[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 70 (Thursday, June 8, 2000)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E915-E916]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING BALL STATE PRESIDENT JOHN E. WORTHEN--A GREAT EDUCATOR
______
HON. DAVID M. McINTOSH
of indiana
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, June 7, 2000
Mr. McINTOSH. Mr. Speaker, today I honor a leader in education in
Indiana and the nation. In the heart of my district in East Central
Indiana lies Ball State University, one of the premier institutions of
higher education in the Midwest. For the last sixteen years Ball State
has been under the capable guidance of University President John E.
Worthen. Sadly, he is leaving the university this year.
Mr. Speaker, greatness is setting bold goals and then having the
determination to accomplish them. John Worthen brought vision and
greatness when he came to the university in 1984 and has spent the last
sixteen years putting his vision into practice. Ball State, Indiana,
and the nation are the better for his efforts. At the start of his
administration, President Worthen focused on broad goals. He aimed for
excellence in all things. The university has reached beyond its grasp
to accomplish his vision. His plan was anchored in the premise that
learning should be a lifelong pursuit. Under his leadership, Ball
State's central mission has been to arm students with the skills,
knowledge, and enthusiasm to continue learning even after they leave
the university.
John Worthen always looked to the future of education, not its past.
He viewed technology as a fundamental component of that mission, and he
directed Ball State's resources toward acquiring that technology. Ball
State established courses and workshops to train faculty and staff to
use the new technologies and started the Center for Teaching Technology
to help faculty use this new tool to enhance their instruction. During
the past ten years, Ball State has spent eighty million dollars on
renovations that have added computer labs, put Internet access in every
residence hall room, and wired every classroom to an interactive fiber-
optic multimedia network. The university now has a student-to-computer
ratio of thirteen-to-one, one of the lowest in the country. This year
Yahoo! Internet Life magazine ranked Ball State among the top twenty in
its annual survey of ``most wired'' universities. These technological
capabilities have made Ball State a national leader in distance
education. The Indiana Higher Education Telecommunication System has
enabled Indiana students to take advanced placement courses--courses
they would otherwise not have access to--that are broadcast from Ball
State's ``Indiana Academy,'' a school for gifted and talented students.
Ball State offers an M.B.A. by distance education and offers nurses the
opportunity to complete degree programs online.
President Worthen's education and training gave him a solid
background for the challenge of running a university. A Midwesterner,
he earned a bachelor of science degree in psychology at Northwestern
University in 1954 and received his master's degree in student
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personnel administration from Columbia University in 1955. He served
four years in the Navy as a carrier pilot and education and legal
officer. He attained the rank of lieutenant. He earned an Ed. D. at
Harvard University in 1964 in counseling psychology and administration
in higher education. John Worthen began his career in education as the
dean of men at American University in Washington, D. C., then moved to
the University of Delaware where he taught education courses and
accepted various administrative responsibilities. In 1979, he became
president of Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Ball State University
invited him to become its eleventh president in 1984.
Although technology has been a major focus, John Worthen's presidency
has been an attack on many fronts. His was not an administration of
timid initiatives. The university reorganized the school year from
academic quarters to semesters; a move that allowed students to involve
themselves more deeply in a subject and that saved the university
thousands of dollars in administrative costs each year. Departments
were realigned to reflect common disciplines. For example, Journalism,
Telecommunications, Speech Communication, and Communication and
Information Studies combined to form a new college, the College of
Communication, Information, and Media. By 1997, it was the fourth
largest college of its kind in the country.
John Worthen has applied the university's resources to statewide
issues. Under his leadership, Ball State has moved to make education
``at home in Indiana'' more attractive to top ability students who
might otherwise leave the state and build their careers and lives
elsewhere. New scholarships aimed at those students have increased the
university's enrollment of National Merit Scholars and increased Honors
College enrollments. For the past three years he and I have worked
together to create a job fair on Ball State's campus to offset recent
factory closings in the area. This year's event attracted seven hundred
job seekers. Three hundred received job offers as a direct result of
the event. Ball State really stepped up to the plate and made a
determined effort to see the Muncie community thrive.
In 1987, Ball State launched Wings for the Future, its first capital
campaign. The goal was to raise forty million dollars. The campaign
collected $44 million and created three endowed chairs and fourteen
professorships. The university is now in the middle of another campaign
that appears headed for the same success with a goal of ninety million
dollars. One-third will go for faculty research, one-third for
scholarships, and one-third for facilities. During John Worthen's
presidency, Ball State's endowment went from twelve million dollars to
eighty-five million dollars.
Ball State researchers were there when the space shuttle Columbia
landed in June 1996, conducting research on the effects of gravity in
space on the astronaut's muscles. Other noteworthy research efforts
have targeted nutrition among the elderly in Indiana, the decline in
frog populations worldwide, tick-borne disease, and cancer prevention.
While research has an important role in education, John Worthen has
always ensured that Ball State's best teachers are still in the
classroom. Ball State professors have won state and national
recognition in teaching, including the 1997 Indiana Professor of the
Year, national teaching awards, and honors for research, architecture,
music, theater performance, history, and public relations, to name just
a few.
Many academic programs at Ball State have received national
recognition. The music engineering technology program has been ranked
first in the nation, the entrepreneurship program ranks fourth. Ball
State has taken the lead in environmental awareness. The university has
established an international conference on environmental education and
practices. The conference draws hundreds of architects from around the
world. The Center for Information and Communication Sciences, created
in 1985, teaches students to design and set up networking systems, an
area in desperate need of trained workers.
Ball State athletics have achieved recognition on the field and in
the classroom. Men's basketball made the NCAA Sweet Sixteen in 1990,
the men's volleyball team has been in the NCAA finals fourteen times,
and women's field hockey went undefeated in conference play for five
consecutive years. But the most impressive figure is Ball State's
athlete graduation rate, at 77 percent, the seventh best rate in the
country.
President Worthen has solidified and expended Ball State's
international ties with study centers abroad and teaching exchanges
with various international universities. The Chronicle of Higher
Education ranks Ball State among the top doctoral granting institutions
for students studying abroad.
Since 1984, the university has built five new facilities, including a
state-of-the-art telecommunications building, a new home for the Human
Performance Laboratory, an arena, and a new alumni center. All of these
improvements and additions have been accomplished with the intent of
making Ball State accessible for people with disabilities.
In closing, I cannot forget to mention Sue. The most complete and
best preserved Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton ever found was named after
its discoverer, Sue Hendrickson. This spring, using people, technology
and programs that were the direct outcome of John Worthen's policies,
Ball State dazzled the nation by bringing Sue's debut at Chicago's
Field Museum of Natural History to an estimated five million school
children nationwide. Ball State uses its technology to connect people
and ideas in meaningful ways. That is what technology is meant to do,
and Ball State certainly has got it right. They were able to get it
right because of John Worthen's vision and follow-through. He leaves
behind a university well prepared to face the challenges and pursue the
possibilities of the twenty-first century.
Mr. Speaker, I have been honored to work along side John Worthen. I
will miss the benefit of his counsel and wisdom. I wish he and his wife
Sandra much happiness as they move on to new challenges.
____________________