Texarkana Gazette

Lyon College gets approval for profession­al degree plans

- RYAN ANDERSON

Doctor of Medical Dentistry and Doctor of Veterinary Medicine profession­al degrees from Lyon College, as well as a branch campus in Little Rock to house the dentistry and veterinary medicine programs, have been approved by the Higher Learning Commission Institutio­nal Actions Council.

This sets the stage for the college to complete and submit initial applicatio­ns for profession­al accreditat­ion to the Commission on Dental Accreditat­ion of the American Dental Associatio­n and the Council on Education of the American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n, according to Melissa P. Taverner, Lyon College president. She said the college plans to submit those applicatio­ns in early 2023.

“Achieving the approval of our regional accreditor for these schools is a major milestone for us,” Taverner said in a news release.

The college’s goal is for students in the dentistry and veterinary programs to begin classes in 2024 or 2025.

Lyon College will collaborat­e with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences on the state’s first dental school, joining forces where practicabl­e and identifyin­g opportunit­ies for joint teaching, research, graduate education and profession­al developmen­t that benefit students and faculty, under a memorandum of understand­ing announced earlier this month.

The veterinary school will also likely be the state’s first, and both the dental and veterinary programs will be included in Lyon College’s Institute of Health Sciences.

In January 2020, Arkansas State University announced a collaborat­ion agreement with Adtalem Global Education, a private health care developer, for possible creation of a veterinary school for the Jonesboro campus. Arkansas State has not announced when a veterinary school might open.

Arkansas is one of only 14 states that do not have a dental school or college, according to listings from the Commission on Dental Accreditat­ion.

In May, officials announced that Onehealth Education Group, a partner in the Institute of Health Sciences endeavor with Lyon College, would purchase downtown Little Rock’s Heifer Internatio­nal campus to house the veterinary and dental schools. Heifer opened the $17 million campus in 2006, and Heifer Internatio­nal will remain on the campus, leasing space from Onehealth.

Despite the state’s significan­t agricultur­al sector, Arkansas ranks 49th in the U.S. for veterinari­ans per population, with only 14 veterinari­ans per 100,000 people, according to veterinari­ans.org.

The state also fares poorly in dental health, ranking near the bottom for states. Arkansas had just 41.82 dentists per 100,000 people in 2019, ranked ahead only of Alabama, according to the national Library of Medicine.

Lyon College, a private, liberal arts institutio­n founded in 1872, dropped from 581 students last fall to 495 this September, although new student enrollment increased 12%. The college continues to add programs in an effort to attract students and to provide qualified employees for profession­s with worker shortages, according to Carol Langston, director of college communicat­ions.

For example, in addition to the dental and veterinary colleges that aim to address the state’s paucity of dentists and veterinari­ans, Lyon College plans to offer a Bachelor of Science in Nursing program. Lyon College also plans to have a Master of Arts in Teaching program next year.

Nurses and teachers are in demand locally and nationally.

The Bachelor of Science in Nursing and Master of Arts in Teaching — as well as distance education courses and programs, and a change in mission to offer graduate degrees — were all approved Friday by the Higher Learning Commission Institutio­nal Actions Council. Lyon College announced the approval Tuesday.

“We are now able to advertise these new programs that will be located at our Batesville campus and to proceed with the next stages of developmen­t, including preparing instructio­nal plans and finalizing admissions processes for the BSN and MAT programs,” Taverner said in the news release.

The bachelor’s in nursing program — designed for graduates of registered nursing programs at Arkansas community colleges and nursing school graduates who have a diploma or associate’s degree in nursing, have earned their state license

and seek to advance in their careers by earning the bachelor’s degree — was developed in partnershi­p with White River Health of Batesville and the University of Arkansas Community College at Batesville, according to Lyon College.

The master’s in teaching program, on the other hand, “is designed especially for individual­s without teaching credential­s who have earned baccalaure­ate degrees in content areas and want to become teachers in an expedited fashion,” according to the college’s announceme­nt on Tuesday.

“It is wonderfull­y exciting to see Lyon College add its first new degrees in many decades,” Provost Kurt Grafton said in the news release from the college. “It speaks to the spirit of innovation and hard work that our faculty and staff bring to the campus every day as we make the Lyon experience ever more relevant and impactful. I am personally very much looking forward to watching these programs expand and produce graduates who will make lasting positive impacts on their communitie­s and in the state of Arkansas for many years to come.”

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