First ISU finalist talks transparency, mental health
Ames TribuneOct 10, 2017
Monday's hour-long forum was, for the most part, the public's first introduction to Ramaswamy. It came at the end of his day of meetings on campus with different students and staff. Before taking questions from the audience, he said that in order for ISU to keep its promises and advance, it will have to be open and accessible in its decision-making.
"We've got to make sure we are completely transparent in everything that we do," he told the audience. "I heard this many times today, that a lot of the conversations, a lot of the challenges we've got are the consequence of the lack of transparency in the things that we end up doing."
The man who would be Ramaswamy's predecessor at ISU,
Ramaswamy said there is an "aura" around Beardshear Hall, the main administration building on campus, and that decisions have to be made "in concert with each other," collaboratively.
"Without that, we're not going to make a whole lot of progress to achieve that next level," he said.
He said that also means the decision-makers at ISU need to hold each other accountable. He said the university needs to work toward creating an equitable environment for everyone and sticking to its land-grant university mission.
During the question-and-answer session of the forum, Ramaswamy, who was appointed to his position at NIFA in 2012, was asked about how he would deal with a controversial speaker coming to campus, someone, perhaps, that a large part of the campus community might not want to hear from. It's become an point of contention at multiple universities across the country.
He lamented the current divisiveness in the political arena but said ISU shouldn't turn away a speaker just because they might say something not everyone likes. The school, however, should set some ground rules, no violence for instance, that if violated, would end the event, Ramaswamy said.
"We should say, 'Yes, but these are the rules of the game," he said.
That was welcome to the ears of
"I was really glad that he sounded like he has a game plan in mind and one with legal backing," she said.
Fair was also glad Ramaswamy spoke about student achievement, but he also talked about students' mental health. He mentioned the opioid epidemic across
Responding to a question from
"Making sure (Ramaswamy) has a closer approach to student wellness and student outcomes is, I think, a very good sight," he said.
The conversation also ventured into students' mental health. A student who works in one of ISU's residence halls said there had been "several" suicide attempts over the past week. She asked what Ramaswamy and ISU should do to help students who are struggling.
He urged people to pay attention to their friends' or students' behaviors to maybe catch warning signs. Making resources available for the campus health center should be another focus, he said
"We've really got to be paying attention to that," he said. "If we don't pay attention to that, we'll end up not catching those symptoms and those signs in those young people."
After the forum, Ramaswamy said he wasn't surprised by any of the questions he fielded. He ignored the stage behind him and strolled back and forth on the floor, occasionally calling out to the students and staff he'd met earlier in the day. He began his remarks with an easy crowd pleaser: lauding the
He admitted several times that his ISU knowledge was limited at best, but he was still impressive to some in the audience.
"It just seems like he was all-encompassing with his answers of the different facets of the university," said
Ramaswamy's six-year term at the
"I'd do it," he said. "There's no ifs or buts about it."
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