The Florida Board of Governors is a 17-member governing board that serves as the governing body for the State University System of Florida, which includes all public universities in the state of Florida.
After its predecessor, the Florida Board of Regents, was abolished by an act of the Florida Legislature that was signed into law by Governor Jeb Bush in July 2001, United States Senator Bob Graham, who objected to the abolition of the statewide higher education body (Board of Regents), responded by leading a ballot initiative to restore it. The Board of Governors was established in 2003 after the successful passage of the constitutional amendment heralded by Graham in 2002. A statewide board of education, also appointed by the governor, oversaw kindergarten through higher education, but focused mostly on K-12 education and community colleges. The Board of Governors, as part of the Florida Constitution, cannot be abolished without another constitutional amendment.
During the 2014-2015 academic year, the State University System enrolled roughly 341,000 total students.
Composition
The Florida Board of Governors has seventeen members, including fourteen voting members appointed by the governor, as well as, the Florida Commissioner of Education, the Chair of the Advisory Council of Faculty Senates, and the President of the Florida Student Association. The Board appoints a Chancellor, who serves as the Systemâs chief executive.
Think Florida
In January 2016, The State University System launched a statewide communications and marketing campaign to build and bolster the stateâs entrepreneurial climate - Think Florida: A Higher Degree for Business. The campaign's focus is a strong connection between the Systemâs universities and Floridaâs businesses, with an emphasis on collaboration in the areas of Talent, Research and Partnerships.
Performance-Based Funding
The Board of Governors unveiled a performance-based funding model in 2014 to incentivize universities to improve on key metrics, from graduation rates to post-graduation success.
The model has four guiding principles:
- use metrics that align with SUS Strategic Plan goals,
- reward Excellence or Improvement,
- have a few clear, simple metrics, and
- acknowledge the unique mission of the different institutions.
Key components of the model:
- Institutions will be evaluated on either Excellence or Improvement for each metric.
- Data is based on one-year data.
- The benchmarks for Excellence were based on the Board of Governors 2025 System Strategic Plan goals and analysis of relevant data trends, whereas the benchmarks for Improvement were determined after reviewing data trends for each metric.
- The Florida Legislature and Governor determine the amount of new state funding and a proportional amount of institutional funding that would come from each universityâs recurring state base appropriation.
See also
- University Press of Florida
- State University System of Florida Libraries
- Florida Institute of Oceanography
- Florida Board of Control
References
External links
- Official website