Schools

University President: Sunbelt Growth Demands Private Education Opportunities

Ed Schrader told members of the South Forsyth Rotary Club in Cumming demands particularly call for adult learners in graduate and undergraduate health care studies.

Brenau University President Ed Schrader told members of the South Forsyth Rotary Club in Cumming this week that the rapid growth in the Sunbelt region of the United States demands more private higher education opportunities—particularly for adult learners in graduate and undergraduate health care studies.

With public education reeling from both political and economic-driven budget cuts, private institutions like Brenau have the responsibility to step up expanded programs. The state’s largest private university, Emory, with its international reputation as a research institution, often educates students from other regions of the country who return to their home regions to pursue their careers while Brenau graduates tend to remain close by to fill the growing need for nurses, physical therapists, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and other health care providers.

“We [in the region] do not yet have adequate private education growth to meet these social needs of our region,” he said.

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He pointed out several ways Brenau has been addressing the challenge, including creation and planned implementation of clinical doctoral programs in nursing,occupational therapy and physical therapy.

About Brenau  

Founded in 1878, Brenau University currently enrolls about 2,800 students in graduate and undergraduate programs on campuses and online. With a curriculum that blends professional preparation informed by the liberal arts, Brenau degree tracks range from Associate of Arts, which includes a special “early college” program for exceptional high school-age students to terminal degrees, a Master of Fine Arts in Interior Design and a Doctor of Nursing Practice. The main campus of the Georgia-based liberal arts institution, which includes the Brenau Women’s College, is in Gainesville with other campuses in AugustaKings Bay and in two metro Atlanta locations, Norcross and Fairburn. Brenau’s 2013 ranking as one of the top 15-best higher education values in the Southeast by U.S. News & World Report marks the university’s eighth consecutive year in that position for the magazine’s America's Best Colleges guidebook. In 2012 Brenau online programs scored high in national rankings by U.S. News & World Report, including a No. 9 in the nation "Honor Roll" listing for graduate degree tracks in Brenau's College of Education. Brenau University also has been cited as one of the best universities in the Southeast by The Princeton Review. The Chronicle of Higher Education accorded Brenau “honor roll” status as one of the top 10 best colleges and universities to work in its 2011-12 survey rankings.  


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