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CNI SPRING 1999 TASK FORCE MEETING

HANDOUT

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FRYE LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
A Project of the Council on Library
and Information Resources
[CNI Spring '99 Icon]

Thanks to a grant of $1.2 million in core funding from the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation, the Council on Library and Information Resources, in collaboration with Emory University, has established the Billy E. Frye Leadership Institute. Named in honor of Billy. E. Frye, former Chancellor of Emory University and member of CLIR's Board of Directors, in recognition of his years of innovative leadership and support for academic libraries and information technology, the Institute's purpose is to effect fundamental change in the way universities manage their information resources in the digital era.

As more information becomes available in electronic format, organizational responsibilities on university campuses have become less distinct. Meanwhile, the instructional and scholarly uses of technology have begun to change teaching and research methodologies. Today, digital information and communications technologies are shaping new relationships among librarians, their information technology counterparts, and faculty members.

The mission of the Frye Institute will be to provide opportunities for continuing education to individuals who currently hold, or will one day assume, positions that make them responsible for leading scholarly information services in the higher education community. Over the next decade the Frye Institute will recruit some 600 - 700 professionals -- most likely to be in midcareer and drawn from library administrative staffs, computer centers, and faculties, who can lead during this vibrant period of change and transformation in the means of transmitting knowledge: a change that entails far-reaching implications for the way universities allocate financial resources and fulfill their educational mission.

The Frye Institute is expected to have an initial life of 10 years during which it will enroll 50 - 70 individuals each year. Participants will undergo a professional development experience that begins with a two-week seminar on the Emory University campus, proceeds through a subsequent year-long practicum at the individual's home campus, and concludes with a summary session that reunites the participants to evaluate what they have learned.

The Frye Institute's program is being designed to equip these future leaders with a sophisticated understanding of the characteristics of leadership in the academic environment. It is planned as a kind of living laboratory where problems facing academic institutions today can be considered by a class who, because of their experience and potential, may have as much to contribute to the sessions as the instructors. Indeed we anticipate the atmosphere of the Institute will prove so exhilarating as to erase the line between student and teacher more often than not!

The Frye Institute is intended for a dedicated core of individuals whose motivation for attending is directly tied to serving their institutions more knowledgeably and effectively. Planning for the Institute is just beginning. An Advisory Committee has been appointed to help establish the Institute's curriculum. CLIR staff, with the assistance of consultants and the Advisory Committee, will identify faculty and prepare application materials over the next several months. The first Frye Institute class is scheduled, appropriately enough, for the year 2000.


FORMULATING A CURRICULUM FOR THE FRYE INSTITUTE:

Following are examples of some of the issues that the Advisory Committee is considering in formulating the curriculum




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