Hanlon Focusing on Five-Point Agenda

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President Hanlon鈥檚 goal for his remaining time in office: finish what he started.

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Hanlon speaks at the public launch of the Call to Lead campaign in Alumni Hall
President Philip J. Hanlon 鈥77 speaks at the public launch of The Call to Lead campaign in Alumni Hall in April 2018. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00)
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The Hanlon Years

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When President Philip J. Hanlon 鈥77 announced last month that he would step down in June 2023, he received an outpouring of messages of gratitude from faculty, students, staff, and alumni for all that Dartmouth has achieved over the past eight years.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been heartwarming,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut we still have some work to do.鈥

Over the course of the next year and a half, President Hanlon plans to focus his energy on the remaining priorities of his agenda to enhance Dartmouth鈥檚  and the , first outlined in two major addresses delivered less than two months into his presidency.

鈥淚n November of 2013, I laid out a 10-year vision for the campus. We have done so much of it already,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want to focus now on the things that we still have to get across the finish line.鈥

At the Feb. 21 meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences,  five primary objectives for the coming year:

  • Completing the last major goals of  campaign to advance Dartmouth鈥檚 academic excellence and innovation in scholarship and teaching. These include meeting the remaining fundraising targets for financial aid; strengthening programs that support diversity, equity, and inclusion; and launching a major renovation and expansion of the 天美影视kins Center for the Arts. In addition, he will embark on a 鈥淵ear of Gratitude鈥 to celebrate the more than 90,000 alumni, family, and friends who have contributed to Dartmouth through the campaign.
  • Putting in place a unit that will consider and support potential new revenue-generating activities that will expand Dartmouth鈥檚 impact and reach and help position the institution to compete in the rapidly changing landscape of higher education.
  • Working closely with athletics to develop an athletics action plan鈥攖o be released in the coming months鈥攂ased on the comprehensive reviews announced in 2021.
  • Helping the Dartmouth community reflect on and mark : the 50th anniversaries of coeducation, , and the .
  • Beginning an exploration of the structure of the Arts and Sciences that will look at how to better empower the division to pursue its most important priorities.

Finishing Strong: The Call to Lead Campaign

The Call to Lead鈥攖he most ambitious comprehensive fundraising campaign in Dartmouth鈥檚 history鈥攐fficially kicked off in 2018. To date, it has raised over $3 billion from more than 90,000 alumni, family, and friends鈥攎ore than twice what any previous Dartmouth campaign has generated. Over the coming 鈥淵ear of Gratitude,鈥 Hanlon plans to host events鈥攊n Hanover and beyond鈥攖o thank all who have contributed.

鈥淲e not only want to finish the campaign strong, but we want everyone who has contributed to feel our gratitude,鈥 Hanlon says. 鈥淓veryone who gave has made an important contribution to this campus.鈥

The Call to Lead has supported Dartmouth鈥檚 efforts to transform the West End of campus, revitalize Dartmouth鈥檚 Arts District, and enhance the student experience through programs such as  (DP2),  (FYSEP), and the . It has helped build the institution鈥檚 capacity for research and graduate studies by establishing the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced studies, creating academic clusters aimed at solving problems of global scope, expanding several signature postdoctoral programs, and so much more.

鈥淚n many ways the Dartmouth community is beginning to see the impact, with the new buildings that are about to open, for instance,鈥 Hanlon says. 鈥淚t takes a little longer to get some of the programmatic developments up and running, but people are going to see a lot more in the next few years.鈥

The campaign鈥檚 focus now is on continuing to expand access to the Dartmouth experience through financial aid; investing in a safe, equitable, diverse, and inclusive campus; and launching the 天美影视 renovation and expansion鈥攁 cornerstone of Dartmouth鈥檚 Arts District. Construction is slated to begin in late 2022.

鈥淭he 天美影视, and the arts, are the heart of creativity at Dartmouth and critical to our liberal arts mission, which is why they are such a central component of the campaign,鈥 Hanlon says.

On the access front, the campaign has raised approximately $400 million for financial aid out of a goal of $500 million. These gifts have allowed Dartmouth to remove loans from financial aid packages for families earning up to $125,000 and waive the parental contribution to educational costs for families earning under $65,000. Most recently, Dartmouth announced a major gift expanding its need-blind admissions policy to include international students.

鈥淥ur goal now is to eliminate loans entirely from our undergraduate financial aid packages,鈥 Hanlon says.

Hanlon also wants to complete funding for the campaign鈥檚 diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives鈥攊n particular, supporting early-career fellowships for faculty and establishing a proposed institute for Black intellectual and cultural life.

Envisioning Opportunities for Dartmouth鈥檚 Future

While Dartmouth鈥檚 recent fundraising success and endowment returns are cause for celebration, Hanlon has said that the funding model for higher education is unsustainable because the costs to provide a high-touch residential education will always grow faster than the traditional revenue base coming from philanthropy, tuition, and federal grants.

For the past year and a half, trustees and senior leaders have been exploring strategic directions that would pave the way for Dartmouth to establish new sources of revenue while better situating the institution within the future landscape of higher education.

These innovative programs鈥攚hich could, for example, be structured like existing initiatives such as the highly successful low-residency  program offered through a collaboration between the Tuck School of Business and the Geisel School of Medicine, or Tuck鈥檚 longstanding 鈥攚ill add to Dartmouth鈥檚 bottom line, complement the core residential experience, and leverage its reputation in new ways to new audiences, making Dartmouth more broadly accessible to a more diverse population.

鈥淲e have a financial, pedagogical, and a moral imperative to pursue these opportunities, and doing so will help Dartmouth lead the direction of higher education well into the 21st century,鈥 Hanlon says. 鈥淭his is not just my initiative. This is a trustee objective at the highest level.鈥

The next step is to hire a leader, reporting to the president, whose mandate will be to find ways to explore and move forward with the best of these big ideas while supporting the innovators already working on campus. A search committee is in the process of finding the right person for this role.

A New Model for Arts and Sciences?

Hanlon has asked Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences 鈥攊n collaboration with appropriate stakeholders and governance committees鈥攖o lead a review of the undergraduate college within the administrative structure of Dartmouth. Smith鈥檚 mandate is to explore alternative organizational and budgetary models for the Arts and Sciences division, whose budget has long been part of Dartmouth鈥檚 centralized operations.

鈥淭he primary purpose of this project is to align decision making, priority setting, and resource allocation across all units invested in advancing the core undergraduate mission,鈥 Smith says.

While a decision is unlikely before the end of his tenure, Hanlon expects the review process to help the division better understand if and how it might improve.

鈥淲e want Arts and Sciences to feel fully empowered to follow its most creative ideas and most important priorities,鈥 says Hanlon. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the flow of resources, and also about autonomy and opportunity鈥攂eing nimble enough to take risks.鈥

50 Years of Coeducation, Native American Studies, and Black Alumni at Dartmouth

The expansion of the Dartmouth experience to include an increasingly diverse community was the most profound transformation in the institution鈥檚 252-year history. This transformation began 50 years ago, in the 1970s, with the trustees鈥 historic vote for coeducation, the rededication of Dartmouth to its founding mission of Native education, and the establishment of the first network of Black Dartmouth alumni.

鈥淭he recognition of these anniversaries, which symbolize Dartmouth鈥檚 decision to open our classrooms to everyone, is an opportunity to reflect on the institution鈥檚 past and envision the future that we want,鈥 Hanlon says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we celebrate how far we鈥檝e traveled as an institution and acknowledge the distance we still have to go.鈥

An Athletics Action Plan

In the next few months, Dartmouth will release a comprehensive athletics action plan designed to safeguard equity and inclusion in Dartmouth sports.

鈥淒artmouth is committed to making sure that we are realizing the full potential of all of our student-athletes,鈥 Hanlon says.

A Time of Action

鈥淭he next year and a half will be full of action and ambition, because we have important things left to do.鈥

But Hanlon emphasizes that he will not be working alone.

鈥淚鈥檓 so proud of what the Dartmouth community has accomplished in the past eight-and-a-half years,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t takes all of us to move the institution forward. I feel lucky to have been joined by so many talented, committed, passionate people鈥攕tudents, faculty, staff, and alumni鈥攊n doing this work.鈥

Hannah Silverstein