2024 has seen extra school closures than final yr


As 2024 attracts to a detailed, it additionally marks the tip of an period for some establishments.

Altogether, at the least 16 nonprofit schools and universities introduced closures this yr. Most have been small, personal, tuition-dependent establishments that lacked sturdy endowments. Many approached the closure course of in an orderly style, winding down operations and educating out educational packages, however some shuttered abruptly, leaving college students within the lurch.

The quantity is barely increased than final yr, when 14 nonprofit establishments introduced closure; a fifteenth, the King’s School, ended operations in 2023 however didn’t announce it was shutting down. Consultants count on school closures to extend considerably within the subsequent 5 years amid enrollment pressures, in line with analysis by the Federal Reserve Financial institution of Philadelphia.

This yr, seven of these headed for closure have been religiously affiliated and 4 have been situated in Pennsylvania—essentially the most of any state. (Department campuses with out stand-alone identification numbers, that are utilized by the U.S. Division of Schooling’s Workplace of Postsecondary Schooling, should not included on this yr’s report.)

Officers most continuously cited monetary pressures and declining enrollment as the explanations for closure; rising working prices have been additionally a recurring theme. Some establishments attributed their enrollment struggles to particular components, such because the troubled rollout of the Free Utility for Federal Scholar Support. One blamed social points in downtown Portland, Ore., citing homelessness, crime and open drug use as contributing causes.

Inside Greater Ed has been monitoring institutional closures and mergers all yr. Right here’s our recap, in chronological order, of the nonprofit establishments that introduced closures this yr. Given teach-out processes, some will stay open into 2025 as they wind down operations.

Pennsylvania Academy of the Positive Arts

The Philadelphia artwork college introduced in January that it might finish its diploma packages, making it the primary establishment in 2024 to announce its demise resulting from monetary pressures. Whereas the academy will formally shut on the finish of the 2024–25 educational yr, its museum will stay open.

Officers attributed the choice to finish educational choices to declining enrollment and rising prices, noting that they had unsuccessfully sought partnerships to maintain diploma packages alive.

Whereas in previous years PAFA enrolled about 200 college students, in 2022 the pinnacle rely fell to only over 100, in line with the most recent federal information. Officers mentioned ending educational packages would save $1 million yearly—a necessity given the establishment’s $3 million deficit.

Notre Dame School

After unsuccessfully pursuing a strategic partnership with Cleveland State College, the small Roman Catholic school in Ohio closed on the finish of the spring semester.

Officers pointed to declining enrollment, demographic challenges, rising working prices and steep debt once they introduced Notre Dame’s closure in February.

Enrollment had fallen by greater than half, from 2,281 a decade in the past, in line with the Division of Schooling’s Built-in Postsecondary Schooling Knowledge System, to about 1,050 lately, native media reported.

Fontbonne College

The Roman Catholic establishment in Missouri was among the many first to announce plans to shut early this yr, simply after celebrating its centennial in 2023. Officers cited deteriorating funds and shrinking enrollment.

Like Notre Dame, Fontbonne’s enrollment fell by greater than half over a decade, from almost 2,000 college students in 2013 to 874 final fall, in line with officers.

Jap Gateway Group School

Beset by authorized and monetary points, the Ohio group school introduced in March it might shut, mere months after it shuttered a profitable however controversial on-line program.

At one level earlier than its on-line program was terminated, EGCC enrolled 40,000 college students.

Plenty of components contributed to EGCC’s demise, together with a prolonged battle with the Division of Schooling over a “free school” program for labor union members. This system boosted enrollment however attracted scrutiny from the accreditor and state lawmakers for enrolling a excessive variety of out-of-state college students, in addition to for alleged mismanagement of economic assist funds. Regulation enforcement additionally investigated the school for alleged monetary irregularities.

Excluding department campuses, EGCC is the one freestanding public establishment within the U.S. to announce a closure this yr.

Birmingham-Southern School

After a failed legislative try to save lots of the personal Christian establishment in Alabama, officers introduced in March that Birmingham-Southern would shut simply two months later.

Birmingham Southern campus at twilight
The BSC campus stays available on the market.

Birmingham-Southern School

The closure was introduced on by a mixture of declining enrollment and rising prices, in addition to errors former officers made greater than a decade in the past. In 2010, the school found that it had improperly calculated monetary assist awards by hundreds of thousands of {dollars}. Across the similar time, directors tapped BSC’s endowment for constructing initiatives, depleting reserves.

Birmingham-Southern introduced in late 2022 that with out state intervention, it might be compelled to shut, prompting lawmakers to cross laws to create a public mortgage program for struggling personal schools. Nonetheless, State Treasurer Younger Boozer III denied BSC’s mortgage software—regardless that it was tailored for the school and drafted by alumni within the Legislature. Boozer argued that BSC didn’t have enough collateral for the mortgage and was a “horrible credit score danger.”

The Legislature later nullified the mortgage program.

With out the anticipated state lifeline, BSC closed abruptly. The BSC campus stays available on the market after a deal to promote the positioning to Miles School for an undisclosed sum fell by way of.

Oak Level College

Going through a steep drop in enrollment and a monetary deficit, the small personal establishment in Illinois introduced in March that it might shut on the finish of the spring semester.

Enrollment on the well being providers–oriented college plummeted following the coronavirus pandemic, from 860 college students in fall 2019 to 429 in fall 2022, IPEDS information reveals.

Goddard School

The spate of spring closures continued into April, when the small personal school in Vermont introduced it might shut down on the finish of Could.

Goddard had struggled financially for years as its enrollment dwindled. On the time of the closure announcement, school officers put enrollment at 220 college students—down from greater than 1,900 within the Seventies. However whilst not too long ago as fall 2014, the school had 538 college students, in line with IPEDS, which means Goddard’s enrollment fell by half in lower than a decade.

College of Saint Katherine

One other personal establishment squeezed by monetary pressures, the College of Saint Katherine introduced in April it was submitting for chapter and shutting on the finish of the spring semester. It had a brief tenure: The Christian college in San Marcos, Calif., solely launched in 2010.

In fall 2022, USK enrolled 232 college students, in line with IPEDS—a wholesome enchancment over the 137 who enrolled in fall 2017. Nevertheless it wasn’t sufficient to reverse the monetary struggles of USK, which operated at a deficit its final two fiscal years.

Wells School

The closure of Wells School surprised college, workers and college students when officers introduced in April that the 156-year-old establishment in New York would shutter on the finish of the spring semester.

Although the abrupt closure got here as a shock, Wells had been shedding college students for years, regardless of its shift from a ladies’s school to a coeducational mannequin in 2005, which offered a short enrollment increase. By fall 2022, enrollment was all the way down to 357 college students, in line with IPEDS information.

A picture of Wells College campus, with redbrick buildings and a bell tower.

The closure announcement surprised Wells college.

Wells School

Critics have alleged mismanagement performed a component within the closure.

Oregon School of Oriental Medication

A distinct segment personal establishment targeted on acupuncture, natural therapies and different different healthcare approaches, the Portland-based establishment introduced in Could that it was closing.

Officers on the small school, which enrolled 160 college students in fall 2022, in line with IPEDS, blamed monetary points “and contraction in Chinese language medication schooling,” in addition to social points within the metropolis of Portland. Particularly, they pointed to an “enhance in crime, drug use and folks dwelling unsheltered” close to OCOM’s campus, which “gutted the school constructing’s worth.”

OCOM “misplaced half its pupil physique within the final 4 years,” in line with the closure announcement.

Delaware School of Artwork and Design

When officers introduced in June that the Wilmington-based school was closing in a matter of weeks, they cited the standard monetary pressures and declining enrollment. However additionally they famous “surprising points with the rollout of the brand new Free Utility for Federal Scholar Support.”

The small school had struggled to generate income, working at a deficit for a lot of the final decade as enrollment dwindled to 129 college students in fall 2022, in line with federal information. However officers indicated that the ultimate straw gave the impression to be the problematic launch of the simplified FAFSA, which was fraught with technical glitches and delays that induced complications for households attempting to navigate monetary assist.

Some consultants have attributed FAFSA points to a decline in enrollment of 18-year-old freshmen throughout the nation.

College of the Arts

Mysterious monetary challenges—which stay unexplained months later—sank the artwork college in Pennsylvania, which introduced on June 1 that it might shut inside a matter of days.

The personal college, situated on prime actual property in Philadelphia, has supplied few particulars on what drove it out of enterprise. However officers famous the establishment had “been in a fragile monetary state, with a few years of declining enrollments, declining revenues, and rising bills.”

Officers referred vaguely to a weakened money place and “important, unanticipated bills.”

College of the Arts officers additionally left college students in limbo, canceling a city corridor concerning the closure on the final minute. That prompted its accreditor, the Center States Fee on Greater Schooling, to step in and lead an data session along with the Pennsylvania Division of Schooling, the U.S. Division of Schooling and the administration agency finishing up the closure.

Whereas Temple initially expressed curiosity in buying UArts, that plan was later dropped.

Pittsburgh Technical School

The closure of Pittsburgh Technical School got here after months of acrimony between workers and President Alicia Harvey-Smith, whom they accused of mismanaging the two-year establishment.

PTC officers pointed to declining enrollment and inflation—in addition to “altering views of upper schooling” and “orchestrated assaults towards the establishment”—in a June closure announcement. In an e-mail to Inside Greater Ed, Harvey-Smith laid the blame on “disgruntled former and present workers.”

Nonetheless, college members, who voted no confidence within the president final yr, allege that she mismanaged school funds—together with by spending $32,000 in school funds to pay a advertising agency to put in writing and edit a guide on enrollment administration printed underneath her title.

Sources instructed Inside Greater Ed that enrollment stood at slightly below 700 college students earlier than PTC closed, a steep dive from 1,744 college students in fall 2019, which was Harvey-Smith’s first yr.

Critics additionally blamed PTC’s board for failing to cease a runaway monetary slide.

Jap Nazarene School

Citing monetary pressures, the small, personal Christian school in Massachusetts introduced in June that it might shut.

Within the closure announcement, officers famous “important monetary headwinds lately,” including that the board and a number of presidents had “pursued quite a few options to closure” earlier than they determined to stop operations.

IPEDS reveals a head rely of 541 college students in fall 2022, down from 699 in fall 2020.

Union Institute & College

After greater than a yr of extreme monetary points—together with repeatedly lacking payroll, being evicted for failing to pay hire on its Cincinnati headquarters and shedding entry to federal monetary assist resulting from alleged mismanagement of funds—the Ohio establishment introduced its closure in June.

Union was additionally hit with a $4.3 million nice from the Schooling Division for alleged mismanagement of federal pupil assist {dollars}, and it confronted a state investigation over labor points.

Although the closure wasn’t official till this summer time, Union had paused instructional exercise and didn’t supply any lessons within the latter a part of 2023 or all of 2024. Undergraduate lessons have been final supplied in summer time 2023, and the final lessons for doctoral college students have been in fall 2023.

Union was the one school in Ohio designated as a Hispanic-serving establishment.

Clarks Summit College

Officers on the small, personal Baptist establishment in Pennsylvania famous tough “monetary circumstances” once they introduced in July the college would shut abruptly.

The closure announcement got here roughly a month after Clarks Summit furloughed all of its workers, with directors working at no cost, in an effort to save lots of prices. Nonetheless, sustained enrollment losses and monetary challenges proved insurmountable as its head rely fell from 1,100 college students in fall 2012 to 552 in fall 2022, in line with federal information.

Mergers, Acquisitions and Strategic Partnerships

Whereas some establishments closed, others launched into a path ahead with a accomplice. In lots of instances, these preparations have been forged as strategic partnerships, with schools stopping in need of utilizing the phrase “merger.” However some gave the impression to be acquisitions, with bigger companions absorbing smaller establishments.

College of Redlands/Woodbury College

In January, the 2 personal California establishments introduced plans to merge after quietly signing a letter of intent in December.

Woodbury, the smaller of the 2 (with 829 college students in fall 2022, in line with federal information), has struggled financially lately, whereas Redlands has been secure regardless of enrollment declines; in 2022, Redlands enrolled 3,460 full-time college students, IPEDS reveals, down from 4,956 in fall 2012.

Redlands has established a number of department campuses lately, starting with its 2019 acquisition of the San Francisco Theological Seminary, increasing its attain throughout California.

Bay Path College/Cambridge School

February introduced additional consolidation when Bay Path College in western Massachusetts introduced it had acquired Cambridge School, situated throughout the state in Boston. Each personal, nonprofit establishments are targeted on profession schooling.

The deal had been within the works since final summer time.

College of Findlay/Bluffton College

Separated by 20 miles, the 2 personal, religiously affiliated establishments in northwest Ohio introduced in March that that they had reached an settlement on a merger.

Whereas merging their operations, Findlay will stay affiliated with Church buildings of God, Normal Convention, whereas Bluffton College plans to take care of its ties to the Mennonite Church USA.

Pending NCAA approval, their athletic packages may also stay separate, with Findlay competing in NCAA Division II because the Oilers and the Bluffton Beavers collaborating in NCAA Division III play.

St. Ambrose College/Mount Mercy College

In Could, the 2 Roman Catholic establishments, situated about 80 miles aside in Iowa, introduced they have been pursuing a “strategic mixture.”

The deal is anticipated to be finalized in 2026, pending regulatory approvals.

The pair “will [then] be absolutely mixed underneath St. Ambrose with distinct campuses, instructional choices and intercollegiate athletic packages in each Davenport and Cedar Rapids,” in line with the announcement. The Mount Mercy title can be retained, with the built-in website in Cedar Rapids rebranded as Mount Mercy Campus of St. Ambrose College.

Northeastern College/Marymount Manhattan School

The merger introduced in Could will see Boston-based Northeastern soak up a campus in New York Metropolis, extending Northeastern’s already massive footprint to 14 campuses worldwide. Since 2011, the college has expanded aggressively and now has campuses in California, Miami, London and elsewhere.

A photo illustration of the Marymount Manhattan College campus with the logos for Northeastern University and Marymount Manhattan College overlaid and intermingled.

Northeastern will increase its footprint by absorbing Marymount Manhattan.

Picture illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Greater Ed | Marymount Manhattan School | Northeastern College

Whereas MMC has skilled enrollment declines lately, it stays financially secure. However given difficult headwinds, officers mentioned the school’s governing board noticed alternatives to develop its signature packages within the artistic and performing arts by way of a merger.

California State College Maritime Academy/California Polytechnic State College, San Luis Obispo

Officers introduced in June that the system had really helpful the “integration” of the 2 establishments, a plan the CSU Board of Trustees formally permitted final month.

System officers famous that combining operations, sources and governance would supply “a long-term answer to Cal Maritime’s untenable fiscal circumstances.” With 804 college students, Cal Maritime is the smallest school within the system and has struggled with enrollment not too long ago.

Lackawanna School/Peirce School

Positioned roughly two hours aside, the 2 personal establishments in Pennsylvania, which share a give attention to grownup learners, introduced plans to merge in August.

Lackawanna is primarily a two-year school with restricted bachelor’s levels, whereas Peirce affords two- and four-year levels and a few grasp’s packages and graduate certificates as nicely. Given enrollment challenges throughout Pennsylvania, leaders of the 2 establishments instructed Inside Greater Ed they noticed the association as a chance to develop and be stronger collectively.

Going ahead, if the merger earns regulatory approval, the 2 schools will bear the title of Lackawanna, which has had extra secure enrollment and funds lately.

Keystone School/Washington Institute for Schooling and Analysis

Struggling Keystone introduced a merger settlement in August that may see it be part of forces with the fledgling assume tank in D.C.

Keystone could be a subsidiary of WIER, in line with the merger announcement.

Nonetheless, Keystone faces quite a few challenges past regulatory approvals of the merger. Final month, its accreditor, MSCHE, alleged that the school didn’t adjust to numerous requirements—together with in areas resembling governance and finance—and might lose accreditation by Dec. 31. Keystone stays accredited whereas the school appeals the choice by MSCHE.

Earlier this yr, MSCHE warned that Keystone was “at risk of imminent closure.”

College of Texas at San Antonio/College of Texas Well being Science Middle at San Antonio

The College of Texas system introduced in August it would merge the 2 establishments into one.

The merger will mix UTSA, a big analysis college with greater than 34,000 college students, and a health-focused establishment that enrolls about 3,500 college students, in line with federal information. The merger will create the third-largest analysis college in Texas, in line with officers.

Ursuline School/Gannon College

The 2 Catholic establishments, situated underneath 100 miles aside, introduced a strategic partnership in September.

Gannon is the bigger and extra financially secure of the 2, enrolling 4,665 college students in fall 2022 in comparison with 950 for Ursuline, federal information reveals. Officers famous within the announcement that Gannon, which additionally has a campus in Florida, had been trying to increase its operations, whereas Ursuline had been searching for a partnership with a bigger establishment.

The transfer appears akin to an acquisition, with an FAQ web page noting that “Gannon College will change the Ursuline Sisters as the only member of the Ursuline School Company.”

Penn State Regulation/Penn State Dickinson Regulation

Pennsylvania State College is combining its two individually accredited regulation faculties into one.

The college break up Penn State, which is situated on the flagship campus in State School, and Penn State Dickinson Regulation, in Carlisle, a decade in the past, however officers backtracked on the transfer this fall. Penn State attributed the transfer to enrollment challenges, noting “a particularly aggressive market for authorized schooling,” on condition that there are 9 different regulation faculties within the state. The merger has raised considerations amongst college about transparency, with some questioning the rationale behind the reunification.

The J.D. class of 2028 would be the first to attend the mixed regulation college.

Seattle College/Cornish School

Earlier this month, officers on the two establishments introduced a merger that may have the a lot bigger college soak up the small, fiscally challenged artwork college.

Seattle College enrolled almost 4,200 college students in fall 2022, in comparison with 458 for Cornish, in line with federal enrollment information. Cornish has confronted enrollment declines lately and declared monetary exigency in 2020 because it struggled to recuperate from the consequences of the coronavirus pandemic.

The transfer comes after Seattle U introduced plans to create a brand new artwork museum in March.

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