Got this from a a friend of my daughter who is an associate professor at one of PSU's satellite campuses.
Open Letter
Open Letter
I think you hit the nail on the head. while I see some value in having satellite campuses, most are commuter students that couldn't get or afford the main campus. Today, that is easily access with online learning.Do brick and mortar institutions have a future anyway? I don't mean the Harvards of the world, but what can't be mostly or entirely taught online?
But don't ditch diggers now require a college degree?
But don't ditch diggers now require a college degree?![]()
There is going to be a tremendous amount of pressure on publicly funded post-secondary institutions in Pennsylvania to more align majors and curriculum with employer needs. In theory, this means less emphasis on liberal arts degrees and more industry-specific — and even elements of CTC training. What that means for both UP and satellite campuses remains to be seen, but these are going to be the expectations from the decision-makers allocating public investments. Combine that with the dramatic decline in birth rates in the past 5-10 years and colleges and universities are going to be facing very difficult decisions over the next 10 years.I think you hit the nail on the head. while I see some value in having satellite campuses, most are commuter students that couldn't get or afford the main campus. Today, that is easily access with online learning.
To me, the value of college is, of course, the academics. That can be accomplished online. the second side is the social side. Here, kids can use college as a halfway house between being a kid and being an adult. I see value in kids going to school so that they learn how to control themselves when not under their parent's control.
I no longer see the value, based on the expense, of the satellite campuses.
agreed. STEM programs, for the most part.There is going to be a tremendous amount of pressure on publicly funded post-secondary institutions in Pennsylvania to more align majors and curriculum with employer needs. In theory, this means less emphasis on liberal arts degrees and more industry-specific — and even elements of CTC training. What that means for both UP and satellite campuses remains to be seen, but these are going to be the expectations from the decision-makers allocating public investments. Combine that with the dramatic decline in birth rates in the past 5-10 years and colleges and universities are going to be facing very difficult decisions over the next 10 years.
I hire them to be my latex salesmen!Does a PSU degree get one anything else these days?
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