From the snow- and ice-covered confines at the tippy top of the Administration Building, I send a warm welcome with the first spring 2026 edition of the Provost's Perspective. Despite freezing temperatures and a delayed start to the semester, the campus is abuzz with the warmth of activity and energy—a sight that brings a smile to my face and adds pep to my step. And can we give another shout out to all the people who worked night and day to get campus clean from snow and ice?
I hope that after the fall semester you had a chance to decompress, step away from work, and feel refreshed for the spring semester. Hopefully, you also had a chance to connect/reconnect with family and friends during the break. As a scholar of close relationships, I am often reminded of the power of close relationships for our own health, including physical health. In addition to prioritizing my own self-care, I prioritized time with family and friends over the break. For the first time, I had one of my children come home after having moved out last summer to move to Michigan. It was wonderful to spend time with her and her boyfriend and see how she was emerging as an adult.
Re-envisioning General Education
Earlier this week I had the opportunity to meet with the Re-Envisioning General Education Faculty Committee led by Peggy Re and Susan McDonough. The committee's work supports the core mission of any public university to prepare future citizens to positively impact their communities.
As I read the news and watch what happens around the world, I don't think there is a better time than now to re-envision our general education program and ask the question What do we want all undergraduate students at UMBC to learn, and how do we want to send them off to positively impact their communities and the future of our world?
This is such an exciting opportunity for faculty, students, and staff. I look forward to working with the university community on this effort. Peggy and Susan will share more details at the Faculty Senate meeting Tuesday, February 10, and we will also share more information on March 5 at the Office of the Provost Strategic Initiatives meeting.
Provost Strategic Initiatives Meeting
March 5, 3:30 – 5 p.m., Fine Arts 118 and online
We heard your feedback that there is a need to better communicate and share information about what we are doing and how work is moving forward. You will see several new things from our office this semester, including regular updates to our website, but we will also start regular conversations with you about the work that is being coordinated through our office.
As a start, we invite you to join us on March 5 from 3:30 to 5 p.m. for the Provost Strategic Initiatives Meeting in Fine Arts 118. We will present information on current strategic initiatives, including re-envisioning general education, student success strategy, graduate student recruitment and enrollment strategy, fostering curricular innovation, strengthening global education, AI strategy, infrastructure needs, refining and enhancing budget models, expanding and strengthening K-12 partnerships.
During this meeting you will learn about goals, timelines, and how you can get involved/provide feedback. After the session there also will be an opportunity for informal conversation with leads of initiatives and the Office of the Provost team.

Guidelines for AI Use in the Classroom
If you missed Anupam Joshi's announcement before winter break concerning university guidelines for AI use in the classroom, check it out here. The guidelines were developed through broad consultation with faculty and staff and reflect emerging best practices and examples from peer institutions. They feature a "traffic light" model to help instructors articulate permissible, limited, or prohibited uses of AI tools.
Global Academic Reputation Survey
Some of you may have received the Global Academic Reputation Survey last semester. It was sent to a curated list of faculty and academic staff between November 5 and December 5 from surveys@timeshighereducationsurvey.com. The subject line of the email was: Have your say in Times Higher Ed's (THE) Global Academic Reputation Survey. You may also have received a reminder survey.
Both emails start with a "Dear researcher" salutation instead of a personalized one. Please rest assured that the invite is genuine.
If you received the survey and feel comfortable doing so, please complete it.
Thank You for the Feedback
Thank you to everyone who has provided feedback this semester. The Provost's Perspective is a work in progress and will continue to evolve to more fully serve you, UMBC's faculty and academic staff. If there is a subject or topic that you feel should be covered (or have general feedback on the content), drop me a note here. Your feedback and input matters!
Mark your calendar
![]()
Refusing Generative AI in College Writing Instruction: A Conversation with the Authors Maggie Fernandes, Megan McIntyre, and Jennifer Sano-Franchini
Hear diverse perspectives on genAI in higher education
Wednesday, February, 11, noon to 1 p.m., online
Join the Faculty Development Center for a conversation with the scholars who created Refusing Generative AI in Writing Studies. The speakers will share how and why they decided to create Refusing GenAI in Writing Studies as well as its impact as a rhetorical intervention. In addition, they will address stock arguments in support of generative AI adoption in the classroom before offering some practical teaching strategies for negotiating some of the challenges that generative AI poses for education. Teachers from all disciplines who assign writing, who are interested in learning about diverse perspectives on generative AI in higher education, and who are interested in resisting Big Tech's incursion in higher education may benefit from attending this teaching talk.
Click here and select "Going Virtually" to register.

absolute alternatives
2026 Arts+ UMBC Faculty Exhibition
Now through February 28
Center for Art, Design, and Visual Culture
The Center for Art, Design, and Visual Culture presents "absolute alternatives," the 2026 Arts+ UMBC Faculty Exhibition. Organized by guest curator Maleke Glee, "absolute alternatives" presents faculty from across UMBC whose interdisciplinary research is a form of creative practice, including Jude Agboada, Fiona Bell, Kelley Bell and the Cheeky Magpie Collective, Lee Boot, Lynn Cazabon, Lisa Cella, Mayank Chugh, Cathy Cook, Arit Emmanuela Etukudo, Eva Grandoni, Tahira Chloe Mahdi, Phillip Mann, Steven McAlpine, Lisa Moren, Edgar Reyes, Julie Sayo, Sarah G. Sharp, and Airi Yoshioka.
Inspired by the boundary-pushing spirit of the Arts+ initiative, the exhibition proposes alternatives to defining research through absolute disciplinary categories.
Public Programs
An opening reception, featuring a performance of Zosha Di Castri's Dream Field, by flutist Lisa Cella and violinist Airi Yoshioka, will take place on Thursday, February 12 (note new date), from 6 to 8 p.m.
On Saturday, February 28, at 2 p.m., conductor Philip Mann and curator Maleke Glee will be featured in Creative Convergence: A Conversation with a Conductor and Curator.
Visitor Information
Admission to the exhibition and all public programs is free. The CADVC is open Wednesday and Thursday from noon to 5 p.m., and on Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
2026 Office of the Provost Strategic Initiatives Meeting
March 5, 3:30-5 p.m., Fine Arts 118 and online
Mark your calendars and plan to join Provost Manfred van Dulmen and the provost leadership team either in person or online to learn about the 2026 strategic initiatives for the Office of the Provost. We will present information on current strategic initiatives including re-envisioning general education, student success strategy, graduate student recruitment and enrollment strategy, fostering curricular innovation, strengthening global education, AI strategy, infrastructure needs, refining and enhancing budget models, expanding and strengthening K-12 partnerships.
During this meeting you will learn about (a) goals, (b) leads, (c) who is involved, (d) timeline, and (e) how you can get involved/provide feedback. After the session there also will be an opportunity for informal conversation with leads of initiatives and the Office of the Provost team.
New Faculty Spotlights
Each week we feature the newest faculty members of our community.
Hasan Shahid, Assistant Professor, Economics
Areas of Research/Interest: Health Economics
Fun Fact About Hasan: I lived in Warsaw, Poland, for six years as a child.
Corine Jackman Burden, Assistant Professor, Chemical, Biochemical, and Environmental Engineering
Areas of Research/Interest: Cell-cell and microbe-host interactions, Human vaginal microbiome, Streptococcus pneumoniae, microdroplet technologies, and biomimetic platforms
Fun Fact About Corine: My Girl Scout Gold award was signed by President Obama.
Are you a new faculty member? Please take two minutes to fill out the form and submit your bio if you have not already done so.
Help Make this Newsletter Better
The goal each week of this message is to deepen our connection to UMBC, whether that is learning about an upcoming event, a divisional accomplishment, an innovative program, or an update from the Office of the Provost. If you know of a program or event that should be highlighted, please share it here.
Until next week,
Manfred van Dulmen