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Board of Governors Approves New Degrees, Flexible Tuition Plans

Millersville University plans to reduce tuition by 10 percent to students who take classes at the PASSHE Center City facility in Philadelphia.

The Board of Governors of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) last week approved new flexible pricing plans for Millersville University and Clarion University.  In addition, they approved new graduate degree programs in health science and special education to be offered separately by Lock Haven and Slippery Rock universities.

Millersville University plans to reduce tuition by 10 percent to students who take classes at the PASSHE Center City facility in Philadelphia. The University will begin offering classes at the site this summer.

Millersville also is proposing to establish a program-specific instructional fee for high-cost, high-demand undergraduate Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs.

The new pricing plans approved are part of the board’s efforts to provide the universities with greater flexibility in a number of operational areas. The universities can submit proposals to adjust their tuition rates and certain fees charged to students under two-year pilots. The proposals also must be approved by the individual university’s Council of Trustees before they can be implemented.

The programs will be evaluated over a two-year period to determine their effectiveness. If successful, the programs could be continued, and even duplicated at other universities.

Clarion University has proposed to charge all undergraduate students on a per-credit basis, effective with the fall 2015 semester. Full-time students currently pay a flat tuition rate for taking from 12 to 18 credits.

Lock Haven University will offer a master’s degree of health science that will include concentrations in health promotion/education and healthcare management. Slippery Rock will offer a Doctorate of Education in special education.

“More than two years ago, the Board of Governors began working to provide the universities with more pricing flexibility,” said, Frank T. Brogan, chandler. “We took a serious first step forward in January when the board approved the first pilot programs, and took another significant step today. This board is serious about being more flexible, collaborative, and student-focused, and proved it yet again today with this action.”

The Board of Governors also approved changes in its policy related to the selection of university presidents to ensure greater input from the universities. By law, the board is responsible for the actual hiring of presidents, but the universities have a major role in the process, including appointing the search committee.

Under the revisions approved by the board, the chairs of both the search committee and the university’s Council of Trustees will be included in the deliberations by the Board of Governors as it considers the final candidates proposed by the university. Other changes would ensure that acting or interim presidents could declare their interest in being a candidate for the permanent position, and would reduce from three to two the number of continuing candidates the university’s Council of Trustees would recommend to the Board of Governors for final consideration.

Three PASSHE universities—California, Kutztown and Shippensburg—will be starting presidential searches in the near future.

The Board also revised a separate policy to allow for the approval of new academic minors and certificates to occur at the university level to assure agility and flexibility. New programs still will be required to meet specific academic criteria before being implemented.

The Board rescinded or revised several other policies whose requirements already are covered in other policies or statutes and were considered unnecessarily burdensome to the universities.

“The State System is evolving and the Board of Governors is leading the way to strike a better balance between system coordination and greater local decision making,” Brogan said. “These important actions empower local university leaders to guide their institutions while helping to shape the future of the whole system.”

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