
The University of Texas at Dallas is destined for the academic top table, says David E. Daniel.
In the early 1960s, the Dallas-Fort Worth region lacked a major scientific or engineering institution. The mayor of Dallas, along with two partners (the same trio who founded Texas Instruments), set out to correct that deficiency. They began by assembling a large parcel of land and ambitiously creating the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest. By 1969, the trio declared the centre and its holdings the site of a future 鈥淢IT of the Southwest鈥 and struck a deal with the Lone Star State to create the University of Texas at Dallas, an elite, research-oriented, exclusively PhD-granting institution. Thus UT Dallas鈥 tale began.
At launch, the institution was a building in the middle of a cotton field housing fewer than 100 academics and doctoral students. Nearby universities opposed it, so much so that in 1990, when UT Dallas asked the state for permission to admit freshmen, the deal hinged on two major concessions calculated to doom the fledgling institution: UT Dallas promised to admit only freshmen with extraordinarily high academic credentials and to offer no programme that would compete with those run by other local universities.
Ultimately, far from dooming it, these restrictions advantaged the university. From the start, UT Dallas students have been the best of the best, and this culture of excellence is our single greatest differentiator today. The second restriction forced us into a multidisciplinary approach before such work was in vogue, inspiring a focus on programmes such as computer science, neuroscience and space science.
糖心Vlog
The legislation restricting UT Dallas was repealed in 2006, but not much changed, as the university had firmly embraced its identity as a place on the rise via a constant focus on growth and improvement. Our freshman class typically has the highest average SAT score among public universities in Texas. We have expanded from 14,000 students in 2005 to 21,000 today, with research expenditure tripling over the same period. Our goal is to ascend rapidly to the ranks of the world鈥檚 best research universities: by any measure, we are enjoying enormous success.
What are the essential factors in our progress? First, our commitment to our mission. UT Dallas鈥 founders focused on research, technology and their benefit to commerce and society. Today, more than 80 per cent of our degrees are in science, technology, engineering and business. We avoid mission creep.
糖心Vlog
Next is location. Dallas is one of the world鈥檚 largest and most rapidly growing metropolitan areas, with an insatiable appetite for the graduates we produce (as our founders predicted). Our success is critical to the region: among the US鈥 10 most economically productive metropolitan areas, only one lacks a top-tier research university 鈥 Dallas-Fort Worth. The city urgently needs us to fill this gap 鈥 and we will.
Third is our sister institution. The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center of Dallas is one of the US鈥 premier medical research universities and a critical collaborator in rapidly expanding medical research and technology work.
Next is our boldness and agility. Small young institutions are inherently nimble (of necessity) and UT Dallas鈥 entrepreneurial culture promotes and rewards risk-taking. The institution experimented early with creative fixed tuition policies and introduced cutting-edge, interdisciplinary programmes. This willingness to take risks is a treasured value.
And finally, money. UT Dallas occupies an expensive niche in academia: science, engineering and business, focused on quality and research, costs. We unapologetically charge the highest tuition fees of any Texan public university, yet are named year after year on the 鈥渂est value鈥 lists. One valuable resource we are able to draw on is the Permanent University Fund. This endowment, managed by the UT System, is derived from oil income. These funds can be used for constructing new facilities and make our ambitious growth plans realistic.
糖心Vlog
Like all institutions, UT Dallas faces challenges: principally, increasing awareness of the university, expanding its core infrastructure to keep up with enrolment and faculty growth, and raising private funds to support excellence.
Our biggest, most immediate challenge is building new academic buildings on campus. Since 2005, we have started or completed construction on more than $600 million (拢340 million) of infrastructure additions: however, needs continue to outstrip even this aggressive programme鈥檚 output.
Private fundraising is vital to UT聽Dallas, as it is to every great US research university. But with a relatively young alumni group, we and our peers in the 100 Under 50 must look to companies, foundations and far-sighted individuals for the majority of our private giving. In time, alumni will play a greater role.
UT Dallas鈥 future is bright. Our founders got the vision and mission right; the university has upheld that mission and vision; and there鈥檚 an urgent local need for us to become one of the world鈥檚 great research universities. Success seems assured, and our leadership team鈥檚 primary job is making that goal a reality as soon as possible.
糖心Vlog
David E. Daniel is president of the University of Texas at Dallas.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?