xt71c53f1k4z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71c53f1k4z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky 2009 2010 2013ua031 booklets English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. University of Kentucky Fact Books University of Kentucky Fact Booklet 2009-2010 text University of Kentucky Fact Booklet 2009-2010 2009 2019 true xt71c53f1k4z section xt71c53f1k4z Fact Booklet 2009-2010 * Table of Contents Letter from President Lee T. Todd, Jr. UK Mission and Vision Enrollment 2-3 Grant and Contract Awards 29 4 Research and Development 30 University Endowment 31 5-9 First-year Student Profile 10-11 New and Renovated Facilities Retention and Graduation Rates 12-13 Land and Space 34 Degrees Conferred 14-16 General Equipment Inventories 35 Library Collections 36 Annual Tuition and Fees 17 32-33 Full-time Employees 18-19 Benchmark Institutions 37 Alumni and Student Origin Maps 20-21 Administrative Organization 38 Faculty Statistics 22-24 Board of Trustees 39 Administrative History 40 UK Values 41 Faculty Salaries Budgeted Revenue and Expenditures Private Giving 25 26-27 28 -1- * January 2010 In compliance with KRS 164.250, I am pleased to provide you with the 2009-2010 Fact Booklet, a collection of current facts and statistics about people and programs at the University of Kentucky. Many items in this booklet will be of interest to our stakeholders and the general public, including statistics on enrollments, retention, research expenditures, and faculty salaries. A summary of the 2009-2010 Operating and Capital Budget also is presented. The University of Kentucky is proud to have attracted one of its most talented and diverse classes of first-year students. More than 12,000 students applied for admission to the fall 2009 semester, a 9.7 percent increase from the previous year and a new University record. The University established another first when it enrolled over 400 freshmen who had previously attended either the Governor’s Scholars Program or the Governor’s School for the Arts. Over 400 African American students began their studies at UK last fall, setting a new record. Currently, black students comprise 6.5 percent of the total headcount, another historical high. A number of buildings are in the process of being constructed or renovated to create the space needed for our teaching, research, and service programs. These facilities include a new Biological/Pharmaceutical Complex and our -2- * new Patient Care Facility. We also are in the process of expanding or upgrading several older facilities. A few of these projects include: the Livestock Disease Diagnostic Lab, the Center for Applied Energy Research, and the Schmidt Vocal Arts Center. Other facilities in the planning and design phase include the Gatton College Building Complex, the Law School Building, and the expansion of the Ophthalmology Clinic at the Kentucky Clinic. The economic crisis at the state and national level has presented many challenges to our institution. UK has affirmed its long-standing commitment to becoming a Top 20 university, despite the gloomy fiscal situation confronting our nation. Citizens of this state look to the University of Kentucky to make the Commonwealth a better place to live and work and raise families. We remain committed to improving the quality of life of our citizens by addressing Kentucky’s critical social, economic, and health-related problems. Sincerely, Lee T. Todd, Jr. President -3- * MISSION The University of Kentucky is a public, land grant university dedicated to improving people’s lives through excellence in education, research and creative work, service, and health care. As Kentucky’s flagship institution, the University plays a critical leadership role by promoting diversity, inclusion, economic development, and human well-being. VISION The University of Kentucky will be one of the nation’s 20 best public research universities. -- Adopted by the Board of Trustees, June 9, 2009 -4- * ENROLLMENT - Headcount and Full-time Equivalent Fall 2009 Headcount Level Full-time Part-time Total Undergraduate 17,619 1,564 19,183 Graduate* 5,654 1,458 7,112 Subtotal (IPEDS) 23,273 3,022 26,295 UG Auditors Postdoctoral House Staff Total (CPE) 0 257 585 24,115 34 0 0 3,056 34 257 585 27,171 FTE calculations have been revised in accordance with CPE guidelines. The new method uses a formula that weights the number of student credit hours by students’ degree level. *Note: Beginning in 2009-10, federal reporting guidelines for enrollments eliminated the first-professional degree category and established a new Doctor’s Degree - Professional Practice category. These degree programs are now subsumed under the graduate classification. -5- * ENROLLMENT - Fall 2009 at a Glance Men Women Total 13,226 13,945 27,171 % of Total 48.7 51.3 100.0 Full-time Part-time Total 24,115 3,056 27,171 88.8 11.2 100.0 Resident Non-resident Total 20,604 6,567 27,171 75.8 24.2 100.0 Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Seniors UG Non-degree Subtotal Undergraduate Master/Specialist Doctoral* Graduate Non-degree Subtotal Graduate House Staff/Post Doctoral Total 5,376 4,135 4,129 5,166 411 19,217 2,645 4,122 345 7,112 842 27,171 % of Total 19.8 15.2 15.2 19.0 1.5 70.7 9.7 15.2 1.3 26.2 3.1 100.0 *Note: Beginning in 2009-10, federal reporting guidelines for enrollments eliminated the first-professional degree category and established a new Doctor’s Degree - Professional Practice category. These degree programs are included under the Doctoral classification. -6- * ENROLLMENT - Fall 2009 by Race/Ethnicity Black, Non-Hispanic Amer. Indian/ Alaskan Native Asian/Pacific Islander Hispanic International Not Reported White Total Undergrad Grad. 1,381 378 43 16 456 202 293 96 259 861 485 293 16,300 5,266 19,217 7,112 Post House Doc. Staff 5 9 0 0 28 2 142 18 62 257 Total 1,773 59 58 744 8 399 11 1,273 167 963 332 21,960 585 27,171 Total = 27,171 -7- * UNDERGRADUATES - by Residency Status Year Fall 2009 Kentucky Residents 15,457 Out-of-State Students 3,760 Fall 2008 15,197 3,791 Fall 2007 15,196 3,634 Fall 2006 15,757 3,571 Fall 2005 15,481 3,251 Fall 2004 15,587 2,905 Fall 2003 15,486 2,704 Fall 2002 15,348 2,530 Fall 2001 14,820 2,464 Fall 2000 14,499 2,400 -8- * APPLIED, ADMITTED and ENROLLED First-year Students Fall 2009 Applied Admitted Enrolled 12,195 8,966 4,153 Admit. Rate Yield Rate 73.5% 46.3% -9- * FIRST-YEAR STUDENT PROFILE In fall 2009, the University enrolled a record number of African-American and Governor’s Scholars/Governor’s School for the Arts students. 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Female African-American Out-of-State International Full-Time Governor’s Scholars and Governor’s School for the Arts Merit Scholars Valedictorians 3,835 2,050 143 997 16 3,829 4,190 2,237 294 1,108 14 4,118 3,865 2,021 255 1,015 20 3,837 4,110 2,099 347 999 32 4,079 4,153 2,118 403 897 44 4,111 304 40 137 354 32 122 348 28 389 32 133 404 31 141 Note: Valedictorian information was not available for the 2007 cohort. - 10 - * ACT Scores - Entering First-year Students Year Fall 2009 Fall 2008 Fall 2007 Fall 2006 Fall 2005 Fall 2004 Fall 2003 Fall 2002 Fall 2001 Fall 2000 N 3,906 3,825 3,532 3,864 3,453 3,609 3,385 3,391 2,881 2,755 Mean 24.7 24.4 24.3 23.9 24.5 24.2 24.3 23.8 24.1 24.0 25th/75th Percentile 22/28 22/27 21/27 21/26 22/27 21/27 22/27 21/26 21/26 21/26 Note: Some students submit SAT scores rather than ACT scores. These students’ scores are not reflected in the table and graph. - 11 - * RETENTION RATE First-to-second Year Retention Rate* Cohort 2008 2007 Overall 80.3 81.0 2006 2005 2004 76.4 77.8 78.9 2003 2002 2001 2000 78.4 77.1 79.3 77.7 1999 80.4 Black, White Non-Hispanic 80.5 75.3 81.2 80.0 76.3 76.6 78.0 76.1 79.6 69.0 78.4 72.8 77.3 78.0 79.3 77.5 77.7 77.7 80.7 Other 84.4 79.5 77.7 76.4 80.5 83.1 71.5 81.1 79.7 77.2 *Retention rates apply to first-time, full-time, degreeseeking students. 78.0 - 12 - * GRADUATION RATE Six-year Graduation Rate* Cohort 2003 2002 Overall 59.6 57.7 2001** 2000 1999 61.4 59.1 59.8 1998 1997 1996 1995 59.6 61.1 57.7 57.2 1994 55.3 Black, White Non-Hispanic 60.5 42.9 58.6 47.6 62.5 50.3 60.6 45.0 60.8 46.2 60.2 49.7 62.2 49.0 59.1 43.2 58.2 38.5 57.1 35.4 Other 62.8 51.1 49.6 50.5 57.1 61.4 59.4 53.9 63.2 48.2 *Graduation rates apply to first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students; the 2003 cohort numbers are preliminary. **Reflects a correction made after IPEDS submission. - 13 - * DEGREES CONFERRED 2008-2009 Baccalaureate 3,650 Graduate 1,646 First Professional 407 Academic Year - 14 - * DEGREES CONFERRED - By College 2008-2009 College Agriculture Arts & Sciences Business & Economics Comm. & Info. Studies Dentistry Design Education Engineering Fine Arts First Bacc. Mast.* Doc. Prof. College 513 73 24 - Grad. School 1,132 117 70 - Health Sciences 625 175 12 - Law 348 93 3 - Medicine 5 58 Nursing 70 9 - Pharmacy 314 230 44 - Public Health 279 156 29 - Social Work 147 33 17 - Total * Includes Specialist degrees - 15 - First Bacc. Mast.* Doc. Prof. 78 4 57 129 34 - 134 16 47 94 107 51 9 10 121 43 8 58 126 1 3,650 1,334 312 407 * DOCTORATES - Enrollments and Degrees Awarded Year 2009-10 2008-09 2007-08 2006-07 2005-06 2004-05 2003-04 2002-03 2001-02 2000-01 Fall Enrollment 4,122 3,949 3,843 3,757 3,633 3,599 3,593 3,542 3,317 3,256 Degrees Awarded 719 717 653 634 670 605 571 559 594 Note1: Federal reporting guidelines have eliminated the firstprofessional degree category and established a new Doctor’s Degree - Professional Practice category. Doctoral enrollments and degree recipients have been revised to include enrollments and degrees from former first-professional programs. Note2: Enrollments are based on the fall semester of a given academic year. The number of degree recipients for 2009-10 is not yet available. - 16 - * ANNUAL TUITION and FEES 2009-2010 Resident Graduate Undergraduate - Lower Division - Upper Division Tuition $ 7,869 Fees $ 909 7,214 7,449 909 909 Non-resident Graduate Undergraduate - Lower Division - Upper Division Tuition $ 17,180 Fees $ 909 15,769 15,992 909 909 Note: Beginning in 2004-05, undergraduates in upper and lower divisions are charged different rates of tuition. The tuition rate in the graph reflects the rate for lower division students. Academic Year - 17 - * FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES 2008-2009 Full-Time Employees Exec./Admin./Managerial Faculty Library Faculty Other Professional Secretarial/Clerical Tech./Paraprofessional Skilled Crafts Service/Maintenance Total President’s Office 35 0 0 187 79 22 6 13 342 Educational Units Provost Administration/ Support 163 2,033 63 1,680 1,303 859 29 189 6,319 100 0 0 480 337 117 7 140 1,181 Finance and Administration 82 0 0 336 201 154 161 666 1,600 Health Affairs 103 0 0 1,092 561 327 6 357 2,446 Total 483 2,033 63 3,775 2,481 1,479 209 1,365 11,888 % Total 4.1% 17.1% 0.5% 31.8% 20.9% 12.4% 1.8% 11.5% 100.0% Note 1: Percentages may not total properly due to rounding. Note 2: The President’s Office includes staff from the Athletics Department and the Offices of the General Counsel, Institutional Advancement, and Commercialization and Economic Development. Note 3: Starting in 2006-07 Library faculty are reported to the federal government in the Other Professional Category. For this publication, Library faculty are classified separately. - 18 - * FULL-TIME EMPLOYEE DEMOGRAPHICS 2008-2009 Full-time Employees Exec./Admin./Managerial Faculty Library Faculty Other Professional Secretarial/Clerical Tech./Paraprofessional Skilled Crafts Service/Maintenance Total Black, Non-Hispanic 23 81 3 153 314 137 26 450 1,187 American Indian/ Alaskan Native 1 1 0 5 1 1 0 1 10 - 19 - Asian/ Pacific Islander 8 237 1 192 27 61 3 20 549 Hispanic White 3 448 32 1,682 0 59 29 3,396 8 2,131 18 1,262 0 180 9 885 99 10,043 Female 234 699 49 2367 2207 885 4 565 7,010 Male 249 1334 14 1408 274 594 205 800 4,878 * KENTUCKY ALUMNI Boone Campbell 2,232 1,834 Kenton 3,458 Bracken Gallatin Pendleton 324 Mason 67 Greenup Carroll Grant 177 Lewis 1,111 1,336 Robertson 229 Trimble 153 Owen 318 83 Boyd 121 Harrison Henry 147 Fleming Carter 2,945 749 Nicholas Oldham 353 499 546 Scott 1,833 250 Franklin 2,475 Rowan Bourbon Bath Elliott 382 Shelby 2,592 961 158 Jefferson Lawrence 48 Woodford 1,186 Montgomery 26,030 379 Fayette 2,372 570 Spencer Morgan 38,167 Clark Menifee Bullitt Johnson 302 Anderson 130 1,642 Powell 43 Meade Jessamine 1,065 870 926 Martin 458 3,132 164 260 Hancock Washington Mercer Madison Wolfe Magoffin 197 Breckinridge Estill 857 2,050 124 325 Nelson 336 Floyd Hardin Henderson Lee 352 119 Daviess 1,377 1,971 Pike Boyle Garrard Breathitt 4,045 2,005 70 Union 3,398 517 1,312 1,161 309 Larue Marion 625 Lincoln Jackson Owsley 410 383 Webster McLean Knott Ohio Grayson 508 90 66 475 316 Taylor Perry 556 463 536 Rockcastle 400 1,513 Crittenden Hart Casey 203 Hopkins Green Clay Letcher 185 183 266 2,034 144 220 Livingston Butler Edmonson Laurel Leslie 1,219 Muhlenberg Pulaski 293 46 35 897 397 929 2,649 Caldwell Adair McCracken 444 Ballard Metcalfe 194 Russell Knox 3,471 Lyon Warren 241 43 206 Barren Harlan 231 1,294 427 Christian Logan Wayne Whitley 428 2,226 2,364 222 Carlisle Marshall Cumberland Bell 555 686 Todd Trigg Allen McCreary 162 Graves 816 970 Simpson Monroe 69 Clinton 259 455 72 424 157 63 197 Hickman 889 Calloway 58 Fulton 375 93 By County of Residence* Fall 2009 Total = 157,734 * Includes former UK Community College System and UK alumni - 20 - * KENTUCKY STUDENTS Boone Campbell 410 Kenton 807 Bracken Gallatin Pendleton 11 Mason Carroll 15 Grant 46 Greenup Lewis 70 28 114 Robertson 65 24 Trimble Owen 2 Boyd 22 Harrison Henry 26 Fleming Carter 202 98 Nicholas Oldham 49 39 39 Scott 466 12 Franklin 354 Rowan Bourbon Bath Elliott 70 Shelby 331 133 18 Jefferson Lawrence 14 148 Woodford Fayette Montgomery 2,848 30 297 Spencer 5,425 Clark 99 Menifee Morgan Bullitt Anderson Johnson 43 19 230 Powell 5 Meade Jessamine Martin 99 143 84 61 517 31 20 Hancock Madison Wolfe Magoffin Washington Mercer 35 Breckinridge Estill 124 366 20 23 Nelson 89 Floyd Hardin Henderson Lee 43 32 Daviess 195 104 Pike Boyle Garrard Breathitt 404 123 15 Union 399 64 217 202 32 Larue Marion 28 Lincoln Jackson Owsley 47 75 Webster McLean Knott Ohio Grayson 65 16 7 17 25 47 Taylor Perry 55 32 Rockcastle 105 85 Crittenden Hart Casey 33 Hopkins Green Clay Letcher 9 17 31 141 19 40 Livingston Butler Edmonson Laurel Leslie 47 Muhlenberg Pulaski 11 11 4 186 22 52 216 Caldwell Adair McCracken 37 37 Ballard Metcalfe Knox 294 Lyon Warren Russell 22 4 46 Barren Harlan 12 258 43 Christian Logan Wayne Whitley 94 46 151 70 Carlisle Marshall Cumberland Bell 36 84 Todd Trigg Allen McCreary 11 Graves 75 68 Simpson Monroe 12 Clinton 17 18 23 27 25 21 21 Hickman 74 Calloway 7 Fulton 56 15 By County of Origin Fall 2009 Total = 19,798 600 - 21 - * FULL-TIME FACULTY - Historical Trends 2008-2009 2007-2008 2006-2007 2005-2006 2004-2005 2003-2004 2002-2003 2001-2002* 2000-2001 1999-2000 Instructional Faculty 1,245 1,250 1,233 1,211 1,198 1,209 1,202 1,165 1,231 1,239 Other Faculty 851 807 795 731 722 681 699 710 658 653 Note: Beginning in 2001-2002, changes in the federal definition of ‘Instuctional Faculty’ excluded ‘Extension Faculty;’ however, Lecturers are now included. ‘Other Faculty’ now includes those with Extension, Clinical, Research and Library faculty series designations. - 22 - * FACULTY DEMOGRAPHICS Tenured and Tenure-track Faculty 2008-2009 Black, Non-Hispanic Full-Time Faculty Professors/Lib. I Associate Professors/Lib. II M 4 21 Assistant Professors/Lib. III Instructors/Lib. IV Total 11 0 36 American Indian/ Alaskan Native Asian/ Pac. Islander Hispanic White F 4 11 16 1 M 0 1 0 0 F 0 0 0 0 M 55 28 47 0 F 6 12 25 0 M 4 2 5 0 F 2 2 7 0 M 457 293 174 2 F 108 188 115 4 32 1 0 130 43 11 11 926 415 - 23 - * FACULTY - By Rank and Title Series: 2008-2009 Tenured/Tenure Track Rank Professors/Lib. I Associate Professors/Lib. II Regular 517 375 Assistant Professors/Lib. III Instructors/Lib. IV Total 306 1,198 Librarian 23 28 6 6 Extension 39 19 15 Spec. Title 61 136 73 1 Total 640 558 400 7 63 73 271 1,605 Lecturer Other 5 1 5 19 Total 30 64 248 43 15 91 30 491 Non-tenure Track Rank Professors Associate Professors Clinical 18 51 Assistant Professors Instructors Senior Lecturers Lecturers Total 177 24 Research 7 12 66 15 91 270 85 - 24 - 106 * FACULTY SALARIES Fall 2008* 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 All-ranks Average Salary $ 80,813 79,350 76,065 73,685 71,026 69,911 66,953 66,713 64,842 62,314 Benchmark Median Salary $ 96,312 88,787 85,300 82,664 81,713 78,594 76,547 74,184 73,892 68,138 *Note: Beginning in 2008-09, the Top 20 Business Plan benchmark institutions replaced the 19 CPE benchmark institutions in salary comparisons. - 25 - * REVENUE (In Millions) Source of Funds State Appropriation State Fiscal Stabilization Funds Tuition and Fees County Appropriations Endowment and Investment Income Federal Governmental Appropriations Gifts, Grants, and Contracts Sales and Services Transfers Fund Balances UK Affiliated Corporations Hospital System Total Revised Budget Budget 2008-09 2009-10 $321.5 $294.1 0.0 21.1 265.3 285.2 15.3 15.9 34.9 30.1 16.6 16.5 227.9 254.5 85.8 82.7 49.8 59.9 103.2 353.5 753.2 95.7 368.4 906.2 $2,227.0 $2,430.3 - 26 - 2009-2010 Budget * EXPENDITURES (In Millions) Revised Budget Program 2008-09 Instruction $ 341.6 281.6 Research Public Service 281.8 Libraries 25.0 Academic Support 86.8 Student Services 28.4 Institutional Support 110.2 Operations and Maintenance 61.8 Student Financial Aid 92.6 Auxiliary Enterprises Operations 126.0 Mandatory Transfers 45.1 Hospital 746.1 Total $ 2,227.0 Budget 2009-10 $ 340.6 292.9 297.3 26.0 89.6 30.8 116.3 64.2 97.6 128.9 61.6 884.5 $ 2,430.3 - 27 - Revised Budget Category 2008-09 Personnel Services $ 1,095.7 Operating Expenses 1,032.0 Capital Outlay 54.2 Mandatory Transfers 45.1 Total $ 2,227.0 Budget 2009-10 $ 1,114.0 1,098.8 155.9 61.6 $ 2,430.3 * PRIVATE GIVING (In Millions) Fiscal Year 2008-2009 Alumni $ 16.6 Non-alumni 13.4 Corporations 14.1 Foundations 9.8 Trusts/Associations Total 14.1 $ 68.1 Note: With the transfer of LCC to the KCTCS in 200304 FY, gifts to LCC stopped being reflected in UK’s Private Giving statistics. Fiscal Year - 28 - * GRANT and CONTRACT AWARDS (In Millions) 2008-2009 By Category of Support Instruction Research Public Service Other Total By Source Federal State Business, Industry, Other $ 12.6 180.6 62.0 1.5 $ 256.7 53% 25% 22% Note: With the transfer of LCC to the KCTCS in 2003-04 FY, awards to LCC stopped being reflected in UK’s Grant and Contract Awards statistics. - 29 - * RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT (In Thousands) Fiscal Year 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 Total R&D Expenditures* $ 336,669 331,606 323,958 306,653 297,610 272,062 236,275 211,721 202,392 174,034 Research and Development Expenditures Federally Financed R&D Expenditures* $ 154,811 154,688 151,238 142,794 129,887 120,003 100,426 86,239 73,858 66,184 Fiscal Year *As reported to the National Science Foundation for science and engineering disciplines. - 30 - * UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT (In Thousands) Market Value of University Endowment Fiscal Year 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 Market Value $ 668,008 871,861 916,590 746,114 538,384 491,098 414,328 399,030 420,838 371,373 Note: In 2006, the Chandler Medical Center University Hospital Quasi-Endowment Fund for $150 million was established, accounting for the large increase over the 2005 total. Fiscal Year - 31 - * NEW and Renovated FACILITIES In Construction/Renovation Construct Patient Care Facililty Biological Pharmaceutical Complex Building Expand and Upgrade Liveststock Disease Diagnostic Lab Digital Village Building # 2 Construct Wildcat Coal Lodge Expand Coldstream Research Campus - Redundant Feeds Renovate/Expand the Center for Applied Energy Research Convert Hunt Morgan Space to Class Lab Renovate Central Computing Facility Renovate Schmidt Vocal Arts Center Construct Children's Garden at the Arboretum Renovate Research Labs in Chemistry-Physics Building Replace Emergency Generators & Fire Pump - UK Good Samaritan Repair, Upgrade, Improve Building Systems - Hospital (Elevators Upgrade for Kentucky Clinic) - 32 - Scope Funding Source $700,000,000 Agency 135,292,000 State/Agency 28,500,000 State 20,000,000 Agency/Private 7,000,000 Private 6,500,000 State/Agency 3,712,581 Federal/State/Agency 3,200,000 Agency 2,813,000 Agency 2,371,000 Private/Agency 2,200,000 Private 2,080,000 Agency Anticipated On-line Date Winter 2010 Winter 2009 Winter 2010 Winter 2010 Fall 2011 Spring 2010 Fall 2010 Fall 2009 Spring 2010 Fall 2009 Spring 2010 Summer 2010 2,025,550 Agency Summer 2010 1,000,000 Agency Winter 2011 * NEW and Renovated FACILITIES In Planning and Design Gatton Building Complex $142,450,000 Fall 2014 123,135,000 Law School Building State/Private State/Private Summer 2015 Expand Ophthalmology Clinic - Kentucky Clinic 2,930,000 Agency Fall 2010 Renovate Nursing Building 1,883,970 Federal Fall 2010 750,000 Private Fall 2010 Renovate Nutter Training Center Meeting Rooms - 33 - * LAND and SPACE* 2008-2009 Main Campus 726 Office Study Special General Support Health Care Residential Unclassified Total * Excludes space provided at no cost; includes leased space ** Includes research farms, Robinson Forest, substations, 4-H Camps, and Adena Park *** Source: FY09 Land Inventories **** Source: Fall 2008 Physical Facilities - 34 - Total 24,929 18,501 158,188 988,513 5,969 593,338 110,290 470,322 188,506 186,251 78,052 276,200 1,343,271 2,726,847 408,108 1,222,637 817,236 3,255,593 665,063 1,444,057 156,767 9,517,849 Assigned Square Footage in Buildings**** Classroom Laboratory Off Campus** 24,203 257,699 1,185,083 1,738,334 402,139 629,299 706,946 2,785,271 476,557 1,257,806 78,715 Acreage*** 2,797,930 12,315,779 * GENERAL EQUIPMENT INVENTORIES (In Millions) Inventory 6/30/07 General Instruction Research Public Service Academic Support Student Services Institutional Support Op & Mgt of Plant Multifunction Sub total Auxiliaries Hospital Other Total $ 26.7 131.0 18.3 18.9 2.4 21.6 3.0 6.9 228.9 17.1 131.7 51.7 429.3 Note: Some numbers do not total properly due to rounding. - 35 - Inventory 6/30/08 $ 29.4 140.4 18.9 21.4 2.5 22.4 3.4 10.6 248.9 19.1 142.6 38.8 451.5 Inventory 6/30/09 $ 33.6 149.1 20.6 21.6 2.6 25.9 3.1 6.4 262.9 20.1 173.3 29.5 485.9 * LIBRARY COLLECTIONS Volumes Held Current Periodical Titles Mircoforms Audio-visual Materials 2006-2007 3,537,710 44,610* 6,433,748 92,600 2007-2008 3,719,548 73,251 6,471,766 93,878 2008-2009 3,784,382 78,194 6,506,097 96,717 The Libraries’ collections also include access to approximately 400 licensed networked electronic databases, over 40,000 electronic journals and a large collection of electronic books accessible in the University’s 12 libraries and also available to faculty and students off campus via a proxy server. In addition, the collections include: 262,549 maps; over 200 current state, national and international newspapers; over 6,500 Oral History program interviews on the history and culture of Kentucky; the University Archives and Records Program; the Wendell H. Ford Public Policy Research Center; the Audio-Visual Archives; the Bert T. Combs Appalachian Collection; the Public Policy Archives; the Rare Book Collection which includes the W. Hugh Peal Collection of 19th century English and related literature; and the Preservation Reformatting Center. The Center for Digital Programs creates digital content for the Kentuckiana Digital Library including electronic texts, digitized photographs, images and archival finding aids. The Library is a regional depository for U.S. government publications, and also a depository for Canadian government publications and European Union publications. British Parliamentary Papers, Kentucky government publications, and technical reports from federal agencies are all selectively collected. *Note1: ARL changed the way that periodicals are counted. - 36 - * TOP 20 BUSINESS PLAN BENCHMARK INSTITUTIONS Georgia Institute of Technology University of Florida Ohio State University University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign Pennsylvania State University University of Maryland - College Park Rutgers University - New Brunswick University of Michigan - Ann Arbor Texas A & M University University of Minnesota - Twin Cities The University of Texas at Austin University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University of California - Berkeley University of Pittsburgh - Pittsburgh Campus University of California - Davis University of Virginia University of California - Los Angeles University of Washington - Seattle Campus University of California - San Diego University of Wisconsin - Madison - 37 - * ADMINISTRATIVE ORGANIZATION - 38 - * BOARD of TRUSTEES Mira S. Ball Stephen P. Branscum Edward Britt Brockman Penelope A. Brown Jo Hern Curris Dermontti Dawson Carol Martin“Bill” Gatton Ann Brand Haney Pamela T. May Everett McCorvey Lexington Russell Springs Louisville Corbin Alumni Member Nicholasville Tennessee Alumni Member Pikeville Faculty Member (2010) (2010) (2014) (2011) (2014) (2011) (2015) (2010) (2013) (2011) Billy Joe Miles Sandy Patterson Robynn M. Pease Erwin Roberts Charles R. Sachatello C. Frank Shoop Ryan Smith James W. Stuckert Ernest Yanarella Barbara Young - 39 - Owensboro Alumni Member Staff Member Louisville Lexington Lexington Student Member Prospect Faculty Member Lexington (2013) (2012) (2010) (2012) (2013) (2014) (2010) (2015) (2010) (2015) * ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY 1865 Agricultural and Mechanical College (A&M) established as part of Kentucky University 1869 James K. Patterson became President of A&M 1878 A&M separated from Kentucky University 1882 A&M moved to current location in Lexington 1885 Ag. Experiment Station opened 1889 College of Agriculture established 1908 College of Arts and Sciences and College of Law established; A&M name changed to “State University, Lexington, Kentucky” 1909 University Library established 1911 Henry S. Barker became President of State University 1916 State University renamed University of Kentucky 1917 Frank L. McVey became President of UK; Graduate School established 1918 College of Engineering established 1923 College of Education established 1925 College of Business and Economics established 1941 Herman L. Donovan became President 1947 College of Pharmacy moved to UK 1956 Frank G. Dickey became President 1957 Ashland Extension Center established 1960 Medical Center established; College of Medicine admitted first class; College of Nursing admitted first class; Henderson Extension Center and Southeast Extension Center established 1962 College of Dentistry admitted first class; University Hospital opened 1963 John W. Oswald became President 1964 Community College System established under UK; College of Architecture established 1965 Lexington Technical Institute (LTI) established 1966 College of Allied Health Professions established 1967 College of Home Economics established 1968 Albert D. Kirwan became President 1969 College of Social Work established; Otis A. Singletary became President 1970 College of Library and Information Science established - 40 - 1976 College of Communications and College of Fine Arts established 1982 University reorganized with a Central Administration and three sectors headed by Chancellors (Lexington Campus, Medical Center, and Community College System) 1984 LTI became Lexington Community College 1987 David P. Roselle became President 1990 Charles T. Wethington, Jr. became President 1993 College of Communications and Information Studies established 1998 William T. Young Library opened; All Community Colleges (except LCC) transferred to the KCTCS 2001 Lee T. Todd, Jr. became President; University reorganized with a Provost model 2002 College of Design established 2004 LCC transferred to the KCTCS; College of Public Health established * VALUES The values of the University guide its decisions and the behavior of its community. Its core values are: • • • • • Integrity Excellence Mutual Respect and Human Dignity Diversity and Inclusion Academic Freedom • • • • Shared Governance Work-life Sensitivity Civic Engagement Social Responsibility -- Adopted by the Board of Trustees, June 9, 2009 - 41 - * see blue An Equal Opportunity University Published by the UK Office of Institutional Research For more detailed information: www.uky.edu/IRPE/fast_facts.html *