At
the first meeting of
the College’s Strategic
Planning Committee,
which I recently
convened, Professor
Richard Androne offered
this trenchant Pauline
admonition to the Thessalonians as a
phrase that characterized our work.
Co-chaired by Professor Thomas
Brogan and John Baily ’65, vice chair of
the Board of Trustees, the Committee is
a broadly representative group of
Albrightians that will chart the future of
the College. Our task is ambitious. It
includes reviewing and revising the
current strategic plan adopted by the
Board of Trustees in 2002; connecting the
budget-making process to plan priorities;
aligning the strategic-planning process
with our Middle States Review; and
developing an ongoing process to assess
and revise our plan – all in time for the
Board’s endorsement in October.
Those are important tasks indeed, but
the Strategic Planning Committee’s
charge is actually far broader and deeper
than this rather nuts and bolts list. I am
asking them not just to revise, but to set
about re-visioning.
The act of planning has to work
simultaneously in two directions – looking
back and looking forward. Albright is
among the oldest institutions of higher
learning in the nation, and the deep
foundation of our rich heritage and
history must be acknowledged – we must,
indeed, “hold fast to that which is good.”
From a thoughtful examination of what is
good and what we must be certain to
retain, we will turn to the future, knowing
that the path ahead is not predetermined
by our past, but will rather be the
outcome of enhancing the good and
building on it for the future.
Visioning for the future is a process
that is both creative and disciplined, and
along the way we must ask ourselves a lot
of challenging questions. What makes the
difference between a great college and a
good one? (James Collins’ Good to
Great: Why some companies make the
leap– and others don’t, is instructive for
higher education in its analysis of why
some institutions get ahead of the pack
and stay out in front, in reputation and
productivity.) What can we be best in the
world at? What are we deeply passionate
about? What drives our economic engine? How do we survive and thrive
in a competitive higher education marketplace?
How do we prepare for the unknowns of
a rapidly changing world? How do we
achieve an excellence uniquely our own?
Finally, and most importantly, what is
the central value proposition of Albright
College? Why have generations of faithful
faculty and staff members, as well as
alumni, parents and friends devoted
themselves so generously to nurturing
and advancing this place? Although it
would be premature for me to offer a
definitive answer to these questions, it has
become clear to me in my short time here
that the special relationship between our
faculty and our students lies at the heart
of what makes Albright great – and what
makes it worth strengthening and
supporting in the days ahead.
The Strategic Planning Committee will
engage the on-campus community,
alumni and friends in the conversation
around these questions, and will ask for
your input not just in the development of
the plan but in its implementation and
on-going assessment. I assure you that
your voices will be heard and that you will
have opportunities to respond to the
work we are doing.
I look forward to our conversation.

Lex O. McMillan III, Ph.D.
President
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