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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2015

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Postsecondary Play

The Role of Games and Social Media in Higher Education

From Volume 43 Number 2 | January–March 2015

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2015

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Postsecondary Preparatory Programs for Veterans

A Federal Reporting Chasm

A very wide gap exists in the ability of institutions to not only collect data and report on outcomes for enrolled veterans, but also to identify them in the first place.

From Volume 43 Number 2 | January–March 2015

Abstract: Military veterans have received federal support to better prepare for success in higher education for nearly five decades. One such federal program, Veterans Upward Bound, has existed since the Johnson administration with a goal to increase veterans’ postsecondary education completion rates. Although there is clearly a demonstrated need for such efforts, the question remains whether these support programs are successful. This article explores federal reporting of programs designed to prepare veterans for the postsecondary learning environment in terms of goal achievement. Findings suggest inconsistent internal data collection methods, nonexistent outcome reporting, and conflicting data on veterans’ postsecondary success rates from non-government agencies.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2015

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Reimagining the Ronald E. McNair Scholars Program Through the Lens of Intellectual Entrepreneurship

Given a certain amount of flexibility, institutions can use programs and partnerships like the IE Consortium as models for expanding the boundaries of the McNair program.

From Volume 43 Number 2 | January–March 2015

Abstract: Despite the fact that U.S. federal TRIO programs, like the Ronald E. McNair Scholars Program, aim to enrich academic spaces for underrepresented students, there are many challenges that minority students face as they move through the program pipeline. This article provides insight into programming efforts by the McNair program at the University of Texas-Austin through interviews with current and past McNair scholars. Furthermore, areas of improvement in planning and integration for local and national application are discussed using the example of UT-Austin’s Intellectual Entrepreneurship Consortium.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
January 1, 2015

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Reshaping Your Curriculum to Grow the Bottom Line

Optimizing Academic Balance (OAB): Mission, Quality, Market Potential, Cost, and Revenue

OAB provides knowledge you can use to redirect scarce resources to increase enrollment, maximize the value of the curriculum, and strengthen institutional viability.

From Volume 43 Number 2 | January–March 2015

Abstract: Optimizing Academic Balance (OAB) analysis provides your institution with effective tools to use in making the strategic academic decisions needed to stay competitive in the context of your institutional mission, quality, market potential, cost, and revenue. Optimizing Academic Balance utilizes market potential data (inquiries, applicants, admitted students, enrolled students, juniors, and graduates) to measure demand for each of your majors using student credit hours (SCH) generated by program as a proxy for revenues and direct (faculty and departmental) costs for teaching each program. It may be applied to all academic program offerings—undergraduate, graduate, and non-traditional.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2014

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Positioning Liberal Arts Campuses to Participate in Regional Economic Development

A Primer

Almost every college has some kind of catalytic role to play in its regional economy.

From Volume 43 Number 1 | October–December 2014

Abstract: Until very recently, the idea of higher education as an economic catalyst has focused almost exclusively on land-grant colleges and research universities. In little more than a decade, the perceived economic development role of higher education has expanded from a narrow field of large elite research institutions to include small liberal arts colleges, many of which traditionally saw their role as a refuge from economic forces rather than as an active creator of them. Liberal arts colleges, and, in particular, public liberal arts colleges, now confront an entirely new set of expectations from the regions in which they are located.
Almost every college has some kind of catalytic role to play in its regional economy. However, in order to be accepted as an effective partner, a college’s economic development responses must be perceived as credible by the larger community, and in order to sustain campus support, they must be seen to add real value to the institution itself. This article provides an overview of the key issues that a liberal arts campus must address as it prepares to enter the economic development arena.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2014

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The Gates of Harvard Yard

The Complete Story, in Words and Pictures, of a Great University’s Iconic Portals

From Volume 43 Number 1 | October–December 2014

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2014

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A Transformational Gallery for Ryerson University’s Architecture School

Ryerson University needed a gallery to exhibit work and host lectures and events. What it got was much more than that, proving that even the smallest project can be transformative.

From Volume 43 Number 1 | October–December 2014

Abstract: The Department of Architectural Science at Toronto’s Ryerson University was already committed to community engagement. However, the need for a permanent gallery provided a new catalyst. The collaborative nature of the integrated planning process provided the school with an opportunity to revisit its public programming mandate. The school’s transformation through the innovative physical positioning and use of the gallery deepens its dialogue and level of engagement both within the university and with the greater community.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2014

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Collaboration Raises the Bar

How Visions Aligned to Create UC Davis West Village, the Nation’s Largest Planned Zero Net Energy Community

When visions are aligned, public-private partnerships can leverage initial assumptions into more ambitious programs to meet placemaking, sustainability, and other goals.

From Volume 43 Number 1 | October–December 2014

Abstract: Collaborative partnerships can yield enormous benefits for campus projects involving complex uses and implementation strategies. When visions are aligned, public-private partnerships can leverage initial assumptions into more ambitious programs to meet placemaking, sustainability, and other goals. The story of the successful UC Davis West Village partnership between the University of California and its developer partner, West Village Community Partnership, LLC (WVCP), serves to illustrate the unanticipated directions made possible by diverse talents, resources, and points of view.

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