
·S3 E26
Why is Rowan One of the Fastest Growing Colleges?
Episode Transcript
Hi, rachel, hey, Jeanette, we just had a great interview with Dr Huchman, the president of Rowan University, which is a university.
That is, what is it?
33 miles from Philadelphia?
Speaker 2Yes, I did look that up and it was 33 miles.
I actually mapped it to South Street.
Speaker 1So it's really.
I looked at the map too.
It's right between Philadelphia and Atlantic.
City, so it's like, right down there, it's a Southern part of New Jersey and a lot of people don't know about it in Northern New Jersey and we're like, well, you need to.
Yes absolutely.
Speaker 2Why do you say that, Rachel?
Well, he's so dynamic.
This was such a fun interview and I just loved hearing how, as a university president, he's been president of Rowan for it's like 11 years.
10, 11 years now, Right, yeah, something like that.
And he's the epitome of a transformational leader that's how I look at him and that he is re-envisioning constantly what higher education should look like and enabling the staff and the students at Rowan to benefit from that.
Speaker 1Yeah, he came from Iran and he came from a humble beginnings and he tells us a little bit about this and his journey here, and then we go on to talk about the university itself and he is very much, as you mentioned in the interview, into experiential education, where people are getting their degree in combination with learning how to actually go and get the job, you know, training them for that specific job.
And he goes on to tell us a little bit about his hot sauce that he makes.
He gives us the background on the whole operation, which is quite big and fascinating and, I would say, the pepper on top of the interview.
I love that Of this really wonderful university, a very, as you said, formative president of a university who seems to hold all of the traits that one would want in a president of a university.
Enjoy this interview.
Welcome to Lost in Jersey, Dr Houshman.
Speaker 3Thank you.
Thank you, glad to be here.
Speaker 1I reached out to you because you are the president of Rowan University and the university came onto our radar because both of us have kids that have been heading off to college.
I have a son right now that's heading off to college, and I have a son right now that's heading off to college, and my husband toured many of the New Jersey universities and he went to your university and he would not stop raving about Rowan.
I think everybody in our circle of friends were like well, where is Rowan?
And that was surprising to us.
So we wanted to bring you on to let people know more about it.
And Rachel also, how did Rowan come on your radar?
I?
Speaker 2remember hearing about it through the Malcolm Gladwell podcast the revisionist history.
Speaker 3Yes, yeah, I had two interviews with Malcolm.
There was one of them about.
The title was my Little $100 Million Gift.
Yes, talked about Henry Rowan's money and the other one about the whole issue of how you rank institutions based on US News and World Report.
Basically, every president gets this survey of 4,000 or so universities and you want to scale, rank them by scale of one to five.
I said how the hell do I know that?
The only way that I do it I send every president a bottle of my hot sauce.
Hopefully they will remember me and give me a better ranking.
Speaker 1I love that, I love that story and we are so glad that you brought it up because we definitely want to talk to you about that.
But before we get to the hot sauce and how Rowan found itself on Malcolm Gladwell about the $100 million we'd like to get, it's a very profound story.
Tell us a little bit about your background.
Speaker 3My background is I was born in the rough part of Tehran, in the rough part.
Let's just leave it at that, okay.
Yeah, my mom and dad were illiterate and my father came from the eastern part of Mashhad, my mom from another eastern town, damqan, and they had many children.
They were hardworking people, especially my dad, and they had 12 children.
I believe two of them passed and then the 10.
And I'm the fifth one.
Wow In the middle, yes, and 1975, I finished my high school and I entered the entrance exam for the universities.
The first time I didn't pass.
And then I had the choice of either going to the military to do my two years of military service or find an alternative of going abroad.
And I had taken a test in English.
I barely passed it by 51%, I remember, and passing it was 50.
Now the question was could I afford to go in there?
And my older brother, who had just got a job at Internal Revenue Service in Iran, he basically bought me a one-way ticket to London and it's $70.
And that was my trip to the West.
Speaker 1So you arrived in London with $70.
Speaker 3Yes.
Speaker 1And you were going to go to school there.
Speaker 3Yes.
So I went there and after one week I was frying Kentucky Fried Chicken for 50 pence an hour and basically I went through school paying for myself, working various jobs cleaning the bars.
You know, in England when people go drink they kind of drink a lot and they make a lot of mess, including throwing up and everything.
So my job was this was a university bar I wake up on Friday, saturdays and Sunday morning at 6 am and go and clean up the place.
Wow, so that was the job I was paying.
I was being paid, I think, 50 pence an hour, about half a British pound, and that was enough.
Because I was then living with a family, the Gilchrist family, who I was paying pounds a week for a room, breakfast and dinner, and the breakfast consisted of cereal, milk and one boiled egg and a piece of toast.
So I will hide the piece of toast and a boiled egg and run from a school lunchtime and eat that for lunch, and that's how I basically, you know it was a very struggling time, so you had a host family.
Speaker 1Is that what that?
Speaker 2was?
Was it a host family?
Speaker 1family and then you stayed with them and you just scraped by as you went to college, but it seems that you had a real acumen for mathematics.
Is that?
Speaker 3math background and actually when I did go to England I ended up doing a bachelor's and master's in mathematics and it was really the greatest thing that I did, because actually when my daughter was a teenager, I gave her advice and I said I'll give you three advice.
I said number one learn mathematics because it teaches you logic and logical thinking is really the best way.
Number two become a runner, because it makes you humble and it hurts.
And number three never let a man pay for you.
Learn to learn your own living and your own job so that you don't depend on others.
And she did all three of them.
Speaker 2That's great life advice.
Speaker 3Yeah, she ended up with a PhD in biomedical engineering.
She worked for McKinsey and then now works for Boston Scientific.
She's a leading authority in deep brain stimulation.
Speaker 1Wow, that's impressive.
So does she live in New Jersey too?
Speaker 3No, she lives in Maryland.
She lives in Maryland, yes.
Speaker 1I see so well, how did you I mean while you're going to school how did you end up coming to the United States?
Speaker 3I finished my master's degree at the University of Essex they didn't have a doctoral program at that time and then I went to my advisor, professor Winston, and asked Professor Winston, I wanted to study sampling theory, which people use in polling and other stuff for elections.
And where do you think I should go?
And he said you should go to India.
India is very good.
And I said I don't want to go to India, I want to go to West.
What about America?
And he said well, there is this university near Detroit.
Everybody has gone, they shoot each other, but the university is not bad.
Honestly, he literally said that he meant University of Michigan.
So I went to the library, I got this stuff and I got applications, sent it them.
A week later they accepted me and that's how I ended up at the University of Michigan doing a PhD in statistics.
And after one year I switched because it was so boring and so theoretical.
I switched to industrial and operations engineering and I got another master's and a doctorate there and did you find Detroit?
Speaker 2that was an accurate description or no?
Speaker 3I consider Ann Arbor the greatest place on the face of the earth.
It's my love city.
It's a place that my kids were born.
I absolutely adore that place.
I would give my left hand to live in Ann Arbor.
Oh, that's so nice yeah.
Speaker 1That's a really common thing.
I think that overseas, in Europe and other places, when people look at the United States, they really, you know, they get fed the big stories, the big things that hit the news and it kind of frames a picture of this place.
So I think that that's a common thing.
That's true.
What they're hearing is not accurate, so that's nice to hear that it was also that case here.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1So after you were there, how did you end up at Rowan?
Speaker 3Okay, Once I finished my PhD I got hired at United Airlines.
My PhD I got hired at United Airlines and my job was to basically, with a team of other PhDs, we would schedule 2,100 flights a day, 310 days in advance.
It was an optimization model to increase the revenue for the airlines and it was kind of easy and boring.
So after six-month activity, somebody from University of Cincinnati called me and said would you like to be a faculty?
I said sure.
The next day I flew over there In the afternoon, they gave me a job and that's how I moved to Cincinnati as a professor.
I was there for 10 years.
Then, in near 2000, I moved to Drexel University in the administration position, Was there for six years, Was there for six years and then in 2006, I came here after I saw an ad and I applied and I was interviewed for three days and they were crazy enough to give me a job.
Speaker 2I didn't really know where exactly Rowan was located, and I see that you're very close to Drexel.
It's like 30 minutes to Philly, it's such a great location.
Speaker 3Actually, our location, in my opinion, is very, very strategic because the southern New Jersey eight counties, about 4,600 square miles, and there are a lot of land available and the price of houses are ridiculously low.
You can basically buy a house in a custom build with 10 acres of land under a million dollars.
You would never find anything like that in North Jersey.
So what we are doing, what I am doing right now, given that our location we did 25 miles radius there are nine medical schools in this region.
Number one eye hospital in the world is in Philadelphia.
Number one children's hospital in the world is in Philadelphia.
Number one cancer world cancer is in Camden, philadelphia.
So what I'm trying to do is I'm trying to really focus on the Southern New Jersey and sell this thing as a new Silicon Valley, because the Silicon Valley of California has been exhausted.
The property values are out of reach for many people.
Even home insurance is out of reach for many people and they have really exhausted themselves.
And where we are, within 150-mile radius of our campus, there are 45 million Americans live here, whereas within 150-mile radius in Silicon Valley there are only 15 million people.
Another thing within 150-mile radius in Silicon Valley there are only 11 top research universities, whereas within 150-mile radius there are 36 top research universities in our region.
Yes, so access to airport, seaport, highways of all sorts, population and sandwich between the political world center of the world, washington DC, and financial center of the world, new York, and cultural world Philadelphia, atlantic City there is not a place on the face of America that is as strategic, in my opinion, for that project.
So that's what I'm promoting right now aggressively.
Speaker 2Well, I love that.
We actually just interviewed Governor Murphy and he was saying how New Jersey is the state that has the largest amount of scientists of any state in the country, and he was also talking about being the new Silicon Valley and getting much more VC investment in engineering AI, photonics, which he introduced a new science to us, and all the medical research, like you were saying, and you have two medical schools, correct?
Speaker 3We have three really.
If you look at the veterinary school, that's the third medical school, the vet right.
Yes, we are only one of two universities in the nation that have allopathic, osteopathic and veterinary school.
The other one is Michigan State.
Speaker 1To that point, what are the key points that you like to highlight about Rowan University?
I know that it has been growing and the research institution has been growing and the medical departments are growing.
What's your elevator pitch to people about Rowan?
Speaker 3Your child is safe.
Your child will not be burdened with massive amount of debt.
Your child will have a great cultural experience in here and after four or five years your child is a successful citizen.
Taxpayer, that's what I want.
Speaker 1What more could you want?
That's what we want.
Speaker 2That's what everybody wants.
That's what every parent does want.
Speaker 3A decent education, not be burdened.
We'll go and get a decent job and leave us alone.
Right yeah, that's what he wants.
Speaker 2Well, not leave us alone too much.
Come visit, keep your distance, don't give us no more problems.
Speaker 3You don't need money.
If you need money, don't come see me again.
Speaker 2That's right.
That's perfectly well said, well said.
Speaker 3First of all, rowan University.
Right now, I can tell you confidently as an engineer, rowan Engineering is only next to UPenn Engineering in terms of quality.
The quality of the students that come to Rowan Engineering are out of charge.
Overwhelming majority of them graduate in four years and more than 100 of them every year are hired by Lockheed Martin and the average salary is $90,000.
That's our quality.
I mean people need to investigate the quality of engineering.
I would send my kids to here.
In fact, my son went to here and I would send them any day, because this is a top-notch engineering program.
It really is, and every single one of those kids get a decent job and they're a productive citizen and that's what we offer in here and the campus the other one is absolutely gorgeous.
Speaker 1It is.
It's gorgeous Within the departments.
What have you seen?
Now, one of the things that we alluded to earlier is about the Malcolm Gladwell interviews that you did.
Now.
Rowan University is about 100 years old now I think you just celebrated the anniversary and that Hank Rowan donated $100 million to the university.
Back in what was it?
1992?
1992.
And since then that money has helped expand the university.
You know, back then, $100 million, you know, shook the world.
That was a large amount of money, huge, and he went to MIT but he didn't give it to them Because, not that he didn't appreciate it, he just felt like it won't make that big of a difference to that university as it would to Rowan.
How has that affected Rowan?
Speaker 3Well in a monumental way.
Honestly, before that, when the gift was given, before that, rowan really was an unknown place, highly localized and regional university around here.
Kids from the counties around here would come in here and it was, to a great extent, an open access university.
It really wasn't anything that was impressive.
That's why a lot of people in North Jersey didn't know about it Increasingly more do, because right now most of our applicants are actually from North Jersey.
So up until then they really were not anything, until Henry Rowan came in and he said, in order for him to have the maximum impact of his gift, he wanted to create a college of engineering.
That is the best, that is unique, that every engineer will become a useful, productive citizen.
That was his demand.
And then what they did?
They did a brilliant job of going and recruiting the top deans from MIT and other engineering to come in here and give them advice how do we build the most amazing engineering college?
And based on their advice, they have built something that is very, very unique.
It's a clinic base in that students come in from year one.
They work on an industrial project all four years.
Speaker 2See, that's what I would have liked.
I studied engineering actually at UPenn.
Speaker 3Okay.
Speaker 2It was a long time ago, but I would say, you know they've done a lot of improvements and I don't want to speak badly of my time there.
I mean, I learned a lot there, but I did not love the engineering program.
I did not feel it was very hands-on, considering all that?
Speaker 3Yes, I know.
Yes, Because they prepare you for a PhD.
That's what they do.
Big universities like that.
They really want to give you the kind of education that you can go to graduate school.
But for us, we want to get a person who can finish and go on board for Lockheed Martin.
Speaker 2I love that.
To make it an experiential, you're in the labs, you're actually working and seeing how things work.
Speaker 3And that's why, as I said, the largest employer of our students right now is this major company, global company, and they're very proud.
They don't hire from other universities around here.
They get all of their engineers from us.
That's fantastic.
A hundred per year, that's amazing, that is amazing.
Speaker 2Because you're also knowing that the people are graduating from that kind of an experience really enjoy what they're doing.
Speaker 3And actually, like in Martin, what they do.
They also have a combat systems engineering certificate that they teach every one of those kids who they want to hire.
So their staff teach them and get them an additional certificate above and beyond an engineering degree.
Amazing, Preparing them to work for above and beyond an engineering degree.
Speaker 1Amazing Preparing them to work for them.
Speaker 3That's exactly it.
Yes, and that, to me, is the future of higher education in this country.
We need to do education based on make to order.
If you are a company and you are in need of certain talent, we should be responsible to provide that to you, rather than the way that it is today.
We just educate people without any connection with the real world of what is the need, and we do disproportionate graduates from different fields based on the need.
Think about, for example, just an example psychology versus mechanical engineering.
The state needs a thousand engineers mechanical engineers and we'll be producing 500.
Then we are not doing a service to the state.
If the state needs 100 psychologists and we are producing a thousand, we are not doing a service to the state.
If the state needs 100 psychologists and we are producing 1,000, we are not doing any service to those 900 other people.
And we need to make sure that we produce what the country and what the economy needs.
And that, to me, requires a far closer collaboration with industries.
They need to come in, even at the curricular level, to work with us to see exactly how do we need to train these future generations, because this is a highly knowledge economy and you want to make sure that every single one of your kids are educated in the right way so that they can be a successful citizen, because this is a very aggressive world.
This is not a thing that people can kind of step back and wait for.
The opportunity Opportunities come and go like this, and you need to create educated workforce, and especially today.
Come and go like this, and we need to create educated workforce, and especially today.
Because if you look at our situation right now, everybody the country is very much against illegal immigrants, so we don't want immigrants.
I mean, even this administration doesn't even want legal immigrants from some part of the world.
So that's one thing.
The other thing is that, unfortunately, people these days are getting married much later and chances are they will have either one or no child.
And two of them are my kids, 36 and 38, both married, no kids.
So that's the second thing.
And the third thing is that we are attacking DER in a very, very aggressive way.
What we are doing, we are basically aging the country and not producing enough young people to run this massive knowledge economy and, as a result, countries like China and India will get ahead of us, and that's the danger right now, in my opinion.
If you don't want an immigrant, fine, great, I'm fine with that.
If people don't want to have children, that's their business, that's their right.
But why don't we go and look at every single one of our own citizens and turn them into productive ones?
Think about a kid who lives with their single mother in Canada, and that kid could go one direction or the other, could end up in the wrong direction, end up in prison, where you and I and everybody else pays to incarcerate them, or turn them into productive citizens where that person pays taxes for the benefit of all of us.
That's the choice that we have and we are killing it.
My argument about DEI is not entitlement.
It's really looking for excellence for the good of the country.
It's not entitlement.
It's really looking for excellence for the good of the country.
Speaker 2It's a really fascinating thing to hear your philosophy like this as the president of a university.
Speaker 3It's the truth, because, you know, I do not really believe in giving people handouts.
I believe everybody should have a skin in the game, but it's crazy of us when there are brilliant kids around here, different from different backgrounds, different color and everything.
They are the assets of this country.
If you let them fade, they'll become a burden to this country, and we can't afford it because, as I said, we are competing with countries that are very, very aggressive.
India and China together have 3 billion people that's nine times the population of the United States and they can afford to have tons of engineers and scientists and run the global economy.
And the day that one country gets the perfect AI, that's when they rule the world, and we better be prepared for that.
Speaker 1How are that is?
You brought up a couple of points that I think that we wanted to discuss with you.
With regards to that is the aging population and enrollment dropping, and I believe it was something.
There's a cliff that's supposed to happen, that there's not going to be as many people going to college, and there's also a lot of people, because of the extreme amount of knowledge available online now, are choosing to learn their skills.
And I'll use my own family as an example.
My oldest son goes to Baruch.
He commutes into the city from Montclair to New York City and he is taking computer science there, but he feels he knows more than the professors do.
Speaker 3He's absolutely right.
Speaker 1He's basically building a career on his own at night through all this technology that he's doing and he just feels like he's going to college just because he's SAS.
Speaker 3Just wants to get the credential, but that's the challenge that we are facing.
That's the biggest challenge that the United States face in higher education is this how do we transition the faculty members and professors from sage on the stage into a guide on the side, because they're no longer sages?
Speaker 2Sage on the stage to a guide on the side.
Speaker 3Probably I've got far more knowledge than many of those professors, because they're better with this than they are.
We are slower.
So, as a result, the question is, what is going to happen to, let's say, your grandchild 17 years from now to go to college?
How is that college going to look like?
Is it going to be still a classroom with 30 people where professor comes and writes on the board and everybody copies and takes the exam and get a degree?
That's not going to happen.
You're not going to do that.
We are in the age of AI, we are in the age of fast-moving knowledge and, as a result, we need to restructure and redefine the whole notion of a university, not only the role of the faculty, role of credential, role of pricing and the way that we educate people.
And, on top of that infrastructure, the buildings that we want to build today is going to last 50, 60 years from now.
You're going to invest $100 million to build a building.
It better be functional 50 years from now.
The way that the knowledge invest $100 million to build a building it better be functional 50 years from now.
The knowledge is going right now Today's building you build the technology first and then put the brick and mortar around it to support it.
Up until now it was brick and mortar first and a punch of hole in the buildings to get wires through there.
We need to transition all of this.
Everything is going upside down as a result of knowledge.
Speaker 2Well, what do you think then about the professors that have been teaching a certain way for so long?
How to retrain them?
Speaker 3We are giving them a lot of, but there are a number of ways.
To begin with, you know, the whole issue of promotion and tenure is going to become much more related to you know how they perform.
But, more importantly, we are giving them the tools, the ability to go and learn new way of delivering knowledge.
Imagine that you know you can go in there and get a YouTube or TED talk and a five-minute talk to give it to the students.
Go and listen to this thing and come back and let's discuss it.
What I think the education of the future is going to be versus the education of today.
The education of today is that knowledge transformation.
Right?
That means I have the knowledge you don't have it.
I give it to you.
Right?
That means I have the knowledge you don't have it, I give it to you.
You got to use it to better your life.
This is no longer the case.
The future education is going to be I know how to use this knowledge to make good decisions.
I'm going to teach you how to use this knowledge to make good decisions rather than how to memorize that knowledge.
Right?
So both of us have the same knowledge, except that I know how to package it to make a good decision in life, and I need to teach you that that's going to be the new education.
Speaker 2And do you feel that that can apply also to the liberal arts classes?
Speaker 3This is critical, absolutely critical, for this country and universities not to damage or undermine humanities and social sciences.
And the reason for that is this because if we do, we're going to have a lot of robots.
All kids are going to become robots.
We need to have a whole person, because in today's knowledge, the notion of you going to college and get a degree and then work with your degree for the rest of your career, that's done, it's not going to happen.
Chances are you're going to have 10 different jobs, multiple careers, multiple jobs and some of the jobs that the industries have not yet been created, of course.
Imagine I'm preparing these kids for the future of the economy that I don't even know what it is.
20 years ago, who knew that the largest hotel company in the world wouldn't even own a single hotel and it's called Airbnb?
Who would have thought that the greatest taxi company doesn't have a single taxi?
Those are the knowledges that just came up and you're going to see many of those.
So we also have the responsibility to educating kids for the economy that we don't even know how it looks like.
Speaker 2It's teaching them also to be flexible and also to learn and to apply those skills broadly.
Speaker 3Absolutely as a result, this whole notion of mechanical engineering, psychology, this, and that you've got to question the whole issue of baccalaureate, master's and PhD.
You've got to question all of those Because right now majoring companies are coming up with these credentials, micro-credentials, and you can go and take it in three months, pay about $500, chances are you can get a $60,000 job.
Speaker 1And you probably know more about how to do it than the person who spent four years in courses.
Well, the thing is.
That really strikes me, though, is that the problem is nobody knows what to do.
Yet I was listening to the author of Sapiens, yuval Harari.
He was talking on a podcast about that.
There is no one in government or business that can really help us guide us.
The only people we have to look to right now are sci-fi writers, and they're the only ones that are trying to predict what our future is going to be like they're the only ones that are trying to predict what our future is going to be like and how as a university.
when you're having to make these decisions, I feel like you're hit with like so many you know.
It's like you have to brainstorm like, okay, we could do it this way.
Are we going to be an online school?
Are we going to hire, you know, executives to come in?
Are we going to become a big YouTube channel, a podcast that we're going to have teachers a certificate for?
How does it feel being in that position?
Speaker 3You're absolutely right on, because all the things that you just said are absolutely possible and, as a result, what you need to do, you need to bring as many brains as possible.
Talk to some industry leaders we have been working with Cisco, we've been working with McKinsey and get those outside perspectives of major advanced companies and see whether together you can build and imagine this future.
Because, as you're sitting, actually we're looking at our campus.
Our campus is divided by Route 322.
That goes all the way to Atlantic City and in the southern part is the old campus and I'm trying to rebuild, get rid of all the old building and turn that into the campus of 21st century which is going to be quite different, because there is going to be a door, there is going to be a certain knowledge, but it's going to be very, very different.
Technology is going to play a major role in the way that these kids have to grow up and, in my opinion, universities should exist indefinitely because every parent should have the right, at the age of 17 and 18, to trust their kids to go someplace that is safe and they can learn to grow up and make good decisions.
That's called a university.
Speaker 2Right, because you're learning so many things besides just the actual major.
Speaker 3You've got to be smart to function in this complex world.
Those are the things that are absolutely essential for every one of us to continue maintaining that university.
As we speak, we are planning an $80 million building for College of Humanities and Social Sciences, but we want to really.
We have partnered with Arizona State in Dreamscape Learn, which is highly advanced technology-based education, and we are right now looking at digital humanities.
You want people to put goggles on and they go, and you can literally be within the, let's say, art in a museum and you can fly in there and learn things that way.
Or you can be in a field where you are touching a dinosaur or testing whether the dinosaur is sick and what kind of medicine you want to give them.
All of that we can do right now at Rowan.
So the new classrooms are going to be very different, also highly technology oriented.
We are investing massive amount of money on technology these days because that's the way the future is and these kids are as you just said.
Your sons and daughters are probably far more advanced than many of the professionals.
Speaker 1Well, that's an interesting thing too is that I've been hearing that a lot of white-collar jobs are being hit right now, as the economy, with some of the changes in the government funding and there's a shrinking of white collar, blue collar jobs are somewhat steady and they are, in a way, growing a little bit Because if you get a degree right now you're not sure you're going to get a job, as we were speaking to earlier, and what I think that you're saying, that what Rowan is doing, is they're trying to make it much more experiential, as Rachel was saying, in a way that you do feel like you're going to go to college and you're actually getting hands-on work, that you're going to go get a job.
That's not going to be disappearing.
That's really the fear now is there isn't.
Speaker 3Because it's a major investment on the part of every parent.
When you send your daughter to school for four years, even to public schools, you are looking at tens of thousands of dollars and when you look at the totality of this thing upon graduation, it's a mini mortgage for an undergraduate.
If you go to professional degrees like medicine and everything, now you're talking about a serious mortgage and you cannot have a society where people young people, come out of college with massive burden on their shoulder and it delays everything else that they want to do, whether they want to buy a house, buy a car, get married, go.
Everything needs to slow down so that they can deal with this thing.
Now, with the federal government, with this one big, beautiful bill that they're going to pass, that thing is going to devastate hundreds of thousands of Americans because Pell Grant is going to get hit big time and that means the poorest of the poor are going to not be able to go to college.
Furthermore, the loan guarantee is going to be even worse.
Federal loan guarantee is critical because, for a low-income person, they can go there and get a loan without paying interest until the day that they start earning.
Now these kids have to go to a bank.
Many of them would not qualify.
Even if they qualify, the interest rate is significantly higher and it would be accrued from day one that they get the money.
Speaker 2That's an interesting way to look at how I mean.
We do know that the equation is off.
If the investment is so heavy into getting the college degree, then of course you're going to want the job right after.
That's the highest paying.
So more and more people want to go into a major that will be high paying, and then all these other majors are just neglected because everyone's afraid of getting a job.
But I hadn't also thought about it with all the burden the financial burden, how it delays all the rest of your life, Because having a job is one part of your life, it's a big part.
But then wanting a relationship, wanting a home, wanting maybe kids or a family, if you're pushing all of that out as well, what are those ramifications for the country?
Speaker 3Those are really, really serious ramifications.
They really are, because, I said, aging of a country is bad.
If you look at a country like Italy, it's an aged country, people are highly entitled and, as a result, the economy will shrink and you can't afford to let the number one political, military and economic power in the world to get into that situation.
And, as I said, time yeah.
Well, one of the things that I wanted to talk about.
Speaker 1that's kind of related.
You brought it up at the beginning and talking about rankings of universities and US News and World Report, there was a very interesting kind of telling interview that Malcolm Gladwell had with the publishers of it, that relationship with the peer review portion of that and it's usually a president of Harvard is asked what universities do you like?
And they're like well, I like Princeton and I like you know whatever.
And you talk about in that interview that the hot sauce that you have created, that you sent it out to every president in all the university presidents so they would get to know who you were.
Speaker 3With my picture on it too, With your picture.
Speaker 2Did you hear back?
What was the?
Speaker 3Oh yeah, a number of universities wrote and they were very, very thankful and grateful and they were very creative.
In fact, rutgers copied us and they created their own hot sauce too.
Speaker 2Did they?
Speaker 1Jersey.
So when did this start?
The hot sauce decision, Adventure yeah.
Speaker 3Adventure started, I would say 15 years ago, when I love gardening.
I do a lot of that.
I love nature and outside, so I grow vegetable and one year I grew a lot of peppers and I basically decided what to do and I like experimentally cooking, I like to do that kind of stuff.
So I put it in the pot and made some hot sauce with some spices and other things.
It was okay and I kept improving this and eventually jarred them and gave them to some of my staff and all my colleagues, and that's how it became known as and in fact they referred to it the first time I gave it to them I called it Ali's Nasty and then eventually, I think about eight years ago, my staff from the marketing came and said would you be able to make a batch and we will auction it and see how it goes?
And I did.
I had to actually go home and do that.
My wife kicked me out of the kitchen because the fume would kill you, so we have a stove in the garage.
That's where I did it.
It was auctioned and it was very popular and there were people in the waiting list, so I did.
Another batch, another batch, the in the waiting list so I did another batch, another batch the following year.
We went big.
We basically I started growing in a farm and we have a lot of land in here and it has now gotten into a major, major operation.
What I do is I do three things actually.
It's not just the hot sauce.
I grow various peppers, 10 different types of pepper, the hottest in the world and we basically gather this thing tens of thousands and we have got storage facilities over at Rutgers Food Center in Cumberland and that's where we bought all these things and we sell them and all the proceeds everything goes to needy students, so it's purely for needy students and expenses.
Most of it, some of it I actually covered myself and we have raised about $3 million and lots of students have been helped.
So that's one project.
Million dollars and lots of students have been helped.
So that's one project.
And then the second project is I also grow fruit and vegetables.
Lots of that.
You know last year was 30,000 pounds, this year I'm hoping would be 50 tons.
And we box these things and we give them to people, whether it's church, whether people come and line up on campus, whether it's school district, and we have a food pantry, so a lot of people get that.
And the third thing that I do is I actually raise koi fish and koi fish are used in aquaponic farming.
We have a greenhouse where we grow vegetables inside the thing.
So I've got right now I've got at least 20,000 baby fish that I'm feeding every day.
Speaker 2Oh my goodness, you're starting your own agriculture school.
We have it, we are trying.
Speaker 3You do.
That's what I was going to ask.
Modern agriculture to Rowan yes.
Speaker 1Do you teach these?
Have these become courses?
Speaker 3Yes, there's a course, but I also teach the kids about the business small business of hot sauce, from the beginning to the end.
That's fun.
The students run this thing, they sell it and I teach them.
If you wanted to start your own landscaping, what is the first thing you need to do?
What is the second thing you need to do?
How do you start a small factory?
So they get Is it a course?
Speaker 1It's not a conversation.
I think it needs to be a course.
Speaker 3Yes, it should be a course, of course, but it's a business course.
How do you go to a bank manager and borrow $5,000 to buy equipment?
Those are the kind of things that kids don't know how to do that's exactly.
Speaker 1It's the most.
It's so tangible for them as well.
Speaker 2Ask also about the PhD in creativity.
Well, I read about that and, as you were speaking so much about brainstorming about the future of universities and teaching, I mean that is all about being able to be creative and think in different ways and taking sort of an engineering background, but also future think.
Speaker 3Absolutely you have to.
Really, the world is moving so fast that you really have to have the ability to predict the future, Because if you don't, you slow down, you stop.
In order for you to move forward, you have to see what is ahead of you.
So you really have to move and that requires constant education, constant learning, constant being involved, and it's essential to do that.
Speaker 2So, in the PhD for creativity, what are some of the things that people are giving you feedback on with?
Speaker 3it.
Well, actually, let me tell you, the PhD in creativity came from University of Arts in Philadelphia.
When they went belly up, yes, we adopted them.
So we brought the two professors and the five students who were in the program already and they were finished and they graduated.
This is the first year, that's great.
Basically, it's the idea of again creativity in all facets of life, the way that I do things.
In order to be creative, I always try to imagine the unimaginable.
I go above and beyond what is crazy.
Speaker 2Do you get those ideas a lot while you're growing peppers?
Speaker 3Yes, right.
Speaker 2Being out in nature and doing something different.
Speaker 3No, I was also a runner.
I was a marathoner.
I ran many marathons.
I used to really solve a lot of my problems during running.
Speaker 1yes, when you are on your own and you're focusing, a lot of great things happen.
Human mind is amazing when you give it a chance.
Yeah, it is true, I think you've given us a lot of very hopeful, a lot of tips on how to live our lives and a lot of good hope for presidents of universities like you that are really, you know, thinking about the tangible student and where, how you can help them go out into the world and succeed.
Speaker 3That's our role, that's our job, though If we don't in fact, if we don't do that, in my opinion we have failed.
Speaker 2Right.
I feel like there is this, though perception of many university leaders of them not being, though perception of many university leaders of them not being transformational leaders.
And, speaking to you, it's a breath of fresh air, but it's also nice to see that you really are, and have been thinking this way for Rowan.
Speaker 3A long time yet.
Yeah, for a long time.
Higher education is very resistant to change.
If you ask 10 professors how many of you does it take to change a light bulb, they say oh my God change.
Speaker 1But you have to now.
If you don't, yeah.
Speaker 3The reason that we are successful in here is the concept of openness and transparency and honesty.
People cannot be fooled and you should never look at any individual less than purely a dignified human being.
You've got to have that attitude.
We have 22 unions in this university.
We don't have a single- 22.
We don't have a single union problem.
They come in here whatever they ask.
I give them the truth always.
We put our budget online for everybody to see so you can see the university finances yourself.
You can see what president does or where he goes.
I think honesty is very important today.
If you are that, then people come along, Because, at the end of the day, every human being wants to have a dignified life and wants to have a life with purpose, and I really believe the reason that this place is successful is exactly that.
Speaker 2I became us.
Speaker 3That's the key.
Speaker 2You've got to become us.
Speaker 3Because if you keep everybody inside the tent, those who are outside will not pee all over the tent.
Speaker 1Well, I completely agree with that.
I heard something once it's like people, when they get into power, they really show themselves.
You know who they really are, and I think that what you demonstrated because you've been in power longer than most presidents of universities I think that— I'm the oldest in New Jersey, actually right now.
Is that right?
The oldest president of a university?
Speaker 3or the longest, the number of years.
I think the number of years yeah yeah, and oldest maybe too.
Speaker 1I don't think you're the oldest, but I think you might be the longest.
So it seems that you definitely have kept this us and we theory working.
Rowan is just growing and growing.
I mean, we saw the rankings.
Whether they are truthful or not, as we hear that US World, whatever news and report, is sometimes questionable, but yours do seem to be going up and up and up.
Speaker 3I mean, we have many universities right now have enrollment problems.
We have the reverse of enrollment problems.
Our challenge for next year actually is how do we have enough dorm room for our students?
We have to triple some kids.
That makes volume about the quality of the institution, the safety of the campus, the beauty of the campus, because at the end of the day, you've got to create home away from home for these kids.
These are the kids who have left the home for the first time.
They were fed, their clothes were washed, the bed was made, all of these things.
Suddenly, all of it is gone and they're going to do it themselves and it's a shock.
People don't realize that.
Speaker 2Honestly, that's a very good point because I think that gets overlooked when all these kids freshmen go to college campuses all over, and then a lot of them are not prepared at all for that.
Speaker 3No, it's like a military camp.
It's difficult because think about the kid who has been in a very protective environment in a rural area.
Suddenly you come to this university where everybody speaks different language, they look differently and there is a competition and everybody wants to get ahead of you.
It's overwhelming.
You know, you've gone from high school where you have seen the same kid for the past 12 years and you're very close and suddenly all of it is gone and a whole new group of people, vastly different in their look, in their accent, in their way, and that's a challenge.
And then you have to balance your own budget, get up early in the morning, make sure that your time is all of these things you have to do.
So have some sympathy for our kids.
Speaker 2For sure, for sure, we do have a lot of sympathy.
Well, because we're going through it with our own kids.
We are.
Speaker 1We are Well, it's such a fascinating story that you have, from your humble beginnings in Iran to being the leader of a university that's just growing and taking care of all of our children, you know, and helping them navigate this world.
It's been an honor to speak with you, thank you.
Thank you for all that you do.
We do close out our interviews with a question, and the question is is there something that stands out to you that you do?
We do close out our interviews with a question, and the question is is there something that stands out to you that you really love about New Jersey?
Speaker 3Jersey tomato.
Speaker 1The Jersey tomato that is so perfect.
Speaker 3I grow a lot of them and if you give me your address, I'll send you some hot sauce and tomato.
Speaker 1We will then Not only.
Speaker 3Come in actually pick your own.
You could come with a truck, fill it up and take it there and give it to the churches around your home.
Speaker 2I love that.
That's a great idea.
That would be great, jeanette, let's do that Road trip.
Speaker 3Road trip.
Come and see Rowan.
Yes, if you want your kids here, come and see the campus.
Speaker 2It's a beautiful campus.
Speaker 3It really is very nice.
I feel very good about this thing because people's kids are safe.
Speaker 1Well, you know I wanted to.
I was telling Rachel I don't know whether I should say it or not and full disclosure my son picked Rowan.
Speaker 3That's great.
I'm glad to hear that I'm going to see more of you, hopefully.
What major does he want to do?
What major?
Speaker 1What is his major?
He doesn't a no yet, I think it's going to be.
Speaker 3The thing is it's not sure.
Speaker 2Yeah, it's good to explore, yeah.
Speaker 3It's really 40, more than 40% or close to 50% of our students.
When they come in they're exploring.
They don't know what they want to do.
Yeah, I myself went through three major changes.
I was electrical engineering, computer engineering, then mathematics and then industrial engineering.
So let them explore, let them find their own ways, and it's the best way because at the end of the day, they don't get to blame you for it to eat it.
Speaker 2I think that is super important advice and I try to give that to as many friends as I can is do not push your kids into a major.
You will regret it, they will be angry with you and they can hold it over your head the rest of your life and it's not worth it.
No, it wouldn't.
Speaker 3Let them make their own decisions and all you need to do is stay in contact and if they don't respond to you, they don't come and visit.
Write them a nice letter Hi, son, I love you.
I love that you're so friendly with your new girlfriend, that the classes are good.
Oh, by the way, here is $200 money.
Why don't you go to dinner with your girlfriend?
Speaker 1And then don't put the the money in there, he will call you.
I love that.
Well, thank you, dr Houshman, for coming on Lost in Jersey.
It's been a pleasure to meet you and I'm just grateful that my son will be going to this school.
Speaker 3I'm so glad that she is and I look forward to seeing you.
Thank you for the interview.
It was wonderful speaking with both of you.
Speaker 2This podcast was produced by Rachel Martens and Jeanette Afsharian.
You can find us on Spotify, itunes and Buzzsprout.
Thanks for listening.
See you next week.