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WebcastCampus Landscaping: Impact on Recruitment and Retention
62%* of high school seniors made their choice of institution on the basis of the appearance of the campus buildings and grounds. Most of them made that decision within the first 15 minutes of arriving on your campus. The landscape is continually sending messages to students, faculty, and staff; is yours saying what you want it to? The built environments of our colleges and universities – both the architecture and the landscape – have affective powers that come to bear in the recruitment and retention of students, faculty, and staff. The campus environment is continually sending symbolic as well as functional messages but we often don't realize that the message received is not the intended one. In looking specifically at the role campus environments play in student recruitment and retention, this intriguing webcast pulls together current research on social forces and cultural trends in arenas as diverse as retail anthropology, crime prevention theory, marketing and packaging, trading up and "masstige", experiential economics, demographics, and the "aesthetic imperative." Participants will come away with fresh eyes to see not only their own campus, but also the role those environments play in student recruitment and retention. "The 62% figure is from Ernest Boyer's book "College: The Undergraduate Experience In America". Harper & Row, 1987. Boyer goes on to say that the most important person in recruiting new students may not be the VP for admissions, but the grounds superintendent. Some might argue that it is out–dated data, but similar findings were established in another survey, and in my own surveys last spring of high school students, which indicated that appearance influenced over 80% of potential students." Phil Waite Discussion Points:
Who Should Attend?This webcast is aimed at: college and university administrators, admissions officers, managers in student recruitment and retention, campus planners, university architects and landscape architects, facilities management personnel, university marketers, and anyone who cares about the appearance of campus.
![]() Non-Architect's Guide to Major Capital Projects
Author, Phillp Waite, provides non-architects with a broad framework of understanding in the steps, phases, and sequence of planning, designing, and delivering a capital project. Presenter:
While at Idaho, he created a formalized process for project planning and architectural programming to ensure coordination between program needs, institutional strategic plan, academic plan, capital budgets & strategy, and the Long Range Campus Development Plan. This planning process resulted in documents called Project Planning Guides ("PPGs") for all major capital projects on campus. He was responsible to lead the planning process and prepare Project Planning Guides for nearly $100 million in major capital projects over a six–year period. Two of those facilities, the Idaho Commons—a new student center/classroom facility in the core of campus—and the UI Student Recreation Center, have won architectural awards. As a faculty member, he teaches courses in landscape architectural design, construction, and graphic communication. He frequently mentors graduate students in landscape architecture, horticulture, and architecture. His current research is directed at the affective power of place and how the landscape of campus affects student recruitment, retention, and learning performance. An active member of the Society for College and University Planning (SCUP), he has published numerous articles, book chapters, and a book on subjects related to campus planning. His book, "The Non-Architect's Guide to Major Capital Projects" was published by SCUP in 2005. As a gifted communicator, he is a frequent speaker at seminars and workshops for SCUP, APPA, Academic Impressions, ACE, and the Noel Levitz Recruitment and Retention conference. He has degrees in both landscape architecture and architecture, and is a licensed landscape architect. Moderator:
Archived Program CD: $195 US
The archived CD contains all the visuals synced with the audio Questions? Please contact Kathleen Benton, or call 734.998.6966.
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