I heard from a bird that Dallas, San Diego, and Phoenix will be the only campuses left after Quarter 3.
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There are at least 9 ground campuses in California and I heard that the northern California campuses have already been told not to schedule faculty for certain ground courses effective immediately, what does that mean? I wonder what the demise of the northern California campuses will be. I'm sure southern Cal will probably be the stronghold for California campuses. San Diego seems pretty safe in terms of campus closures in the future...but then again, what future?
What about online faculty?
I find it unlikely that they would cut any of the campuses with the lpn to ban program, given that they have to lotto the seats in the program.
They are listed on our internal sites.
Has anyone published a list of teachout locations?
Closing the campuses will be slow but campuses but more campuses will be closed. It won't be a big group at once especially not those that have more than 300 students. San Diego, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Dallas, D.C/Maryland will be the main locations. The rest of the campuses will be closed on teach out but it will be a longer process because many states like Hawaii, Massachusetts and others will not allow you to even host online students without a campus or at least some type of campus presence. Thus, legally pulling all campuses is not possible.
Many of these GRound campuses have been slated to close and teach out and have not been accepting new ground students for the last year.
University of Phoenix allegedly has more than 100 campuses and sites. Are you saying they will be closing (or teaching out) that many physical locations? If that happens, all sh** will break loose.
The campuses will teach out. The staff, including enrollment will be laid off. Everything East of the Mississippi River will be gone.
It's hard to believe that UoPX could close so many campuses so quickly. Teachouts typically take at least a year, and for a 4-year program, it would need to take considerably longer--unless everybody is forced online--and historically, UoPX online has had horrible graduation rates. How many physical campuses does UoPX have today?
This will happen, most remaining managers and directors will be cut and a handful of ERs will remain. Most with higher salaries will be cut and the new ownership will begin bringing in their own preferred team at a much lower cost.
It is. Buckle up.
@HR, this does not sound plausible.
This is true and many will be fired or forced to transfer to Phoenix. It's all over now.