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Pierce, Dennis – Community College Journal, 2018
Cutting programs and laying off staff is one of the hardest parts of a community college president's job. Not only is it emotional for everyone involved, but the political fallout can be damaging as well. How campus leaders arrive at the difficult choice to cut staff and programs, and how they communicate their decision to stakeholders, can make a…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Presidents, Program Termination, Retrenchment
Sullivan, Gregory W.; Stergios, Jim – Pioneer Institute for Public Policy Research, 2019
In just the last 18 months, Massachusetts has seen the closure of small private liberal arts colleges Mount Ida and Newbury Colleges. The pressures on these types of institutions include technological disruption, changing student demands, and ever-escalating costs. To address this, the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education (BHE) and Department…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Governing Boards, Liberal Arts, Risk
Davis, Shametrice – Journal of Negro Education, 2015
This study examines how a Black college, referred to as Southern College, used a number of resources and strategies to remain a credible institution of choice in the community while also reversing a severe financial deficit. Qualitative research methods are used to understand strategies embraced by Southern College to stay afloat of the many…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Institutional Survival, Economic Climate, Educational Finance
Chevalier, Jacque – Our Children: The National PTA Magazine, 2012
The word sequestration has been in the news lately when talking about the federal budget. Sequestration refers to across-the-board cuts, and depending on where one lives and the amount of federal aid one's community receives, those cuts could amount to as much as 17 percent. That spells bad news for schools unless parents, educators, and other…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Public Education, Advocacy, Child Advocacy
Johnson-Ahorlu, Robin N.; Alvarez, Cynthia L.; Hurtado, Sylvia – Journal of College Admission, 2013
Nationally, state funding to higher education has significantly decreased. Ironically, the trend of state divestment in higher education coincides with federal and state policies geared toward increasing degree completion rates. Through an analysis of qualitative data gathered at California higher education institutions, this paper highlights how…
Descriptors: Student Experience, Higher Education, Barriers, Educational Finance
Snell, Joel C. – College Student Journal, 2012
Dana College (Dana.edu) was dying. A corporation was willing to buy it. However, Dana did not teach in the main, 21st century technical skills which is true of most little liberal arts colleges. Dana's demise first came in cuts for faculty in terms of benefits (Manghan, K. 1/16/2009). The entrance of the federal government was an attempt to stop a…
Descriptors: Institutional Survival, Retrenchment, Change Strategies, Organizational Change
Cavanagh, Sean; Hollingsworth, Heather – Education Week, 2011
States are finally arriving at the "funding cliff"--the point where about $100 billion in federal economic-stimulus aid for education runs out. The loss seems certain to compound severe budget woes and could mean thousands of school layoffs and the elimination of popular programs and services in districts across the country. The bulk of…
Descriptors: School District Spending, Elementary Secondary Education, Job Layoff, Retrenchment
Kelderman, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In autumn, most colleges' football fields are covered with a thick carpet of grass or artificial turf and are adorned with yard lines. But the football field at Paul Quinn College was carved up by plowing and planting. This past fall, portions of the college's gridiron were covered with sweet potatoes, watermelons, peppers, rosemary, and sugar…
Descriptors: Fund Raising, Financial Problems, Black Colleges, Educational Finance
Black, Steve – Library Journal, 2010
Magazine publishers weathered the difficult recession year of 2009 with admirable resilience. Although several magazines failed and many saw reductions in advertising revenue, a number of new publications have been launched as industry professionals continue to demonstrate their ability to adapt to new technologies and difficult business…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Electronic Journals, Printed Materials, Economic Impact
Wootton, William R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Higher-education analysts have predicted it: The global financial shambles will cause the closing or merger of a growing number of colleges. At the top of the endangered list are rural colleges. Included in this group is the author's own college, Sterling College, in Craftsbury Common, Vermont. Despite this prediction, the author is counting on…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Small Colleges, Institutional Survival, Retrenchment
Capaldi, Elizabeth D. – Academe, 2011
Public universities are not for-profit businesses with an easy-to-understand bottom line: their financial reports are not designed to convey information to the public fully or to reflect all the costs of teaching and research. Financial reports do track every dollar in accordance with the accounting rules required by auditors, but they do not…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational Finance, Educational Quality, Costs
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Greensboro College has many of the intimate hallmarks of a small, private, liberal-arts college. Professors give their cellphone numbers to students and routinely provide extra help to those who need it. Classes at the North Carolina institution average 14 people. One of the students featured on the college Web site is a biology major who plays on…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Job Layoff, Institutional Survival, Retrenchment
Fain, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article provides suggestions on how colleges can keep strategic plans on course in a stormy economy. These are: (1) Move quickly; (2) Develop contingencies; (3) Be flexible; (4) Make hard choices; and (5) Recognize opportunities.
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Change Strategies, Institutional Survival, Retrenchment
Kelderman, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
The fiscal year that begins on July 1 for most colleges is expected to bring a wave of layoffs, as institutions grapple with declining state contributions, a falloff in donations, and other budget pressures. Eliminating jobs can create a number of legal pitfalls, including potential lawsuits for breach of contract or discrimination. If handled…
Descriptors: Legal Problems, Job Layoff, Retrenchment, Financial Problems
Kelderman, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
To be at the University of Arizona these days is, in some ways, to be under siege. The flagship university in one of the nation's fastest-growing states may have to eliminate some 600 jobs and merge dozens of programs to deal with two rounds of budget cuts imposed since June. Now the governor is telling the university and other state agencies to…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, State Universities, Fiscal Capacity