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University Of Colorado, Denver: β€˜Work For All': How CU Denver Will Become A Leading Public Urban Research University By 2030

On June 17, Chancellor Marks presented to the CU Board of Regents the 2030 strategic plan, a profound repositioning of CU Denver to be a ...

Alex DeWind

June 22, 2021

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On June 17, Chancellor Marks presented to the CU Board of Regents the 2030 strategic plan, a profound repositioning of CU Denver to be a public urban research university thatΒ works for all:Β learnersΒ of all kinds and at all stagesΒ of life, industries and employers that need talent ready to hit the ground running, and communities requiring new solutions and discoveries.Β Β Β Β 

β€œCU Denver 2030: Make Education Work for All” paints an ambitious future for the institution, created entirely by the Lynx community, and illustrates a viable alternative to more traditional and less accessible models of higher education. The plan contains big, bold ideas, including the aspiration to become the nation’s first equity-serving institution and the desire to be a β€œuniversity for life” that continuously serves the needs of learnersβ€”and employersβ€”over a lifetime.Β 

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The plan leverages many of CU Denver’s greatest strengths and assets, including our downtown location in an emerging global city that combines outdoor adventure and entrepreneurial swagger; the wonderful diversity of our student body; and the intellectual and experiential heft of our faculty, academic and research programs, and professional pathways.

β€œThe cohesive plan addresses head-on the idea that for the last several hundred years, education has not worked for all, particularly not for first-gen students, transfer students, and working parents, populations that CU Denver serves,” Marks said. β€œThis is part of what makes CU Denver unique, both within the CU system and in Colorado. In fact, differentiation among the campuses strengthens CU overall – the sum of the parts is greater than the whole. In our plan, we strive to meet learners where they are and help higher education fit into their lives, not the other way around.”

CU Denver’sΒ 2030 strategic plan consists ofΒ five top-line goals, formed from the input ofΒ 3,000 peopleβ€”faculty, staff, students, alumni, and other stakeholdersβ€”who shared 7,000 ideas throughout the three-phase design thinking process spanning from January to June. (See the 2030 Strategic Plan websiteΒ for more on the process.) Together, our community created this plan to better fulfill our role as a public urban research university, proudly claim our unique identity, and reach our fullest potential.

Marks appointed Martin Dunn,Β PhD, dean of the College of Engineering, Design and Computing, as chair of the Strategic Planning Steering Committee, which provided leadership throughout the process and worked closely with eight vision teams to generate bold, forward-thinking ideas that meet the needs of all students, faculty, and staff and contribute to a more innovative and equitable society.

β€œOne of my greatest takeawaysΒ isΒ thatΒ this is exactly whatΒ our community neededβ€”they wereΒ eagerΒ to help shape the future,Β but they wanted and needed a leader who wouldΒ set a unifying vision toΒ get the best ideasΒ out of them and then gel it into a way forward,” Dunn said. β€œThis is what Chancellor Marks has done.”

Others involved echoed similar, enthusiastic sentiments about the inclusive nature of the process and what lies ahead for CU Denver.Β 

β€œI’m proud that these very large-rostered vision teams have been able to work in concert one with another to produce what we are about to see: a very solid vision for this university,” said John Ronquillo, PhD, assistant professor in the School of Public Affairs, vision team co-chair, and co-chair of theΒ Equity Task Force, formedΒ in October 2020 as a result of Marks’ Equity Listening Sessions.

Gabe Castano, assistant vice chancellor for enrollment management and a vision team participant, said, β€œWe were very intentional about casting a wide net both in our teams as well as in our student surveys. We thought big and adventurous about what we wanted to accomplish.” 

Jaimie Carrington, program director for undergraduate recruitment, retention, and student success, and vision team co-chair, added, β€œThe sky is the limit. We are looking at something pivotal on a global scale, and I’m very proud to be part of that.” 

Our 2030 GoalsΒ 

Our 2030 GoalsΒ 

The goals represent the big picture and the long view, Marks emphasized. Now, efforts will shift from visionary to concrete: establishingΒ annual goals andΒ metrics and setting and aligning priorities.Β A formal rollout and celebration will take place this fall, when the campus community returns to in-person learning and activities.Β 

β€œWe have never been better positioned to lead this strategic work,” said Jennifer Sobanet,Β executive vice chancellor of administration and strategy.Β β€œIt will take all of us acrossΒ the university to be innovative, creative, and to take risks. There will be challenges along the way but, importantly, there will be huge successes that everybody will be a part of.”

This is CU Denver’s time to tell its unique story and further fortify the CU System in the process.Β 

β€œNot all strategic plans are the same,” Marks said. β€œWhat we undertook was what our community needs at this time, and I am grateful for their passion, creative thinking, extraordinary effort, and belief in our collective future.Β We truly believe this is CU Denver’s moment.”

Creating a Roadmap for CU Denver’s Next 10 Years: Hear from some of the CU Denver community members behind the scenes of the 2030 Strategic Planning Process


This press release was produced by the University of Colorado, Denver. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

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