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Email: iaa@ksu.edu Phone: 785.532.1999 Fax: 785.532.5946 Inter-Institutional Collaboration Benefits Faculty
Empowerment and Enrichment A grassroots approach to institutional collaboration empowers department heads and faculty to play an active role in the growth and development of their department. A program alliance (versus an institutional alliance) allows faculty to take an active role in shaping the future. Societal
Benefits It has been said that our progress as a culture and a world can be no swifter than that of our institutions of education. Collaboration is the future. Combined with the medium of distance education, it has the power to fundamentally change the future of education. Remaining
on the Cutting Edge Institutions often find that they are not capable of keeping up with the rapid emergence of new fields. They simply don’t have the resources. Forging institutional alliances can craft universities into entrepreneurs. Distance education is on the cutting edge in higher education. A recent eCollege First Quarter 2003 Earnings Results Conference found that distance education is “by far the fastest growing sector of the higher education market. Of the 15.5 million students that the Department of Education says are in higher education, 73% are non-traditional. Of these, according to the Department of Education data, roughly 200,000 were taking online courses in 2000. We believe that that number was about 600,000 students, or roughly 1.8 million online enrollments last year.” The same eCollege conference concluded that “online distance programs are usually a profit center for an institution. If done properly, they drive high margin, incremental revenues. If we can add value to an institution by driving profitable revenue for them, we feel that we can build long-term, strategically meaningful customer relationships.” Distance education alliances allow institutions to embark on exciting new paths in higher education that enhance their credibility and expand their outreach while simultaneously generating a new source of income for their programs. Financial
Stability In times of financial uncertainty, institutional resources are certainly not expanding. Faculty and administrators are struggling to acquire the resources to respond to emerging needs. Consequently, academic deans and administrators are forced to choose between “the bottom line” and the integrity of their institution and programs. Inter-institutional collaborative agreements offer a solution to this painful dilemma. In terms of graduate education and specialized degrees, the demand is rising. The Washington-based Council of Graduate Schools expects post-secondary enrollments to increase between 5% and 10% at schools across the nation this year. An inter-institutional alliance allows institutions to collectively respond to emerging needs such as this by combining their resources to maximize each of their own institutional resources while expanding the institution’s outreach. The “bottom line” is that institutions lose big money on small classes and small programs. Alliances increase the class-size while expanding a program’s capabilities, which makes it both affordable and profitable to universities. |
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