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No institution
certainly, no academic institution, including CSM
is as good as it possibly can be. Therefore, periodic deep self-examination
through questions such as those in the title of this talk should
be beneficial, even essential, to the ongoing vitality of our university.
In our dynamic
world, which imposes changing demands on engineering and science
graduates, and which, through changes in the character and quality
of secondary-school preparation of entering students, CSM must address
difficult decisions regarding how to maintain, indeed how to define,
the quality of its program. This necessity is all the more so because
any and all universities with which we wish to compete for students
certainly are acting on the outcome of similar self-examination.
In this talk,
I raise specific questions and offer opinions aimed at stirring
thoughts and discussion across campus on core issues. These issues
include:
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The
balance and character of our undergraduate versus graduate programs |
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Traditional
core programs versus newer, more general engineering ones |
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Relative
emphasis on classroom teaching versus research |
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The
desired size of our student body |
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The
standards we choose to set for each aspect of the university |
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The
elements of other universities that we choose to emulate |
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The
steps that need to be taken to best position ourselves, once
we have examined such issues. |
There's much
that we can do for ourselves, not all of which is bounded by budgetary
constraints, through serious inquiry of who and what we are and
we want to be.
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Ken
Larner received the degree of geophysical engineer from the Colorado
School of Mines in 1960 and a Ph.D. in geophysics from MIT in 1970,
after serving in Vietnam in the U.S. Army. He joined Western Geophysical
Company as a senior research geophysicist in 1970 and, in August
1988, left his position as Western's vice president for geophysical
research to become the Charles Henry Green Professor of Exploration
Geophysics at the Colorado School of Mines. He received the 1975
SEG Best Presentation Award, 1976 CSEG Best Papers Award, Best Paper
in Geophysics in 1976 and best paper awards at the 1978 Offshore
Technology Conference (OTC), the 1981 Australian Petroleum Exploration
Association (APEA) Conference in Adelaide, and the SEG/UCEG Beijing
'89 International Symposium on Exploration Geophysics.
Ken
Larner is a member of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG),
European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers (EAEG), and
Canadian Association of Exploration Geophysicists (CSEG). He is
also a member of geophysical societies of Houston (past first vice
president and Honorary Member) and Denver. He received the 1988
Conrad Schlumberger Award of the European Association of Exploration
Geophysicists and, in 1990, the Medal of the Society of Venezuelan
Geophysicists.
At the 1996 SEG Annual Meeting in Denver, he received the SEG's
Maurice Ewing Medal, its highest award. That same year, he was inducted
as a Foreign Fellow of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He was the
Spring 1988 SEG Distinguished Lecturer, and a 2000-2001 Distinguished
Lecturer for the Society of Petroleum Engineers.
Dr.
Larner served as first vice president of the SEG (1979-80) and SEG
president in 1988-89. As the Director of the Center for Wave Phenomena
(CWP) at CSM (which is a research consortium sponsored by 29 companies
in the oil exploration industry), his research interests include
all aspects of seismic data processing, which these days relate
to many aspects of acquisition and interpretation.
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