Â鶹´«Ã½ 2023-2029
Hawai¡®i¡¯s University for Today and Tomorrow
Our Aspirations
The University of Hawai¡®i (UH) offers opportunity and hope for every resident of Hawai¡®i. As the sole provider of higher public education in the state, the Â鶹´«Ã½can drive a more vibrant, sustainable, resilient, just and kind future across our islands. And our scholarship must address the opportunities and challenges of Hawai¡®i, the Pacific and our planet.
We want the university to be grounded in traditional Hawaiian values, in aloha, to create a strong sense of place, while also serving as a forward-looking economic engine driving hubs of innovation and research.
As the Â鶹´«Ã½begins its 116th year of service, we must remain vigilant, anticipate what is coming and act with agility and compassion to maintain a vital role in shaping the future of our island home. It must be Hawai¡®i¡¯s university for today and tomorrow.
Our Vision
The University of Hawai¡®i is the world¡¯s premier integrated higher education system, advancing the quality of life for all the people of Hawai¡®i through robust educational offerings and world-class discovery while modeling how institutions must fulfill responsibilities to indigenous people and place in the 21st century.
Our Mission
With a focus on creating a healthy and thriving future for all, the University of Hawai¡®i provides broad educational opportunity as the higher education destination of choice in the Pacific that nurtures the personal success, leadership capacity and positive engagement of every resident of Hawai¡®i. It achieves global impact by enriching the fundamental knowledge of humankind through engagement in world-class research, scholarship and service that promotes the welfare and sustainability of Hawai¡®i¡¯s people and environment. Woven through all it does is an appreciation of and commitment to indigenous Hawaiian people, culture, values and wisdom.
Imperative Fulfill kuleana to Native Hawaiians and Hawai¡®i
Goal
Model what it means to be an indigenous-serving and indigenous-centered institution: Native Hawaiians thrive, traditional Hawaiian values and knowledge are embraced, and Â鶹´«Ã½scholarship and service advance all Native Hawaiians and Hawai¡®i.
Imperative Develop successful students for a better future
Goal
Educate more students, empowering them to achieve their goals and contribute to a civil society.
Imperative Meet Hawai¡®i¡¯s workforce needs of today and tomorrow
Goal
Eliminate workforce shortages in Hawai¡®i while preparing students for a future different than the present.
Imperative Diversify Hawai¡®i¡¯s economy through UH innovation and research
Goal
Build and sustain a thriving Â鶹´«Ã½research and innovation enterprise that addresses local and global challenges by linking fundamental scientific discovery with applied research necessary for technological innovation to create jobs and advance a knowledge-based economy.
Our Findings
What We Heard and Learned
The strategic planning process yielded valuable insights about the direction of the University of Hawai¡®i. Remarkably, Â鶹´«Ã½faculty, staff, and students and others in the community share common aspirations for the UH. The Â鶹´«Ã½ Steering Committee was able to distill the responses from the surveys, interviews and town hall meeting discussions into five foundational principles and four imperatives.
Foundational Principles
- Hawaiian Place of Learning
The Â鶹´«Ã½champions the principles of aloha, caring for people and place, as we integrate Hawaiian language, culture, history and values across the institution and its work. - Statewide Need
The UH¡¯s primary responsibility as the only public university system is to support the needs of the state of Hawai¡®i. - Diversity and Equity
The Â鶹´«Ã½upholds its commitment to provide higher education opportunities for all, especially those historically underrepresented, including Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, Filipino, economically disadvantaged, first generation, LGBTQ+, rural students and students with disabilities – as well as continue to diversify its faculty, staff and leadership. - Sustainability
The Â鶹´«Ã½recognizes its responsibility to the ¡®¨¡ina, to steward its natural resources, and to develop solutions to the complex challenges of sustainability, resilience, and climate change. - Stewardship of Resources
The Â鶹´«Ã½is committed to ensuring the university¡¯s economic viability and will responsibly organize, align and allocate institutional resources effectively as a system, including the stewardship of its facilities, processes, and human resources.
Foundations
The foundation of the work to develop the University of Hawai?i Â鶹´«Ã½, 2023-2029 is the Third Decade Report. The report provides an extensive scan of state, national, and international trends and emerging issues, as well as extensive interviews with campus and community members. Several of the proposed strategies come directly from this report.
Our previously completed Â鶹´«Ã½Strategic Directions (2015-2021) are also embedded in this foundation. The University of Hawai?i Strategic Directions, 2015-2021 included five priority areas:
- Hawai?i Graduation Initiative
- Hawai?i Innovation Initiative
- 21st Century Facilities
- Mission Focused System
- High Performing System
Using the action strategies and metrics in these five areas, significant progress (summary of accomplishments) has been made in increasing graduation rates and degree production, increasing research funding, improving facilities, and increasing online capacity, among other areas.
These Â鶹´«Ã½Strategic Directions have guided us at a high level, and our post-pandemic plans have helped us focus on what Hawai?i needs most from public higher education during these challenging times. They set forth shared directions and purpose toward high-priority outcomes for our institution and our state.
Developing Our Â鶹´«Ã½
Collaborative Process and Broad Engagement
This strategic plan sets out to define the University of Hawai¡®i¡¯s path forward for the next six years. A dedicated Â鶹´«Ã½ Steering Committee was established by President Lassner with representatives recommended by the systemwide shared governance organizations, campus leaders and systemwide offices.
Recognizing that virtually everyone in Hawai¡®i is a stakeholder of the Â鶹´«Ã½system and has a vested interest in its success, the Â鶹´«Ã½ Steering Committee believed it was important to create opportunities not only for the university faculty, staff, and students to share their thoughts and perspectives, but also for the broader community including residents, employers and government officials. The goal was to engage the community to collectively own the future of the UH. This plan, as presented, represents and incorporates hundreds of hours of listening and learning from individuals inside and outside the Â鶹´«Ã½who care.
The Committee deployed a number of methods to capture and analyze feedback from various stakeholders.
- Surveys were sent to students, faculty, and staff to develop and identify key themes.
- The Â鶹´«Ã½hosted a series of town hall meetings in Spring 2022 to elicit feedback on the themes and directions that the Â鶹´«Ã½should prioritize. The Â鶹´«Ã½ Steering Committee and the Â鶹´«Ã½System Planning Committee met throughout Spring and Summer 2022 to further refine the themes, action items, and metrics.
- The Â鶹´«Ã½commissioned SMS Research and Marketing Services, Inc. (SMS), an independent, third-party market research firm, to also conduct an online survey open to those who wanted to share their thoughts about the UH. The majority of the respondents were Â鶹´«Ã½alumni.
- SMS also conducted key informant interviews with key elected officials, business and other community leaders to obtain their perspectives and to understand their hopes for the UH.
- Finally, to close the loop, a draft of the strategic plan was shared with the Â鶹´«Ã½community as well as members of the broader community during a series of town hall meetings and breakout sessions in September and October 2022 to confirm the findings and direction of the strategic plan.
Timeline
We present here the development schedule to guide the university system from 2023 through 2029. Your opinion matters. We hope that you will lend your voice, experience, and aloha to this important participatory process. It is an aggressive timeline, but it will help us all to have a new Â鶹´«Ã½ in place as soon as feasible.
March
Appointment of UH-wide Steering Committee
Campus Chancellors/Provost were invited to submit names to be considered for appointment to the Â鶹´«Ã½strategic plan steering committee.?¨C COMPLETED ¨C
April
Â鶹´«Ã½Community Internal Survey
Faculty, staff and students will be invited to respond to an initial survey on the thematic recommendations and strategies that emerged from core planning documents including the ¡°¸é±ð¾±³¾²¹²µ¾±²Ô¾±²Ô²µ¡± report, Post-Pandemic Hawai?i and UH, the Third Decade Report, and the 2017 Integrated Academic and Facilities Plan.?¨C COMPLETED ¨C
Early May
Feedback on Input
Following analysis and review of survey results, town hall discussions will be held on and off our campuses with internal and external constituents and stakeholders. ¨C COMPLETED ¨C
June-August
First Draft
Steering committee begins to develop the first draft of the plan including goals, strategies, tactics and recommended metrics.
– Presentation to BOR (PDF) ?(.html)
¨C COMPLETED ¨C
July
External Community Survey and Outreach
– ??
– ? .html
– SMS Research External Data Collection Final Report (PDF)
– SMS Research External Collection Final Report Appendix (PDF)
¨C COMPLETED ¨C
September
Review of and Consultation on First Draft
Governance groups, all members of the Â鶹´«Ã½community and external stakeholders will be invited to provide input and suggestions.
September 26, 1:30-3 p.m.
Town Hall Meeting
– COMPLETED –
October
Refine Draft
Steering committee continues to refine the draft plan based on feedback with attention to assignment of responsibilities, timelines and resource requirements.
October 5, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
October 14, 8:30-10 a.m., 1-2:30 p.m. (for students)
Town Hall Meeting
– COMPLETED –
November-December
Approval Process
Proposed Â鶹´«Ã½Â鶹´«Ã½ 2023¨C2029 approved by the Â鶹´«Ã½Board of Regents at its November 17 public meeting following public testimony.