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Status Report

Status Report. Emergency Management Higher Education Project. June 7, 2005. 201 Participants – Largest Ever – 170 Last Year 102 U.S. Colleges and Universities -- 94 Last Year 6 Foreign Colleges/Universities -- 3 Last Year

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Status Report

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  1. Status Report Emergency Management Higher Education Project June 7, 2005

  2. 201 Participants – Largest Ever – 170 Last Year 102 U.S. Colleges and Universities -- 94 Last Year 6 Foreign Colleges/Universities -- 3 Last Year 39 States Plus the District of Columbia – 40 Last Year EM HiEd Conference Participation

  3. Very Busy Conference – Need Suggestions for Next Year Growth of Collegiate Programs EM HiEd Project Activity Future Developments, Issues, Friction Points? Topics To Be Covered

  4. 1994/1995 -- 4 1996 -- 13 1997 -- 23 1998 -- 34 1999 -- 49 June 2000 -- 64 June 2001 -- 72 June 2002 -- 78 June 2003 -- 95 June 2004 --113 June 2005 --120 (143) June 2004 To June 2005: 30 New EM Programs: 15 -- AD Level 7 -- BA/S Level 8 -- Graduate Level Collegiate “EM” Program Growth

  5. “EM” College Programs By Year

  6. 110 Programs Under Investigation or Development 42 at Associate Level 34 at Bachelor Level 34 at Graduate Level Projected “EM” HiEd Program Growth

  7. 42 States Have “Emergency Management” Programs District of Columbia & Puerto Rico Have EM Programs 4 States Investigating or Developing “EM” Programs Kentucky, NH, SC, SD 2 States Have EM-Related Programs Alaska & Iowa 2 States Have No “EM” or Related Program Maine & Montana EM HiEd Programs in U.S.

  8. Map of US Showing Status of EM College Programs by State Emer. Mgmt. Program in Place = Related Emer. Mgmt. Program = Proposed Emer. Mgmt. Program = No Program =

  9. 42 Homeland Security/Defense, Terrorism Programs 18 Others Under Development 10 More Being Investigated 9 International Disaster Relief, Humanitarian Assistance 26 Emergency Management/HS Related Programs Environmental Protection, Science, Management, Technician (6) Hazardous Materials Management (2) Public Health & Emergency Medical Services (10) Public Safety & Security Emergency Services Operations & Management (2) 2 Others Under Development (Public Health) Homeland Security, International Disaster Relief and Humanitarian Assistance, & EM/HS-Related Programs

  10. “Over the past four years we have seen our student population nearly double [185 declared majors] …Our credit hour production more than triple… Contemplating putting a cap on enrollment.” (Dr. David McEntire, University of North Texas, March 2004) Programs Growing In Size Also

  11. “At end of Spring 2005 will have graduated 179 students 98% working in highly specialized positions related directly to field of emergency management.” (Mary Ann Rollans, Dean, Arkansas Tech University, April 2005) Graduates Getting Jobs

  12. 28% Job Market Increase in… “Emergency Management Specialists” … By year 2012. Top 20 List of Growing Professions in U.S. (Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2004) EM Student Job Market

  13. Promotions with education consideration - 218 (50%) Pay/reimbursement educational expenses - 286 (66%) Provide incentives for going to college - 100 (23%) Flexibility to attend school - 260 (60%) Higher Starting Pay for degree - 170 (39%) (Craig Marks, Survey of Emergency Management Collegiate Students, 2004-2005) Employer Support of Emergency Management Higher Education

  14. 17 Courses on Website -- Free College Courses Latest: Holistic Disaster Recovery Next: Disaster Ops & Mgmt., or Coastal Hazards Mgmt. Periodically add new material to existing courses 5 Courses Under Development Coastal Hazards Management – Graduate Level Disaster Operations and Management – Upper Division Hazards Mapping and Modeling – Upper Division/Graduate Homeland Security and Terrorism short course – Upper Division Flood Plain Management – Graduate Level Draft material downloadable from EM HiEd Website – Free College Courses How Are We Being Supportive?

  15. “Course Treatments” Under Development Legal/Ethical Basis For Emer. Mgmt and Homeland Security Hazards Risk Assessment Methods Images of Disaster in Film How Are We Being Supportive?

  16. 5 “Books” Under Development or in “Works” Introduction to Emergency Management Textbook International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters Articles Hazards Risk Management Case Studies Textbook Disciplines, Disasters and Emergency Management Papers from 2005 Emergency Management HiEd Conference EM & HS-Related Training Courses CD ROM Audio-Visual Materials Film and Video Annotated Bibliography, DVD Clips and Additions Mini-Lectures Video-Taped Conference Interviews 2005 EM HiEd Conference Select Plenary Panel Presentations How Are We Being Supportive?

  17. Additions to Emergency Management Competencies Section Added EM Job Market Data section to EM HiEd Website Developing EM & HS Body of Knowledge Section Developing “Getting Experience” Section to Website How Are We Being Supportive?

  18. Disasters Are A Growth Business Thus, More Collegiate Programs of All Stripes More Emergency and Disaster Management Programs More Homeland Security Programs More International Disaster Management Programs More Related Programs With Growth Comes Issues – Some Uncomfortable Where Now In EM & HS HiEd & Professionalism – Some Trends & Issues

  19. “…some emergency management systems are exclusively ‘ambulances at the bottom of cliffs’, whereas others are also ‘fences at the top’. (Dr. Neil Britton, “Higher Education in Emergency Management: What is Happening Elsewhere,” Paper for the 2004 EM HiEd Conference, June 2004, p. 2.) This is why, for those who tout the “Be-All” of “Experience,” that “Experience” needs to be grounded in EDUCATION. Issue: Response and MitigationIssue: Education and Experience

  20. “We do the profession a great injustice if we only look to the future without extending a hand to the past. The depth and breadth of knowledge in practitioners must be acknowledged, embraced and built upon. To do so is to have the best of both worlds – the open-mind and the learned-soul.” (Cwiak, Cline & Karlgaard. “Emergency Management Attitudes…” North Dakota State University, 2004) Experience AND Education

  21. “Too many Joes (and Janes) on the street think academic research is: Some guy who shows up and takes money away from them… To Study something they don’t care about… Writes it up in words…nobody understands… And publishes is somewhere that nobody ever reads.” (Craig Marks, IAEM Discussion List, May 1, 2005) Practitioner & Academic Research

  22. “My own experience indicates that most faculty tend to be excellent academics rooted in various schools of methodological and substantive theory. In sharp contrast, others are ‘nuts and bolts’ oriented practitioners who have earned some type of academic credential. Too often they lack much respect for the place of theory in either the profession or any academic discipline.” (Dr. Thomas Drabek, Western Social Science Association Paper, 2005) Theory versus Practice IssueWithin EM & HS Academic Programs

  23. Referring to spurt in growth of EM and homeland security programs post 9-11: “Suddenly, people who couldn’t spell the word ‘fire’ and didn’t know much about emergency management are offering programs.” (Dr. Nancy Grant, University of Akron, 2003) Issue: Faculty and Program Credentials

  24. “Unfortunately…from my perspective, in the post 9-11 environment, the term emergency management is losing its proactive and all hazards emphasis and is devolving back into a term associated primarily with response and recovery and a focus on terrorism to the exclusion of an all hazards approach.” (Dr. Greg Shaw, “What Do We Call Ourselves…?, May 2005) Emergency Management & Homeland SecurityAll-Hazards vs. Response & Terrorism Focus

  25. “What the all-hazards approach can contribute to the effort to deal with terrorism in its many forms is a basic framework for structuring the emergency response, preparing for the response, and recovering from attacks, as well as developing appropriate measures to prevent or reduce the impact of the attacks….the all-hazards approach encourages a broader perspective….and a broader foundation on which to build effective programs to manage hazards and disasters.” (Dr. William L. Waugh, Jr., Journal of Emergency Management, March/April 2005) Emergency Management & Homeland SecurityAll-Hazards vs. International Terrorism Focus

  26. Next Emergency Management High Ed Conference June 6-8, 2006 Possible addition of a GIS & EM Preceding Workshop on June 5th? Others? Use Evaluation forms in notebooks to make recommendations. Sign-up for Activity Reports to stay current with EM & HS Hi-Ed related developments – http://training.fema.gov/emiweb/edu/ Finally

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