and Technical College, a partner in the Center for Strategic Information Systems and Security, has three grants totaling more than $1 million for computer science, information technology and math education. And, Inver Hills Community College has an award-winning Network Technology and Security degree program, she noted.

"At the same time," Baer said, "we still have many excellent programs at state universities and colleges that will be outside these centers of excellence."

Funding for the centers will come from a $10 million state appropriation initiated by Gov. Tim Pawlenty and approved by the Legislature. Each center will receive $2 million to $4 million over a two-year period, besides being required to generate other funding.

"We're pleased that the governor and Legislature gave us this challenge," said David Paskach, chair of the board's Educational Policy Committee. "We believe we have met it. We're eager to have these centers establish Minnesota as a leader and innovator in higher education."

The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system comprises 32 state universities and community and technical colleges serving the higher education needs of Minnesota. The system serves about 240,000 students per year in credit-based courses and an additional 130,000 students in non-credit courses.

A fact sheet about the centers can be found at http://www.mnscu.edu/media/newsreleases/2005/pdf/centers_of_excellence.pdf

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