Robert Lapiner Intends for SCPS To ‘Capture the Global Moment’
By Jason Hollander
Robert S. Lapiner began his tenure this spring as dean of the School of
Continuing and Professional Studies (SCPS), after 15 years as dean of
continuing education and UCLA Extension at the University of
California, Los Angeles. Under his leadership, UCLA Extension set
national standards for post-baccalaureate certificate programs and the
integration of multicultural and global perspectives in continuing
education curricula, while enrolling approximately 60,000 students
annually.
From 1976-1990, Lapiner worked in international education throughout
Europe and Africa. As the deputy executive director/director for Europe
of the non-profit Council on International Educational Exchange from
1982-1990, he developed and oversaw university-based academic study and
practical training programs. From 1976-1982, he was a U.S. career
diplomat in cultural and educational affairs, posted in the
Netherlands, Zaire (now Republic of Congo), and France.
During this period, he was also a visiting professor at the National
University of Zaire at Lubumbashi, and the American University of
Paris, and a frequent lecturer at French universities and grandes
écoles. In his various capacities, he helped found a university-based
Center for the Study of Human Rights in Central Africa and the Dutch
American Studies Association.
Lapiner earned his B.A. from UCLA and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard
University in British and American languages and literatures. His
articles about U.S. and international higher education policy and
practice have been published in the Netherlands, Germany, France, South
Korea, and the United States.
NYU Today recently spoke with him about his new role as SCPS dean:
What enticed you to steer your career toward non-traditional education?
In my childhood, in many part-time jobs as a student, and in volunteer
work, I was moved by the transformative examples of family members,
parents of friends, and older co-workers who were non-traditional adult
students. I believe that learning is a life-long vocation—and that
universities must accommodate the evolving needs and expectations of
adult students.
Adult learners bring professional experience, personal maturity, and
clarity of motivation to their studies. They may focus on obtaining
practical tool-sets to advance in their profession (or embark on a new
career direction); at other times, they study for the sheer passion of
exploration. In shaping the programs and methodologies for reaching
such broad needs and aspirations, I like that schools of continuing
education must be responsive to—and reflect the characters of—the
greater community in which their universities sit.
How
does SCPS overcome the perception that higher education is for young
men or women aged 18-22? What’s different about educating adult
students?
First of all, SCPS
serves students of all ages. The outstanding undergraduates in our
Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism, and Sports Management are the
traditional 18-22. But it is true, that the overwhelming majority of
our nearly 40,000 full and part-time undergraduate, masters’ degree,
and non-degree students, are older. In that regard, we are not
unusual—nationally the majority of students in American higher
education is made up of “non-traditional,” part-time adults. That is
why SCPS is the natural home for NYU’s Paul McGhee division, offering
undergraduate liberal arts and professionally oriented degrees for
older students.
The SCPS curricula take into
account that students’ work and life experiences add value to their
professional and academic preparedness. So we build on their maturity
and draw upon their knowledge in developing our programs. Our
student-centered approach is also why we offer our courses in the
evenings, weekends, online, and in summer intensives—because older
students have to balance time for career, family, and study.
What do you plan to do here at NYU that you had not been able to do at UCLA?
I loved UCLA and UCLA Extension, but I have come to NYU because of its
openness to creative innovation and entrepreneurial spirit, and history
of community engagement. In the short time I’ve been here, I have
become ever more convinced that if you have a compelling idea and get
the right champions, you can achieve almost anything.
What
distinguishes SCPS in particular is its comprehensive nature as a
school, offering undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education
programs, having full-time faculty and distinguished adjuncts and
enjoying deep connections within many of the industries and sectors
that shape the New York economy and its place in the world.
There is also a tremendous opportunity for collaboration within NYU
through strategic partnerships with other schools at the University,
where my predecessors began precedents that I hope to expand. And then
there are the possible collaborations within the city itself, its
industries, cultural institutions, community organizations, and
unrivaled international resources.
You
mention your desire for SCPS to take a ‘greater role in global
business, cultural, social, and political affairs.’ How will that
happen?
Students should always possess
knowledge of the world around them. Keep in mind that probably most of
our students are already working in fields that are being shaped by
global factors. It is essential that in whatever we’re teaching, our
programs capture the global moment. Across the world there is a hunger
for understanding other cultures and other ways of doing business, and
SCPS should not be an exception. Part of the dean’s job is to support
and shape initiatives—be they in curriculum design, internships here
and abroad, increasing international enrollments and overseas study
options, or faculty exchange—toward that end. And we are committed to
offering the general public access to learning opportunities that
foster nuanced global understanding.
How have you enjoyed living in New York City so far?
The NYU community has been very welcoming. My wife (a native Parisian)
and I have already come to feel entirely at home. Walking in New
York—especially in the vicinity of NYU—is to experience the vitality of
life itself, its diversity, capacity for joy, and exuberance. As my
wife said one day while waiting for me in Washington Square Park,
watching the frolicking dogs and children at play, and the students,
faculty, and staff in rapt conversation, and smelling the lilacs in
bloom, “Can it get any better than t

