January 23, 2014
PASSHE Board of Governors approves new strategic plan
Contact: Kevin Hensil, khensil@passhe.edu
Harrisburg – The Board of Governors of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) today approved a new strategic plan that will enhance and expand student learning opportunities and ensure the Commonwealth receives the greatest possible return on its annual investment in the System and its 14 universities.
The new long-range plan establishes a series of measurable goals for the System as
a whole, including increasing the number of degrees and certificates awarded annually
by the universities; increasing the number of working adult and transfer students
enrolled in the System; and boosting graduation rates among all groups of students,
especially low-income and underrepresented minority students. The goals are expected
to be met by 2020.
“Strategic plans are never ‘final’ and should always be evaluated for relevancy,”
said PASSHE Chancellor Frank T. Brogan. “But, today’s action solidifies a roadmap
that will help the Board of Governors, the Councils of Trustees and the university
leadership move this system toward even greater responsiveness to the needs of our
students and all of Pennsylvania.”
PASSHE’s new strategic plan titled 2020: Rising to the Challenge includes 21 specific
outcomes based on four strategic goals. The plan has been under development for nearly
two years and will replace the System’s last long-range plan, which was approved nearly
a decade ago.
The plan recognizes the shifting higher education landscape, both in Pennsylvania
and nationwide. In its introduction, the plan notes that in order to achieve long-term
success, PASSHE will need to:
•adapt to an ever-changing student population
•align academic programs with real workforce and personal growth needs
•provide greater flexibility in how, when, and where students learn
•ensure that competition and cooperation within the System is strategic
•preserve and promote accessibility and affordability
•enhance accountability and transparency
“Importantly, this plan includes specific goals with specific benchmarks, all of which
will help us assure even greater accountability,” said Brogan.
The plan calls for increasing (from 5,600 to 7,500) the number of degrees or certificates
awarded annually in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and health-related
disciplines. It also calls for increasing the total number of degrees and certificates
awarded annually to 31,500.
“As a system, we also need to provide more access points for non-traditional and working
students—those who have jobs and families and want to pursue a degree at the same
time,” said Brogan.
The plan calls for increasing the number of undergraduate students over the age of
25 to at least 11,000 and the number of community college transfer students to at
least 4,000; and increasing to 53,000 the number of students enrolled in classes offered
via distance education, including online. About 9,000 non-traditional students – those
over the age of 25 years of age – and 3,300 community college transfers are currently
enrolled.
“This new strategic plan establishes significant new goals for PASSHE and our universities
as they seek to be responsive to the needs of the Commonwealth,” said Board of Governors
Chairman Guido M. Pichini. “It is a blueprint that can be adjusted as those needs
change.”
PASSHE is the largest provider of higher education in the Commonwealth, enrolling
about 112,000 students. While each of the universities has its own unique set of program
offerings, the plan calls for greater cooperation among the institutions in order
to improve their operating efficiency and to ensure students have greater access to
educational opportunities even as available resources become tighter.
New nursing programs approved for Bloomsburg, Clarion and Edinboro
A pair of new Doctor of Nursing Practice programs to be offered by Bloomsburg, Clarion
and Edinboro Universities of Pennsylvania will join a third DNP program approved by
the Board of Governors last summer at West Chester University of Pennsylvania as PASSHE
and its member universities work together to align programs to best serve Commonwealth
needs.
“This is an outstanding example of PASSHE universities working together to ensure
relevance in programs, to reduce costs through collaboration and to align resources
to meet the needs of the Commonwealth,” said Aaron A. Walton, chair of the Board of
Governors’ Academic and Student Affairs Committee.
The trio of programs will help address the decline in the availability of physicians,
especially in primary care specialties, and the need for improved quality of care
and patient safety in all areas of Pennsylvania.
Bloomsburg University, working in partnership with Geisinger Health System, will offer
a Doctor of Nursing Practice degree that will provide the only aligned pathway from
a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist program to the DNP. The new program will
help address the healthcare needs in the north central and northeastern regions of
the state.
Bloomsburg currently offers an array of undergraduate and graduate programs in nursing,
including a Master of Science in Nursing degree that provides certification in three
different advanced practice roles – adult health clinical nurse specialist, adult/gerontology
and family nurse practitioner, and nurse anesthesia.
Clarion and Edinboro Universities will jointly offer a new Doctor of Nursing Practice
degree that will help meet the need for advanced care nurses in rural northwestern
and midwestern Pennsylvania. Building upon their joint Master of Science in Nursing
degree program, the doctoral program will prepare graduates to serve as primary care
providers as well as clinical nursing faculty.
West Chester’s DNP program was designed for nurses who are already advanced practice
nurses. It will help address healthcare needs primarily in the southeastern portion
of the state.
Clarion University also will add to its existing array of nursing programs a new Bachelor
of Science in Nursing degree program approved today by the Board. The new degree is
designed to prepare graduates to become licensed registered nurses, providing comprehensive
direct and indirect nursing care. Clarion also offers an Associate of Science in Nursing
degree and an RN to BSN degree completion program.
Shortly after passage in June 2012 of the Higher Education Modernization Act, which
provided opportunities for PASSHE universities to offer professional doctorates, nursing
faculty and academic leaders from Bloomsburg, Clarion, Edinboro and West Chester universities
and the Office of the Chancellor engaged in collaborative discussions that resulted
in a plan for the development of the three unique and distinct Doctorate of Nursing
Practice (DNP) Degree proposals. Each proposal was designed to meet the varying geographic
and population needs of the Commonwealth by building upon the diversity and strengths
of the existing nursing programs at the four universities.
With a commitment to meeting regional Commonwealth needs, the programs are designed
to be offered online for working adults. Opportunities for students and faculty to
meet face-to-face or through the use of technology also will be provided. Orientation
sessions at the beginning of the programs, as well as the presentation of capstone
projects, are two such examples.
Flexible tuition programs approved
PASSHE universities historically have charged the same tuition rate to all resident
students. The Board of Governors last summer began discussing the possibility of allowing
the universities to charge different tuition rates based on program costs. The discussion
gained momentum in October when new Chancellor Frank T. Brogan endorsed the idea of
allowing the universities to develop pilot programs.
“We are working to achieve a better balance between system-wide coordination and local
decision making, which will allow each of our universities to leverage its own strengths
to advance the institution and the entire system,” said Brogan.
Six proposals were brought forward to the Board for its consideration today. A number
of others are under development and could come to the Board in April. The proposals
will need to be approved by the individual university councils of trustees before
they can be implemented. The programs will be evaluated over a two-year period to
determine their effectiveness, and whether they could be duplicated at other universities
or should be discontinued.
“This is a potential sea change for the Board of Governors and PASSHE,” Brogan said
when discussing the proposals during the Finance, Administration and Facilities Committee
meeting Wednesday. “The only way we’re going to know if this will work is to study
it, vet it, and actually employ it, to see if it has the effect we intended it to
have.”
California University of Pennsylvania plans to reduce tuition charged to active members
of the military, their spouses and dependents. The reduced rate would match the amount
students with military ties are reimbursed through G.I. assistance programs.
West Chester University of Pennsylvania will reduce by 10 percent the tuition charged
to students who take courses it offers at the PASSHE Center City location in downtown
Philadelphia.
Three universities – Clarion, East Stroudsburg and Edinboro – will establish new course-
or program-specific fees to more appropriately cover the costs of offering their nursing
programs. Clarion will establish a similar fee for its Communication and Speech Disorders
program. As part of its approval, the Board included language to help ensure low-income
students are not negatively impacted by the new fees.
Finally, Edinboro University will reduce its non-resident, undergraduate tuition rate
to 105 percent of the resident rate. Currently, the nonresident tuition must be at
least 150 percent of the resident rate.
The Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education is the largest provider of higher
education in the Commonwealth, with about 112,000 students. The 14 PASSHE universities
offer degree and certificate programs in more than 120 areas of study. About 500,000
PASSHE alumni live and work in Pennsylvania.
The state-owned universities are Bloomsburg, California, Cheyney, Clarion, East Stroudsburg,
Edinboro, Indiana, Kutztown, Lock Haven, Mansfield, Millersville, Shippensburg, Slippery
Rock and West Chester Universities of Pennsylvania. PASSHE also operates branch campuses
in Clearfield, Freeport, Oil City and Punxsutawney and several regional centers, including
the Dixon University Center in Harrisburg and PASSHE Center City in Philadelphia.