- Integrated Planning
Integrated Planning
Integrated planning is a sustainable approach to planning that builds relationships, aligns the organization, and emphasizes preparedness for change.
- Topics
Topics
- Resources
Resources
Featured Formats
Popular Topics
- Events & Programs
Events & Programs
Upcoming Events
- Community
Community
The SCUP community opens a whole world of integrated planning resources, connections, and expertise.
- Integrated Planning
Integrated Planning
Integrated planning is a sustainable approach to planning that builds relationships, aligns the organization, and emphasizes preparedness for change.
- Topics
Topics
- Resources
Resources
Featured Formats
Popular Topics
- Events & Programs
Events & Programs
Upcoming Events
- Community
Community
The SCUP community opens a whole world of integrated planning resources, connections, and expertise.
We're grateful for our community and wish you a happy holiday! Please note the SCUP Office will be closed November 26-27.
Planning for Higher Education JournalStatewide Planning and the Public Sector
From Volume 4 Number 2 | April 1975By James P. LyddyPrivate colleges and universities are now under pressure from many directions in the following article, James P. Lyddy, assistant director for university development, Georgetown University, explores the potential benefits of statewide planning agencies in building cooperation between the public and private sectors of higher education. This compendium of suggestions for finding alternatives to often wasteful competitive relationships is drawn from his doctoral dissertation, "Statewide Planning and Coordination of Post-Secondary Education: Relationship to Private, Non-Profit Post Secondary Education Institutions," recently accepted at The Catholic University. Lyddy suggests that the 1202 Commissions offer a potential mechanism for aiding both those private institutions which continue to prosper and those which are struggling to remain viable by meeting new educational needs through a redefinition of their goals and operating assumptions.
MEMBERS ONLY
Attention Members: Log in to access this item.Not a member? Join now> to access this article and all journal articles for free. - Topics
- Topics


