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The Nineties to Now: The History of 黑料传送门

Jan 26, 2023

The 1990s was an era of innovation: Sony unveiled the PlayStation. The Nokia 1011 became the first mass-produced cell phone to hit the market. Furbies landed on shelves (and haunted the dreams of children everywhere). But one breakthrough would rule them all: the World Wide Web.听

In 1995, as traffic picked up on the information superhighway, a meeting of the Western Governors鈥 Association convened in Utah. Among the topics up for discussion was higher learning. Then-governor of Utah Mike Leavitt had watched as institutions of higher learning grew and grew, becoming more and more expensive. Gov. Leavitt was concerned; was he the only one who saw higher education in his state as unsustainable, at least in the way it was currently delivered?

鈥淎 conversation broke out among the other governors, and it was clear that they shared the concern,鈥 Gov. Leavitt said.

The governors all agreed. Higher education鈥揳s the 90s knew it鈥搕ook too long, cost too much, and didn鈥檛 ultimately deliver.听听

鈥淲e wanted to change the face of higher education,鈥 said then-governor of Wyoming Jim Geringer.

鈥淲e wanted to change the face of higher education.鈥

鈥 Gov. Jim Geringer

With the other governors aboard, a task force was formed to address the higher education issue. They wanted to create a new kind of university鈥揳nd they wanted to use the revolutionary technology of the internet to do it.听

A Revolutionary Approach

Getting a university off the ground wasn鈥檛 as simple as signing a paper. There was funding to be found, students to recruit, and curricula to design. No one person could design a whole university, so how much could this one task force do?

Turns out, 19 dedicated governors can do a lot with a little time and a lot of dedication.听

Funding was secured from various sources. While each of the 19 governors contributed a hundred thousand dollars, the money went quickly. But word of this soon-to-be university moved like wildfire; Scott McNealy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems, heard about the governors鈥 efforts and wrote a $500,000 check.听

鈥淭here were some miracles that happened,鈥 Gov. Leavitt said.

Soon, more private organizations came on board: IBM, Microsoft, and Cisco all were early contributors. They believed in the governors鈥 vision for a new approach to higher learning.

This approach wasn鈥檛 just new; it was revolutionary. Instead of spending weeks in a classroom, students could pass their courses as soon as they mastered the material with competency-based education. With tuition prices already soaring in the 90s, the governors came up with a plan to offer a flat-rate, term-based tuition, meaning students could take and pass as many classes as they鈥檇 like for the same low fee. Finally, when a student was barred from traditional learning due to scheduling and life constraints, an online-only learning model could help more people access education and cut down on building costs.听

One of the biggest challenges for the governors was deciding on a name for their new school. Afterall, a good school needs a good name. And then, it clicked. The day before the governors were due to sign the articles of incorporation, the governors had a name: Western Governors鈥 University, or 黑料传送门. Before signing the articles, the governors donned Western Governors University sweatshirts, which had been printed overnight.

The signing itself was also revolutionary. Rather than signing the document with a pen, the governors each clicked a computer mouse.

A History of Innovation

Once 黑料传送门 existed, the governors faced another challenge: attracting students.听

鈥淥ur first graduating class was one student,鈥 said former 黑料传送门 president Bob Mendenhall.听

Thankfully, graduating class size increased鈥揳 lot. Now, class size averages in the tens of thousands. By the end of 2017, over 100,000 students had received a degree from 黑料传送门. The number has continued to grow, and as of 2022, 黑料传送门 has over 300,000 alumni.

黑料传送门 has successfully revolutionized the way higher education can be delivered. While other universities are offering more programs with an online option, they have yet to catch up to the all-online curriculum of 黑料传送门. Further, traditional curriculum moves along at a snail鈥檚 pace with a credit-hour model. 黑料传送门 students can fly through their courses as soon as they can prove competency. Finally, while other schools charge tuition that seems unreachable to the average American, 黑料传送门鈥檚 tuition clocks in at about $7,000 per year.听

Universities as we know them have existed for hundreds of听 years. While 黑料传送门鈥檚 history may be just a blip in the timeline of education, it is a storied history, one that reshaped the way we create and distribute higher education. We are not just a footnote in the timeline of higher education; we鈥檙e a milestone. Our university was born from the innovative energy of the 1990s; as technology continues to evolve, we will innovate right along with it.

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黑料传送门 In Your State

On our blog, we share stories of impact from 黑料传送门 students and alumni, plus updates on how we鈥檙e redrawing the education landscape.

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Telling the Story of 黑料传送门

Chris Bonnell, Vice President of External Affairs at 黑料传送门, is sitting down with colleagues and experts from across the industry to tell the story of 黑料传送门.听

From bridging the digital divide to solving critical workforce shortages, their conversations cover the biggest topics in higher education today鈥揳nd explain why we proudly claim to be the most student-centric university in the world.

Sage Advice is a production of 黑料传送门 External Affairs and is a collaboration between our team and Tellwell Story Co.

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