BYU - R1 status

 



By Study and by Faith: This week BYU received R1 status and reported the nation’s 3rd most Fulbright Scholars. It is doing this w/integrity to its spiritual mission. Our faculty are modeling the double heritage President Kimball foresaw 50 years ago:

https://news.byu.edu/announcements/r1-institution-carnegie

Brigham Young University is now an R1 research institution according to the newly updated Carnegie Classification research designations announced today.

BYU’s move from an R2 institution to the highest “Research 1: Very High Spending and Doctorate Production” designation is a result of Carnegie Classification changes to the methodology for determining research designations, as well as a more complete reporting of BYU’s research expenditures.

The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education is a framework for categorizing colleges and universities in the United States based on research level and degrees awarded. Among doctorate-granting universities, there are three designations: R1 (Very High Spending and Doctorate Production), R2 (High Spending and Doctorate Production), and “Research Colleges and Universities.”

Addressing BYU’s Carnegie Classification designation in his Annual University Conference address this past fall, President C. Shane Reese said, “BYU is committed to remaining ‘primarily ... an undergraduate teaching institution that is unequivocally true to the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.’” Research efforts on campus, he continued, are aimed to be “supportive of the university’s primary teaching mission.”

This commitment to undergraduate teaching, mentoring and experiential learning is demonstrated every day across campus. One recent example comes from the work of physics student Noah Pulsipher, who helped author a paper on the acoustics of SpaceX’s Starship rocket. Pulsipher, along with fellow students and faculty mentor Kent Gee, measured the intense sound produced by the world’s most powerful rocket. The project highlights the university’s ongoing hands-on approach to learning, where students engage directly in transformative research while working alongside expert faculty.

BYU is one of several institutions nationwide moving from R2 to R1 status. According to the Carnegie Classification, institutions of higher education that annually spend at least $50 million on research and development and produce at least 70 research doctorates qualify for the R1 designation under the updated guidelines. BYU has produced more than 70 PhDs per year for more than a decade and the university’s research expenditures for 2023 exceed the $50 million threshold.

Equal opportunities

 


@naval

: “The reality is that opportunities have never been more equal than now.

@elonmusk and @JeffBezos have the same iPhone you do. They don’t have some better version of an iPhone.

They’re eating food that might be marginally better than yours, but it’s basically the same. You might even have a better diet than them. You probably have more time to go to the gym than them. They’re not immortal, and they’re not going to be—most likely, not at this time scale. So you have more youth than them. You have a lot of advantages over them. The wealth gaps are actually much smaller than people think. A lot of that is due to mass production, which comes from specialization, labor, and capitalism. But it’s very easy to overlook that and agitate—because that gets you higher in the status hierarchy with other monkeys. It makes you look like you’re fighting for noble causes and gives you status, which is really what people are craving these days. They’re craving status, not money or wealth. And status is a zero-sum game. So it’s kind of an evil game to play because there have to be losers for every winner. And the only way to win is by crushing somebody else down.”

https://x.com/arjunkhemani/status/1869440256308867167

Plant LDS anywhere in the world

 



NY Times best-selling author, Stephen Mansfield, who is not a Latter-day Saint, observed: Plant The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in any country on earth and pretty much the same results will occur. It will produce deeply moral individuals who serve a religious vision centered upon achievement in this life. They will aggressively pursue the most advanced education possible, understand their lives in terms of overcoming obstacles, and eagerly serve the surrounding society. The family will be of supernatural importance to them, as will planning and investing for future generations. They will be devoted to community, store and save as a hedge against future hardship, and they will esteem work as a religious calling. They will submit to civil government and hope to take positions within it. They will have advantages in this. Their beliefs and their lives in all-encompassing community will condition them to thrive in administrative systems and hierarchies—a critical key to success in the modern world. Ever oriented to a corporate life and destiny, they will prize belonging and unity over individuality and conflict every time.