The University of Arizona is putting together the pieces to create a new online university with the announcement Monday that it is buying a for-profit online school.
The assets of Ashford University, including its 35,000 students, will be under the umbrella of the University of Arizona Global Campus, a nonprofit, fully online entity, the UA said. It will serve as an expansion of the Global Campus, made up of 150 sites worldwide.
Since spring, UA administrators have investigated the potential sale to bolster the universityβs offerings of more than 65 online programs. They said the move will help them serve more underrepresented and nontraditional students as well as provide additional career paths in a flexible and affordable manner.
βWe are really good at the 18- to 22-year-old business,β said Jeff Goldberg, now-retired dean emeritus of the College of Engineering and special advisor to the president. βWeβre also very good in graduate education, but thereβs a much broader mission in education for the state of Arizona and the United States that we think we should be involved in as well.β
Goldberg said thereβs an βinteresting student mixβ among Ashfordβs population; 90% of its student population is over 25 years old, a quarter of students are active-duty or retired service members, more than 35% are Black, and 56% are Pell Grant recipients.
President Robert Robbins said the UAβs push toward expanded online education follows that of Arizona State University, which provides online instruction to tens of thousands each year.
βWeβve been down around about 5,000 students in our online platform. Whereas, if youβd look at President (Michael) Crow and ASU, theyβre almost 60,000 online. We see this is the future change of higher education,β Robbins said.
With major operations in Tucson and Phoenix, the move makes Arizona an instant powerhouse in online education.
Those within Ashford β including 2,400 faculty members β should not face disruptions as they are welcomed to their future home, UA officials said.
Ashford runs year-round with five-week courses starting each week. Students can choose from more than 60 programs.
Classes are taught by a staff of 40% full-time faculty who have obtained their doctorate while 47% serve at the director level or higher in their companies, Goldberg said.
βWe were really impressed with the school they came from and the kind of work that they do and the passion they have for educating students,β he said.
Craig Wilson, the UAβs new vice provost for online and distance education, said as a former Ashford faculty member he found everyone was there to support each other.
βI can say that even back then, they really had a great infrastructure to support faculty. They really pushed our faculty to really be responsive to students,β Wilson said. βThe students that I was working with were working adults, anywhere between the ages of about 25 to 60 and the ability to provide instructions to that certain student population, I found it to be really exhilarating.β
THE DEAL
The UA has agreed to a long-term deal with Ashfordβs operating partner, Chandler-based Zovio, an education technology services company. It consists of Ashfordβs sale and Zovio providing services such as βrecruiting, student advising, financial aid counseling,β Goldberg said. βThey even may help with the construction of new courses and new programs. They have capabilities in that space as well.β
Ashford will be sold for $1 in a deal arranged to allow the UA to βto ramp up with very small initial costs,β Goldberg added.
While final details of the deal will likely be finalized in November or December, there will be guaranteed money to Ashford to continue operations, significant funds back to the UA and funds for Zovioβs services.
As a separate entity, University of Arizona Global Campus will have a separate board of trustees and president. However, the UA administration will have some seats on the board and play a role in setting up the processes the Global Campus follows.
βWe would have oversight of the academics, in the quality and how the degree is delivered to the students,β Robbins said. Students will be offered Ashfordβs programs in the U.S. and a mix of the UAβs online and Ashfordβs programs internationally, the administration said. Existing UA online programs will continue as is.
Mondayβs announcement, however, did concern some UA employees.
The Coalition for Academic Justice, an organization of more than 500 staff workers, graduate students and faculty members, said they are βdeeply troubledβ by an agreement seemingly made behind the scenes.
βAccording to President Robbins, the decision to create UA Global Campus was made after meetings with 200 or so individuals in top leadership positions at the university,β the coalition said.
βThese meetings hardly indicate shared governance or the existence of a democratic process regarding a new venture that could result in a myriad of short, medium and long-term consequences for the 15,000 staff and more than 3,300 faculty, who toil daily to keep the university afloat.β
The coalition also highlighted the administrationβs use of nondisclosure agreements lifted only after the news was shared with the UA community.
βThe fact that those who were privy to details about the venture were forced to sign βnon-disclosure agreementsβ before the materials would be shared with them points to the leadershipβs unwillingness to be transparent with the rank-and-file faculty and staff at the university,β the coalition said.
FILE - In this May 3, 2017, file photo, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra answers a question during a news conference in Sacramento, Calif. Becerra sued San Diego-based Ashford University on Wednesday, alleging the school and its parent company, Bridgeport Education Inc., used illegal business practices to deceive and defraud students.Β
PAST ALLEGATIONS
The agreement between the UA and Zovio, formerly known as Bridgepoint Education, was not made without addressing misconduct allegations against the company, officials said.
In 2017, a suit was brought against the company for allegedly using its admissions office to make false promises regarding prospective studentβs financial aid to get them to enroll.
Ashford then allegedly used βillegal debt collection practicesβ against students struggling to pay bills, according to a news release from the Office of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra.
A trial date is set for April 2021 in San Diego Superior Court.
Ashford University remains accredited through spring 2025 by WASC Senior College and University Commission, a regional association accrediting a range of schools in the United States.
βWeβve called out very clearly that these kinds of unethical behaviors are not going to be tolerated. There are a number of attorneys as well that are combing through each allegation,β Goldberg said.
Robbins said it will take some work to get their messaging across that this acquisition will benefit students.
βWe just havenβt done as good a job as I think we could have in that regard. I think this is a golden opportunity for us to give that message to students that the University of Arizona cares about you, cares about your future,β Robbins said.
THE FUTURE UA
Internally, there are hopes that with expansion not only will more students come through the UA pipeline, but financial gains will also be recognized for years to come. Thatβs particularly important now, with the UA facing extreme financial pressure due to COVID-19.
βWhen an organization is struggling, you canβt just stand back and let the world happen around you. Youβve got to think about where youβd like to be 10 years from now and what are the things youβd like to be doing to help you get there,β Goldberg said.
He noted that βif you look at the large online providers, these are $600- and $700-million-a-year businesses. This easily in a decade could be $100 million in revenue to the University of Arizona.β
UA administrators believe thereβs much more room for student enrollment to grow, as Ashford served 85,000 students at its peak.
βWe are a land grant institution, and the mission with most land grants, if not all, is to continue to provide accessβ to education, vice provost Wilson said.
βAs the demography of students change, our modality of delivery needs to be reflected on that change. Thatβs why moves like this are necessary β to be positioned not just for tomorrow, but for the next decade.β
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Light shines on a reflective sculpture titled βReflexivityβ in front of The University of Arizona Stevie Eller Dance Theater, 1727 E. University Blvd., in Tucson, Ariz. on May 20, 2020. Reflexivity was created by Dennis Jones.
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