Antioch University Midwest

The now-closed Antioch University Midwest (AUM) was a private institution of higher education serving adult students in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Previously the school was named "Antioch University McGregor" after the management professor and theorist Douglas McGregor, who served as the President of Antioch College from 1948 to 1954.[2] On June 12, 2010, the university was officially renamed "Antioch University Midwest."[3]

Antioch University Midwest
Former names
  • School of Adult and Experiential Learning
  • The McGregor School
  • Antioch University McGregor
TypePrivate
Established1852 (1852)
Parent institution
Antioch University
ProvostDr. Marian Glancy
Students698[1]
Address
900 Dayton Street
, , ,
45387
,
39°48′13″N 83°54′31″W
CampusRural, small-town
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.antioch.edu/midwest

AUM was part of the on-going Antioch University system that includes Antioch University New England in Keene, New Hampshire; Antioch University Seattle in Seattle, Washington; Antioch University Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California; and, Antioch University Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara, California. The original Antioch College, out of which the University system grew, is no longer part of the system, and has been reborn as an independent liberal arts college in Yellow Springs. Antioch University Midwest offered bachelor's degrees, a number of masters degrees, certificates, and educational endorsements.

Background

Antioch College was founded in 1852 as a progressive non-sectarian and co-educational institution of higher learning. Antioch's first president was Horace Mann, the revolutionary educational philosopher whose famous words, "Be Ashamed To Die Until You Have Won Some Victory For Mankind," is still spoken annually at all Antioch University commencement ceremonies.

Horace Mann daguerreotype by Mathew Brady

Under Mann's leadership, Antioch College took the Harvard academic model of Latin, Greek, mathematics, history, philosophy and science to a new level, with an emphasis on educating the "whole individual" with a commitment to social and moral character. The first graduating class consisted of 28 students, with an annual tuition of $24.

Antioch College was also the first to offer courses in the methods of teaching, by College professor Rebecca Pennell- one of the College's ten original faculty members, and the first female college professor in the United States to have the same rank and pay as her male colleagues.

Arthur E. Morgan was president of Antioch College from 1920 to 1936, developing a curriculum in which students alternate on-campus study with off-campus work experience, furthering the Antioch tradition of developing the whole person through education and experiential learning.

Douglas McGregor, a renowned social scientist and management theorist, served as president of Antioch College from 1948 to 1954. McGregor authored a highly influential book, "The Human Side of Enterprise," which revolutionized labor relations by conceiving of employees as inherently creative and self-motivated individuals who had something to offer an organization ("Theory Y"). This notion rippled through the world of managerial practice, challenging the belief that employees must be commanded and controlled because of an inherent desire to avoid work whenever possible ("Theory X").

This socially progressive outlook inspires the role of Antioch University today.

History

During the 1970s and most of the 1980s, Antioch College offered distance learning to adult students, through the Center for Adult Learning (CAL) and the Individualized Master of Arts (IMA) program. In 1988, these two programs became the School of Adult and Experiential Learning (SAEL), separating from the College and becoming an independent part of Antioch University.

In 1994, SAEL became the McGregor School of Antioch University. Dr. Barbara Gellman-Danley assumed the role of President on May 1, 1999.[4] The McGregor School and Antioch College shared the original campus in Yellow Springs, the College providing residential education to traditionally aged students seeking bachelor's degrees, and The McGregor School providing a bachelor's degree completion program to non-traditional students, and master's degrees.

In 2000, The McGregor School was renamed Antioch University McGregor, and in the fall of 2007 AUM moved onto a new campus in Yellow Springs, citing access to technologies and modern facilities as central to its continued growth. The board of Antioch University closed the original Antioch College in 2008, but an association of alumni subsequently purchased its name and assets from the university and Antioch College reopened as a separate, independent, four-year liberal arts college in 2011.

In 2010, Antioch University McGregor was renamed Antioch University Midwest.[3]

By late 2020, Antioch University Midwest had been eliminated as a separate campus.[5] Its functions were absorbed into Antioch University Online, and its building put up for sale.[5] However, university administration, Antioch University Online and Antioch University’s Graduate School of Leadership & Change remained headquartered in Yellow Springs.[5]

AUM Enrollment Statistics

At one time, AUM enrolled more than 900 students, with 76% in the graduate programs and 24% in the undergraduate programs. The average student age was 39, with approximately 75% of enrollees being female.[6] In 2007, AUM received a Diversity Award from Minority Access, Inc. for their commitment to "inclusion of diverse perspectives" throughout the curriculum, and a 30% minority representation in the student body.[7]

AUM Programs

AUM offered bachelor's degrees in Liberal Arts, Early Childhood Education with Ohio Licensure, Middle Childhood Education with Ohio Licensure, Special Education, Intervention Specialist with Ohio Licensure, Management, Healthcare Administration, Human Services Administration, and Applied Technology and Business Leadership. BA Liberal Arts students can choose from six concentrations, including Conflict Studies, Creative Writing and Literature, Education Studies, Environmental Sustainability, Humanities, and Information Technology. Two undergraduate certificates were available in Conflict Studies and Data Analytics.

At the graduate level, AUM offered Master of Arts degrees in Management and Change Leadership, as well as the Individualized Master of Arts. Antioch University Midwest also offered a Master's of Business Administration with a concentration in Healthcare Administration, as well as a number of Masters of Education (M.Ed.) programs, licensures, and endorsements certified by the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP), formerly known as the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE).

Teacher licensure was available for early childhood education, middle childhood education, adolescent, and intervention specialist at both the mild to moderate and moderate to intensive levels. Educators could seek the Ohio Principal Licensure as part of the Masters of Education in Educational Leadership or they may pursue the M.Ed. only. An M.Ed. in Educational Leadership with professional concentrations was also available for professional educators and administrators that want to tailor a degree program for their career. Endorsements are offered for Reading PK-12 and Early Childhood Generalist grades 4 and 5. Certificates were available in Reggio Emilia approach, Dyslexia Studies, Coaching and Mentoring, and Trauma Informed Education. Class offerings for the education programs were administered in a cohort model with classes occurring on weekday evenings.

References

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