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  • IUPNation
    replied
    Originally posted by Bart View Post

    It wasn't that way before, is private business running it now?
    Nope.

    Its just bend over SEPA residents a bit more.

    Leave a comment:


  • IUPNation
    replied
    Originally posted by iupgroundhog View Post

    The state's goal is to maximize revenue. Demand for using the Turnpike is highly inelastic. It won't change based on the price of using it. In the Phila. region people have to use the Turnpike to get to work in a timely manner or do other things efficiently. So, Southeastern Pennsylvanians are exploited. That's the way it works.

    By the same token, the "I-80 corridor" politicians were blowin' smoke when they said that people in their constituencies wouldn't be able to go to work if the interstate was tolled. They would have and they would have contributed to paying their fair share.
    We get exploited and then called “the problem” by the Trumpy counties who pay diddly squat.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fightingscot82
    replied
    Originally posted by iupgroundhog View Post

    That's not going to happen. IUP still has a very strong education department, with Ph.D's and everything. Regarding Clarion (and Edinboro), there is no "saving grace."

    There is an element to all this that relies on market-based dynamics. It doesn't make sense to remove that from the equation.
    One of IUP's struggles has been that several other PASSHE schools now offer doctoral programs, just not a PhD. West Chester has the highest enrollment education doctorate in the system, but no less than Cal, Kutztown, Slippery Rock, and West Chester offer doctoral programs in education. Most are online. As someone shopping for a PhD program, IUP's insistence that theirs meet in person crosses it out to me. Pitt and Slippery Rock are online.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fightingscot82
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPNation View Post

    What is the number of Education students (teachers in training) at each school?

    I think sone schools like IUP should get out of that business. We don’t need 14 schools training future teachers despite a teacher shortage. However the state could designate Clarion as a campus highly dedicated to educating students to be teachers. They could invest funds to make it affordable to major in Education there and the state starts churning out teachers to fill the staffing shortages as boomers retire. That could be Clarion’s saving grace.
    14 schools plus nearly every other school. They won't market themselves aggressively. A degree from PASSHE and one from a more expensive school like Penn State or a private doesn't pay any more. There are other fields like this too like nursing. They should market as the lowest cost pathway to a job that pays the same no matter where you went.

    Elementary education is still very popular, usually top 3 or top 5 at all the schools. Pretty sure business administration is the most popular systemwide. At SRU its Exercise Science (basically pre-PT), Safety Science, and Elementary Education.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ship69
    replied
    Originally posted by Bart View Post

    Everything is more expensive in southeastern Pa.
    Big-city areas are almost always more expensive. Land is at a premium, there is extensive infrastructure to maintain, and it costs more to administrate them and maintain order. The up side is that they are centers of wealth, jobs, and culture.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ship69
    replied
    Originally posted by iupgroundhog View Post

    The state's goal is to maximize revenue. Demand for using the Turnpike is highly inelastic. It won't change based on the price of using it. In the Phila. region people have to use the Turnpike to get to work in a timely manner or do other things efficiently. So, Southeastern Pennsylvanians are exploited. That's the way it works.

    By the same token, the "I-80 corridor" politicians were blowin' smoke when they said that people in their constituencies wouldn't be able to go to work if the interstate was tolled. They would have and they would have contributed to paying their fair share.
    PennDOT recently proposed temporarily tolling the South Bridge at Harrisburg to help pay for repairs to that structure. People screamed bloody murder about it, and that got nowhere.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bart
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPNation View Post

    The rate per mile should be exactly the same along the entire highway. I should not pay more to drive east than it does to drive west from Downingtown.
    It wasn't that way before, is private business running it now?

    Leave a comment:


  • iupgroundhog
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPNation View Post

    It easier to charge higher rates where the traffic is heavier. The Turnpike is also a commuter road in SEPA. Again we pay, Cletus receives.
    The state's goal is to maximize revenue. Demand for using the Turnpike is highly inelastic. It won't change based on the price of using it. In the Phila. region people have to use the Turnpike to get to work in a timely manner or do other things efficiently. So, Southeastern Pennsylvanians are exploited. That's the way it works.

    By the same token, the "I-80 corridor" politicians were blowin' smoke when they said that people in their constituencies wouldn't be able to go to work if the interstate was tolled. They would have and they would have contributed to paying their fair share.

    Leave a comment:


  • iupgroundhog
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPNation View Post

    What is the number of Education students (teachers in training) at each school?

    I think sone schools like IUP should get out of that business. We don’t need 14 schools training future teachers despite a teacher shortage. However the state could designate Clarion as a campus highly dedicated to educating students to be teachers. They could invest funds to make it affordable to major in Education there and the state starts churning out teachers to fill the staffing shortages as boomers retire. That could be Clarion’s saving grace.
    That's not going to happen. IUP still has a very strong education department, with Ph.D's and everything. Regarding Clarion (and Edinboro), there is no "saving grace."

    There is an element to all this that relies on market-based dynamics. It doesn't make sense to remove that from the equation.
    Last edited by iupgroundhog; 10-14-2023, 08:53 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • IUPNation
    replied
    Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post

    If majors are single digits it's because they've already been discontinued and the remaining students are being taught out. Harrisburg has set some pretty stringent minimum standards for program excellent enrollment.

    Athletes are about 20% of Clarion students.
    What is the number of Education students (teachers in training) at each school?

    I think sone schools like IUP should get out of that business. We don’t need 14 schools training future teachers despite a teacher shortage. However the state could designate Clarion as a campus highly dedicated to educating students to be teachers. They could invest funds to make it affordable to major in Education there and the state starts churning out teachers to fill the staffing shortages as boomers retire. That could be Clarion’s saving grace.

    Leave a comment:


  • IUPNation
    replied
    Originally posted by Bart View Post

    Everything is more expensive in southeastern Pa.
    The rate per mile should be exactly the same along the entire highway. I should not pay more to drive east than it does to drive west from Downingtown.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fightingscot82
    replied
    Originally posted by boatcapt View Post

    I wonder what % of students at Clarion are athletes? Also wonder what percentage of the Majors offered there have a student enrollment in the single digits?

    Heck, I wonder the same for each of the triad campuses.
    If majors are single digits it's because they've already been discontinued and the remaining students are being taught out. Harrisburg has set some pretty stringent minimum standards for program excellent enrollment.

    Athletes are about 20% of Clarion students.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bart
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPNation View Post

    It easier to charge higher rates where the traffic is heavier. The Turnpike is also a commuter road in SEPA. Again we pay, Cletus receives.
    Everything is more expensive in southeastern Pa.

    Leave a comment:


  • IUPNation
    replied
    Originally posted by Horror Child View Post

    Maybe rate per mile isn't the right what of analyzing tolls. Interchanges cost a lot more to build to maintain than roadway and there are a lot more of them in southeast and southwest. Bridges are more costly to build and maintain and rodaway.
    It easier to charge higher rates where the traffic is heavier. The Turnpike is also a commuter road in SEPA. Again we pay, Cletus receives.

    Leave a comment:


  • boatcapt
    replied
    Originally posted by IUPbigINDIANS View Post

    I still think the triad creation was the last 'we tried' PR stunt before they ultimately close some doors.

    Clarion is a total ghost town these days. It's sad.
    I wonder what % of students at Clarion are athletes? Also wonder what percentage of the Majors offered there have a student enrollment in the single digits?

    Heck, I wonder the same for each of the triad campuses.

    Leave a comment:

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