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The university where I teach is currently restructuring in a major way. Alas, we have been told that we have one week to respond to a current plan which includes discontinuing computer science as a teaching discipline, and breaking the current computer science department between mathematics and electrical engineering.

Merging the whole school into either Maths or EE is apparently considered inappropriate because the resulting school would be too large. Staying as a separate discipline is also considered inappropriate because we are too small. But, everyone in CS feels that breaking us up will destroy CS as a discipline at our university.

This is at a quite highly regarded institution that places high value on science, the arts, law, medicine and engineering. It is in a major city that is somewhat isolated so generally it provides the only serious choice for those that want a more academic focus to their studies. But computer science is somehow is considered vocational and not academic enough - something better taught at a technical school.

What is the best way to convince our administrators that computer science is an important discipline, within the next week?

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What is the main purpose of the department structure? Academic, financial, other? The main purpose should strongly influence your logical argument. What is the main reason for the restructuring: academic, financial, other? What are the backgrounds of the decision makers? What fields did they get their degrees in? This might be a good clue as to how they think. How important is the view that CS isn't "academic enough" to your opponent's case? To come up with support for your case, I'd focus on the question: "What specific negative academic affects will CS students likely experience?" – outis Oct 24 at 8:41
This should be community wiki. – 01 Oct 24 at 8:57
Good question. It is a university wide restructuring into a universal structure of a 3 year broader undergraduate + 2 year specialised masters. The rationale is to move the university more towards graduate school teaching. The restructuring includes adding more separation between teaching disciplines (departments) and research activities. Academics that teach will have their salaries funded through their teaching discipline. The decision makers are academics - but in engineering, agriculture, etc. On negative consequences - yes, that is good. – RD1 Oct 24 at 9:07
@01 OO You could be right. I don't know how to do that though. (Too busy treading water in my employment recently, not much time to swim.) – RD1 Oct 24 at 9:11
From what you say about the restructuring, it seems that the separation of teaching & research and who pays teacher salaries are two aspects of administration that will hinder cross-department teaching, which may affect whether or not certain classes can be offered. Are there any other administrative hindrances? – outis Oct 24 at 9:28
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[I agree this is not programming-related but here's my effort anyway].

I have been through this many years ago where the dept was closed - in chemistry, not CS, but the argument is the same. I agree it's impossible to answer but I feel your pain - I don't know whether you are a student, mid researcher or run the department. If you aren't the head then it will be extremely difficult as if s/he has already accepted the inevitable then pressure from lower down is not effective.

I'd look first to your national or international organizations (perhaps IEEE, British Computer Society, etc.) and get poilcy documents that argue for the need for CS as a discipline. I'd try to show that publications and grant income will be affected (this is the only thing that now counts, unfortunately).

If you are lower in the hierarchy I'd suggest getting it into the blogosophere. Maybe there are depts elsewhere that have changed policy and you need to know how they did it. My guess is that the impending closure is public knowledge so you won't be doing much harm.

When we were threated (1982) I compiled a list of the dept publications and showed that we had more publications per head than any comparable institution. We got it published as a letter in Nature. An early use of bibliometrics - it wasn't effective in the end.

Sometimes change works out for the best - it did in my case.

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Thanks, that is all useful. I could with a change. My girlfriend (kinda) is in Sardinia... I wonder what I could find to do there. :-) – RD1 Oct 24 at 11:34
BTW, the impending closure is very much not public knowledge. I'm not allowed to reveal what university it is. The decision has not been made - we are in the brief period where we can give input before a decision is made. – RD1 Oct 24 at 13:21
Also, I checked and the criteria for stackoverflow questions is: "of interest to at least one other programmer somewhere" So, I feel that this question is well within scope. – RD1 Oct 24 at 13:33
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Nobody will know the answer to that question. Its so open ended. MIT has EE and CS as a single department

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Yes, I'm well aware of that. And, we'd be open to that if we had to. But, that won't be allowed, because EE + CS will be too large. So, CS will be split in two, hence cease to exist even as part of a combined department. – RD1 Oct 24 at 8:37
Thanks though for the input - it is actually an important point. But, I do disagree that no one will know the answer to this question - because I am asking for the "best way", meaning the best way that people can think of. – RD1 Oct 24 at 8:42

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