Los Angeles Times

Coleman University in San Diego to shut down

55-year-old private school’s accreditat­ion bid was denied.

- GARY ROBBINS Robbins writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Coleman University, a small San Diego school that opened in the early 1960s to train workers for the burgeoning computer and informatio­n technology industries, is closing due to accreditat­ion and financial problems.

The closure, which will take effect Sunday, comes with little notice. Coleman officials were promoting the private, nonprofit school about two weeks ago at San Diego Comic-Con. And its website is still marketing classes.

Coleman President Norbert J. Kubilus said in a statement that the school, which has about 200 students, learned in June that the Western Assn. of Schools and Colleges’ Senior College and University Commission “denied our petition for initial accreditat­ion.”

“Losing our bid,” he said, “placed the financial sustainabi­lity of the university in question. For the last three weeks, our Board of Trustees and management have been seeking alternate forms of financial support to keep the school open.

“Finally, after exhausting all feasible resources, the decision to discontinu­e operations at the end of the current term had to be made.”

The California Office of Student Assistance and Relief issued a statement confirming the closure, and notified Coleman students that they have a right to request a refund and to have student loans discharged.

Coleman was created in 1963 by Coleman Furr and his wife, Lois, who saw an opportunit­y to train students in electronic data processing.

The school eventually expanded its offerings. It remained a college until 2008, when it began the transition to university status.

Coleman struggled to compete in a region that is dominated by UC San Diego and San Diego State, public schools that operate large programs in computer science, informatio­n technology and engineerin­g.

“Declining enrollment over the last five years has taken its toll,” Kubilus said in his statement.

“Many factors outside of the university’s control contribute­d to this decline, such as de-recognitio­n of our national accreditor by the secretary of Education, tightened controls over internatio­nal students coming to the United States to study, and historical­ly low unemployme­nt in our region,” he said.

Kubilus added: “While we have stemmed the downward trend in recent months, meaningful enrollment growth is nearly impossible without regional accreditat­ion.”

Coleman also was competing for students at a time when overall enrollment at the nation’s degree-granting colleges and universiti­es has been sliding.

Enrollment dropped by 1.2 million students from 2010 to 2016 and is expected to continue dropping, partly due to a major fall in the nation’s birth rate, education analysts say.

The slide has contribute­d to the closure of a number of small schools, including Marylhurst University near Portland, Ore., which is closing at the end of the year.

“We’re going to see more closures,” said Carol Aslanian, an education analyst and president of Aslanian Market Research in Hoboken, N.J.

“Many small, private schools don’t have the resources to do outreach and convert people into students. It’s a very competitiv­e market.”

 ?? Gary Robbins San Diego Union-Tribune ?? COLEMAN UNIVERSITY opened in 1963 to train workers for careers in computers and informatio­n technology. The nonprofit school is closing Sunday.
Gary Robbins San Diego Union-Tribune COLEMAN UNIVERSITY opened in 1963 to train workers for careers in computers and informatio­n technology. The nonprofit school is closing Sunday.

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