November 14, 2017
State System makes progress with ‘redesign’
Contact: Kevin Hensil, khensil@passhe.edu
Harrisburg – Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education continues to move forward with
its effort to redesign itself to better serve students and the Commonwealth.
More than half a dozen task groups will be deployed to provide expertise and perspective
on specific objectives related to the three System priorities previously identified
by the Board of Governors— ensuring student success, leveraging university strengths
and transforming governance and leadership structures. Regular progress reports on
the task groups will be provided at each quarterly meeting of the Board of Governors
and on a new website being launched today (www.passhe.edu/system-redesign/).
The focused task groups will develop actionable recommendations on a range of specific
issues, including how to define student success; how the universities can better serve
adult learners; and how they can work more collaboratively in the areas of pricing,
purchasing and the provision of services.
“As we move forward to redesign the State System, we want to provide our universities greater flexibility to respond to student needs, and the ability to be more nimble to respond more quickly to those needs,” said Board of Governors Chairwoman Cynthia D. Shapira.
The first policy change approved by the Board on Monday allows the universities to expand the availability of need-based scholarships to Pennsylvania residents and merit-based scholarships to all students. Currently, the universities can use up to 5 percent of their tuition and fee revenue to provide such scholarships. Under the policy revision, that amount will be increased to 10 percent.
The Board historically has, on an individual basis, given the universities the ability to waive out-of-state tuition and fee rates to students whose colleges and universities have had to close at least temporarily because of a disaster, such as those impacted by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The new policy means the Board does not have to vote each time such a disaster occurs; the universities will have the discretion to take such action on their own.
With the new policy in place, the State System universities will be able to assist displaced students as soon as the upcoming winter term.
“Both of these actions are designed to better serve students and align with our stated priority of ensuring their success,” Ms. Shapira said. “They give our universities additional tools they can use right now to benefit students who are enrolled today, and those who will enroll in the future.”