UHCL sharpens focus on strategic partnerships
March 21, 2019 | UHCL Staff
University of Houston-Clear Lake has been offering undergraduate and graduate degrees
since 1974. But beyond the classroom, the university is a community resource in ways
that many might not realize. It’s Dwayne Busby’s primary focus in his new role as
UH-Clear Lake’s executive director of strategic partnerships to change that.
Busby, who spent over three years as UH-Clear Lake’s executive director of development
and alumni relations, said that UHCL President Ira K. Blake created the position because she’d encountered so many people in the community who
weren’t aware of all that the university had to offer apart from academic degrees.
“We can offer so much more to the community, and it’s my purpose to elevate the public’s
awareness of what we have beyond our classrooms,” said Busby, who began his new position
last summer.
There are some corporations and organizations in Bay Area Houston that know UHCL is
an outstanding resource for applied research capabilities, said Busby, “but I’m here
to broaden our scope even further. That’s one of my primary objectives — to create
partnerships with more entities in the community based on our ability to give them
the research facilities to work in and lend our faculty’s expertise,” he said. “We
have plenty of students who are searching for internships and co-ops. We can facilitate
research across so many industries that are vital in our community, including industrial
safety, environmental, and mechanical and software engineering.”
Busby explained that although UHCL is not a research institution, it conducts applied
research across all disciplines. “That means that the research we do and the facilities
we have available are applicable to current industry needs. The research that comes
out of those labs can be taken and used today,” he said. “For example, our Recreation
and Wellness Building contains state-of-the-art labs and equipment to be used by students
and faculty in our Exercise and Health Sciences program. Those labs accomplish applied
research that can meet an external entity’s needs through our Exercise and Nutritional
Health Institute.”
With faculty and students also available to provide expertise and assistance, a company
can meet its applied research objectives quickly. “This also gives our students the
opportunity to have interaction with professionals working in their chosen field,”
he said.
President Blake said she chose Busby for this role because in his previous role in
University Advancement, he’d been charged with building the relationships needed for
the university to raise the funds to finance its set priorities. “Dwayne was already
traveling in those circles, prospecting corporations and participating in multiple
chambers of commerce and economic development partnerships on the university’s behalf,”
she said. “He already has the ability to promote the university and its brand to these
different parties through committees and councils.”
“In addition to networking in those circles, I’m also communicating our message through
our internal partners, including the Office of the President, Office of Marketing
and Communications, the Office of the Provost, and Career Services,” Busby said. “My
goals are to set up students to become competent, confident, caring and courageous
citizens in their lives, not just their careers, and to educate the community about
UHCL and its resources.”
The Office of Strategic Partnerships continues to expand. Joyce Delores Taylor, director
of internship programs, and Alexis Nwagui, program manager have recently been added
to Busby's team.
For more information about the Office of Strategic Partnerships, visit www.uhcl.edu/strategic-partnerships/.
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