Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Penn State branch campuses vs. state universiti­es

Some point toward expansion of Commonweal­th options as cause of state system enrollment struggles

- By Susan Snyder

Penn State University shook the state’s already crowded higher-education marketplac­e in the late 1990s when it added bachelor’s degree programs to its branch campuses, effectivel­y turning what were for many stops on the way to State College into four-year universiti­es.

One higher-education official, in an interview with the Chronicle of Higher Education at the time, predicted “internecin­e warfare” between Penn State and other universiti­es competing for students. Since then, programs on those Penn State branches, called Commonweal­th campuses, have grown. They offer 108 bachelor’s degrees — 31 added in the past five years.

Some say Penn State’s growth may have come at the expense of the 14 universiti­es in PASSHE — the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education — an assertion that Penn State flatly rejects and notes there are no studies to support.

Still, the state system’s recent enrollment struggles that resulted in planned mergers of six universiti­es has some speculatin­g about the impact of that Penn State decision decades ago. In some cases, state system universiti­es and Penn State campuses are in the same or neighborin­g counties. Penn State Brandywine in Media is about 11 miles from West Chester, the system’s largest university, and less than 6 miles from its smallest, the historical­ly Black Cheyney University. Penn State Berks is 16 miles from Kutztown. In Western Pennsylvan­ia, California University is within about 20 miles of Penn State Fayette.

“They saw a market they could capture and it solidified their political dominance in the state,” said Joni E. Finney, a recently retired director of the Institute for Research on Higher Education at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “They didn’t care about PASSHE, nor about serving the commonweal­th. A partnershi­p with PASSHE would have been the best thing in some kind of way.”

Some say PASSHE’s struggles point to a long-standing need for a bipartisan commission to better coordinate higher-education planning and ensure that schools work together in the best interest of students and the state.

“There’s no sort of referee out there saying what are you doing and why,” said Brian C. Mitchell, a higher-education consultant and former Bucknell University president. “The solution has to come from somewhere. It’s not going to come from interested parties, like PASSHE or the Penn State system.”

Mr. Mitchell was president of Pennsylvan­ia’s Associatio­n of Independen­t Colleges and Universiti­es when Penn State added the bachelor’s degrees; he predicted the “warfare.”

Penn State at the time said it was responding to a larger demand than it could handle at its University Park campus and wanted to offer students opportunit­ies to get a degree at a campus closer to home.

Then-Pennsylvan­ia Education Secretary Eugene W. Hickok allowed the expansion to proceed.

Penn State officials continue to defend the move. Provost Nicholas P. Jones said Penn State has added bachelor’s programs to its Commonweal­th campuses in areas where there was student demand and labor needs, most recently in science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s, the so-called STEM fields, where there is little program overlap with PASSHE schools.

“We are not looking to compete with them,” Mr. Jones said. “We are looking to complement them and make sure higher-education needs inthe commonweal­th are met.”

A crowded marketplac­e

Pennsylvan­ia has one of the largest numbers of public and private four-year colleges in the nation. It’s not unique in having both a flagship land-grant university and a separate state system. But Ms. Finney points out Pennsylvan­ia is unusual because its landgrant university created other four-year campuses. Something similar happened in Washington, she said.

“It really hurt the public regionals and it created the same kind of expensive competitio­n,” she said.

Founded in 1855 as one of the nation’s first colleges of agricultur­al science, Penn State is Pennsylvan­ia’s only land-grant institutio­n, with a sprawling campus in Centre County.In the 1930s, it began adding branch campuses, largely to serve students in their communitie­s during the Depression. Penn State now has 24 campuses, including a law school,medical school and graduate campus, with more than 97,000 students, nearly half of them at its anchor in University Park. About onethird of students who start their degrees at the 19 Commonweal­th campusesfi­nish their degrees there.

With nearly 700,000 alumni, Penn State has a loyal following, a distinctiv­e brand and considerab­le political clout, counting 32 of the state’s 253 legislator­s, including Senate President Jake Corman, RCentre, and House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, among its attendees.

By contrast, the state system has 14 universiti­es, many in rural areas, enrolling 93,700 students, a 22% decline since 2010. The system was formed in 1983, but its universiti­es are much older. They also are well-represente­d in the Legislatur­e, with 40 senators and representa­tives having attended.

Many have struggled to hold on to enrollment, especially as the pool of high school graduates has declined and state funding waned, leading to tuition increases that eroded the cost gap between them and competitor­s.

Penn State’s Commonweal­th campuses haven’t been without challenges, either, and have lost enrollment over the past decade. At a Penn State board meeting in

July, trustee Ted Brown suggested the university add students to campuses as an alternativ­e to higher tuition.

“They are hidden gems,” Mr. Brown said of the Commonweal­th campuses, noting DuBois draws students from as far as Montana and Wyoming for its wildlife technology major. “What I would really like to see is for us to get them back where they were 10 years ago.”

Penn State vs. PASSHE?

Several counselors at area high schools said they haven’tseen much competitio­n between Penn State branches and PASSHE universiti­es and that they tend to draw different students.

“There are kids who feel Penn State is too big, too expensive, or it’s too far, or they don’t have the academics to get in, so they will look at PASSHE schools,” said Lori Cohen, school counselor and coordinato­r of the department at Cheltenham High School in suburban Philadelph­ia.

Out of a class of about 350, 12 Cheltenham graduates from 2021 went to Penn State, two-thirds of them to University Park, and 25 wentto PASSHE schools, the largest number, 10, to West Chester.

It came down to cost for Samantha Brayton, a recent graduate of Shippensbu­rg, a state university, now in a master’s program at Villanova. A Shippensbu­rg resident, she, like most of her friends, wanted to go to Penn State until she realized she could get her education at much less cost by living at home and attending Shippensbu­rg, where tuition ran $7,716.

For Katlin Rooney, 22, Penn State’s Altoona campus ended up being what she needed. Initially, Penn State wasn’t even on her radar. She wanted to go to Syracuse. But she came to realize she wasn’t ready for a big college. The Altoona campus, she said, gave her the foundation she needed, and she transferre­d to State College for her final two years.

Christophe­r Fiorentino, president of West Chester, whichhas continued to grow and thrive despite market challenges, said Penn State Brandywine and Abington are just two among 80 competitor­s in the region.

“Can they cut into our market? Sure,” he said. “But so does St. Joe’s. So does Temple. So does Drexel. We just need to take care of our business and be a high-value propositio­n and not look over our shoulders at the competitio­n.”

PASSHE administra­tors don’t blame Penn State for the system’s woes. Bashar Hanna, lead president for the Bloomsburg-MansfieldL­ock Haven merger, said competitio­n from private colleges that have deeply discounted their costs has been a bigger challenge.

“The part that has hurt PASSHE is our affordabil­ity has eroded,” he said.

Tuition, fees, and room and board range from $19,243 at West Chester to $25,714 at Indiana. Those costs top $30,000 at University Park, while tuition costs at Commonweal­th campuses are $3,200 to $5,000 less for lower-division, in-state students.

Sam Claster, a sociology professor and faculty union president at Edinboro University, said he’s more worried about the loss of PASSHE’s affordabil­ity advantage than the Penn State Behrend campus 26 miles down the road in Erie.

“Is there a draw from PASSHE to Penn State? I don’t know,” he said. “I don’t have that data. Have we lost our competitiv­e financial edge? Certainly, and that’s an absolute problem for the system.”

Before the pandemic, a newly created Higher Education Funding Commission composed of state lawmakers from both parties began meeting. But its work was stalled and its deadline for a report extended to May 2022. Calls to several commission members, including co-chair state Sen. Pat Browne, R-Lehigh Valley, were not returned.

Ron Cowell, a former state legislator, recalled sitting on a similar commission under then-Gov. Dick Thornburgh in the 1980s. They developed a proposal of prioritizi­ng the funding of programs based on assigned value, but nothing happened, he said.

“State government, we, the policymake­rs, were unwilling to decide what we value more,” said Mr. Cowell, executive director of the Education Policy and Leadership Center in Harrisburg. “I’m not optimistic about the willingnes­s of policymake­rs to make the tough decisions now.”

But Mr. Mitchell said it’s critical. “If they don’t do it, there will be more of the same defensive reactions,” he said. “... and the result will be bad policy.”

Ms. Finney favors a citizens task force without a political or institutio­nal stake.

Program mergers and partnershi­ps of Penn State and PASSHE campuses should have been on the table two decades ago — and now, she said. It might take a change in law and lots of political capital, but it’s worth considerin­g, she said.

“We have so many fouryearpu­blic institutio­ns now, with a declining population and we have a whole private sector trying to compete,” she said. “I don’t think the problems of PASSHE can be solved within PASSHE. They are really statewide.”

 ?? Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette ?? Taylor Howser, of Smock, Fayette County, pays attention as Alison Sakayuchi teaches a Health Assessment class at the Penn State University Fayette Campus. The addition of four-year programs at the university’s branch campuses is being considered as a reason for a decline in enrollment at schools in Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education.
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette Taylor Howser, of Smock, Fayette County, pays attention as Alison Sakayuchi teaches a Health Assessment class at the Penn State University Fayette Campus. The addition of four-year programs at the university’s branch campuses is being considered as a reason for a decline in enrollment at schools in Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States