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Virginia community colleges facing
enrollment crunch
by Heather Hayes
Virginia Business
September 2005
For some time Glenn DuBois, chancellor
of the Virginia Community College System (VCCS), has
been warning about an impending crisis at the state’s
two-year colleges: Too many students and not enough
space or faculty.
Now, DuBois has the hard numbers
to back up his warning. The State Council of Higher
Education for Virginia (SCHEV) estimates that enrollment
at the state’s 23 community colleges will reach
186,555 students by 2012, a jump of 27.4 percent over
2004 enrollment figures of 146,472. The SCHEV report
predicts that half of the enrollment growth will occur
in Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads, regions served
by schools already operating beyond capacity.
But SCHEV’s numbers are probably
on the conservative side, says DuBois. He notes that
an increasing number of companies need workers with
two-year degrees and certificates while a growing number
of students choose community colleges as a lower-cost
“on ramp” to higher education.
“The good news in all of this
is that more and more people are seeking post-secondary
education,” Du-Bois says. “The tougher news
is that we have to expand our capacity if we’re
going to assimilate the demand.”
For the chancellor, the numbers mean the community college
system must obtain state funds to expand existing schools
and build additional campuses in high-growth areas such
as Northern Virginia, Richmond, Hampton Roads and Charlottesville.
DuBois and other school officials,
however, also are interested in trying out creative
solutions. These include investment partnerships with
the private sector. One idea under consideration would
be to sell or give campus land to corporations. These
companies, in turn, would construct office buildings
on the sites while reserving some space for classrooms
and laboratories. “They would have to build the
building according to our specifications, and they would
have to do something in that building that strengthens
our mission or complements it,” DuBois says. |