About the
ANU Emeritus FacultyBeginnings - The Present - Aspirations
Our Beginnings In 1999, a group of ANU staff
recently retired or approaching retirement resolved to establish a collegiate
organisation within the University to provide opportunities for themselves, collectively
and individually, and for others of similar inclination, to continue to contribute
to the academic and cultural life of the university. They called this organisation
The Emeritus Faculty of The Australian National University, referred to
from here on as the Emeritus Faculty. The founding group also saw their
prospective activities as valuable to the social and intellectual life of the
wider community, and likely to enhance the visibility and reputation of ANU. They
saw too that the Emeritus Faculty should include those whose association with
the ANU was less recent, but welcome by virtue of common interests and values. The
Emeritus Faculty saw the activities of its members as complementing those of existing
ANU staff and not replacing them in any way. These were the original aims: Academic
Programs - Assistance with lectures and tutorials when called on
by areas of the University
- Collaboration in the laboratory work of areas
of the University
- Contribution of publications to the University’s research
record
- Occasional lectures, seminars and conferences
- Participation
in consultancies
- Supervision and examination of postgraduate students
when called on by areas of the University
- Assistance with the University
Preparation Scheme.
Advisory Roles - Advice on curricula
when called on by areas of the University
- Advisory roles in cooperative
research ventures
- Assistance with industry liaison
- Assistance
with seeking private funding and supporting the ANU Endowment for Excellence
- Opportunity
for individual voices to be heard on policy formulation in the public sector
- Opportunity
for individual voices to be heard on the development of the Higher Education sector.
Outreach
Roles - Being well informed ambassadors for the University
- Collaboration
with other bodies such as the University of The Third Age
- Participation
in Convocation activities
- Participation in the University programs of
outreach, extension and professional refreshment, including summer schools for
teachers.
- Affiliation with other organisations/groups as appropriate.
Our
first Office Bearers were Chair: John Molony, Deputy Chair: Beryl Rawson, Treasurer:
Rafe De Crespigny, Secretary: Giles Pickford. The 1999 Provisional Committee
Members were: Allan Barton, Bob Gollan, David Hambly, Anthony Low, Maev O’Collins,
Colin Plowman, Peter Stewart, and Gerard Ward. What We Now Do
Consistent with the intent of the founders, we are a collegial community of
past university members and others who in various ways continue to contribute
their skills and knowledge to the University and to society more widely. We
are committed to participating in the evolving debates on educational and social
issues, and we provide opportunity and encouragement to our members to engage
their skills and energies in such debates and associated enquiries. We recognise
that scholarship and intellectual skills are not confined to universities; we
therefore include and seek as members those who have not previously been members
of universities, research institutes, or similar traditional places of scholarship;
the essential criterion for joining us lies in an active respect and positive
regard for learning, research, and creativity. While we are, by our nature,
principally an organisation for older people, we engage with and seek a role in
mentoring and encouraging younger scholars. Our Accomplishments
In the short time that the Emeritus Faculty of ANU has existed, our
members have contributed importantly to the life of the University, to the life
of community, and to the life of the mind more generally. These contributions
have included (usually on an honorary basis): - summer schools in science
and the humanities for high school teachers;
- public lectures;
- specialist
courses for undergraduates;
- provision of independent advice to government
and industry;
- assistance in the development of new courses and activities;
- establishment
of a membership registry of skills and knowledge, accessible to specialist users
or to a wider audience seeking guidance or advice;
- expert briefings for
the media and public (in development);
- excursions and social activities
for members and guests;
- sponsorship of an Emerging Artist at the ANU School
of Art.
- organisation of major colloquia as part of National Science Week.
- providing
a point of contact for people seeking retired staff for collaborative projects.
- writing
the obituaries of ANU staff.
We have also provided campus and community
forums for discussion of issues which we see as critical to sustaining a national
ethos that values scholarship, and intellectual and aesthetic creativity generally. Our
Aspirations We, the members of the Emeritus Faculty, aim to build on
the spirit and purpose with which the Emeritus Faculty was founded – a constructive,
but non-intrusive, engagement with and contribution to the intellectual and creative
life of the University, to the cultural and social life of the surrounding community,
and to the life of the mind most generally. We aim also to identify the
changing needs and aspirations of our members, and how these might be coupled
to changing opportunities in the University, in the community, and beyond. Moreover,
we seek to explore the extent to which our model of active retirement and collegiality
might be offered to a wider, possibly national membership. Accordingly, we seek
expressions of interest or comment from others particularly from outside Canberra,
concerning this broadening, and their willingness to become part of it. The
Emeritus Faculty office is located in the Molony Room, Fellows Lane Cottage -
Building 3T. Emeritus Faculty
T: + 61 2 6125 5300 F: + 61 2 6125 5262
PO Box 6050 O'Connor ACT 2602 |