Artigo Revisado por pares

A Century of Campus Planning: Past, Present, and Future

2014; Society for College and University Planning; Volume: 42; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

0736-0983

Autores

Mark Crawford,

Tópico(s)

Higher Education Governance and Development

Resumo

FOR MOST OF ITS HISTORY, higher education in America was an experience that only the elite could enjoy. As a result, throughout the 19th century, higher education institutions became increasingly steeped in tradition and resistant to change. Things stayed about the same until World War II, which forced colleges and universities to face some huge challenges. For example, in 1944 the G.I. Bill enabled more than two million returning veterans to enter the higher education system. education became more accessible and was no longer entirely the domain of the elite or the upper echelon, says Persis C. Rickes, president and principal with Rickes Associates, a higher education planning firm in Attleboro, Massachusetts. Instead, it became the golden ticket to achieving the American Dream. nation's higher education system was greatly challenged by this surge of students--in response, many institutions expanded facilities quickly, cheaply, and with minimal planning. Universities that had catered to a relatively small population, with a fixed curriculum that had been taught the same for 100 years, were suddenly forced to adapt to a larger and more varied student body, including married students, adds Fred Mayer, retired university planner for the University of Michigan. Dorms had to be built. There was also a dramatic increase in the amount of research being done on campus--a result of the war effort--so research facilities had to be built to accommodate this expanding role. Social, cultural, and socio-economic changes soon followed. Brown vs. Board of Education eliminated segregated educational institutions in 1954, opening doors that were previously closed to disenfranchised groups. The feminization of higher starting in the 1980s, also contributed to the great enrollment expansion of higher education, adds Ira Fink, president of Ira Fink and Associates, a university planning consulting firm in Emeryville, California. In the early 1960s the typical college student was white and male--today the majority of college students are female. Projected enrollment patterns are also tied to increasing numbers of non-white students--populations that have historically been underserved by higher education, says Michael Haggans, an independent scholar and architect studying the impacts of digital technology on higher education. these changes resulted in the physical expansion of facilities at many existing colleges and universities, as well as the creation of many entirely new institutions. Higher Education Act of 1964 opened access to higher education even further, especially through its endorsement of community Although the first community college was established in 1901, the Carnegie Commission in 1964 called for the establishment of community colleges that were within easy access of all, states Rickes. The consequence is that almost half of today's higher education students are enrolled in community colleges. WHEN BIGGER WAS BETTER In general, over the last 100 years, campuses have grown fairly slowly. It is likely that the change in total amount of space on campuses, when added together, might average one to two percent per year, says Fink. It could take 50 to 100 years to build what already exists. Most campuses spend as much rehabilitating and renovating as they do on new buildings. Facilities on campuses have long life spans. However, with the wave of students funded by the G.I. Bill, followed by the influx of students during the 1950s through 1970s, class sizes expanded, larger residence halls were required, and the physical size of the campus grew dramatically. All these changes produced much of the physical environment we see today--bigger was consistently seen as better, says Haggans. Higher education institutions today--especially research universities--continue to build bigger and more impressive buildings. …

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