Posts: 18,158
Threads: 968
Likes Received: 5,976 in 4,503 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Feb 2016
Interesting, I thought there was a post I created in regards to this institution closing but couldn't find that post, It's kind of sad seeing so many institutions go bust... Anyways, I happen to notice the executive staff list, so I went through their Linkedin details...
The President actually is a Regent's College graduate! Yes, that was the entity that changed names so many times and finally ended with Excelsior University as we now know it... A few of their exec's have PhD's, how did they fail?!
Link: https://questu.ca/announcement/
•
Posts: 1
Threads: 0
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Jul 2023
(07-16-2023, 02:30 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Interesting, I thought there was a post I created in regards to this institution closing but couldn't find that post, It's kind of sad seeing so many institutions go bust... Anyways, I happen to notice the executive staff list, so I went through their Linkedin details...
The President actually is a Regent's College graduate! Yes, that was the entity that changed names so many times and finally ended with Excelsior University as we now know it... A few of their exec's have PhD's, how did they fail?!
Link: https://questu.ca/announcement/
Thank you for sharing!
•
Posts: 106
Threads: 9
Likes Received: 50 in 38 posts
Likes Given: 115
Joined: May 2022
07-19-2023, 06:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-19-2023, 06:48 PM by JPN.)
I sent a letter to the Board of Governors a few months ago suggesting that they become an online college that focuses on experiential/on the job/in field learning opportunities, and accept alt credit like CLEP, ACE, etc., similar to the Learning at Work degrees offered by Portsmouth. It could've been a significant augmentation of their brick and mortar education. I imagine it fell on deaf ears or I was a bit naive to think they'd take it into consideration, but I do think there are ways for post-secondary institutions to adapt and remain dynamic in a changing environment. Their on-campus enrollment was declining, but their pedagogical discoveries were valued and should remain considered - learning can come from many different places, whether that's alt-credit, portfolios or independent study projects.
Also, for those that don't know, Quest University was always kind of a weird university by Canadian standards. It was founded by faculty from other institutions in British Columbia who valued non-traditional learning and wanted to validate a model of non-traditional learning. It was organized as a SLAC / small liberal arts college with inspiration from Colorado College.
As far as its local reputation goes, a lot of the students I know that went to Quest University were the well-off kids who were a bit of slackers. They could afford the $22,000 CAD annual tuition (which is very high by Canadian standards) and wanted a general studies education that they could tailor. A large number went onto professional degrees afterwards.
Posts: 18,158
Threads: 968
Likes Received: 5,976 in 4,503 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Feb 2016
•
Posts: 8,309
Threads: 91
Likes Received: 3,450 in 2,477 posts
Likes Given: 4,084
Joined: May 2020
I guess the quest has come to an end.
Posts: 1,430
Threads: 83
Likes Received: 629 in 396 posts
Likes Given: 1,147
Joined: Dec 2008
08-19-2023, 03:17 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-19-2023, 03:18 PM by Jonathan Whatley.)
Terrible track record for Canadian private university startups with very corporate names:
Meritus University, for-profit online, owned by University of Phoenix, New Brunswick. 2008-2011.
Unexus University, later Lansbridge University, for-profit online, New Brunswick. 1991-2018.
Quest University, non-profit B&M, British Columbia. 2002-2025.
University Canada West, for-profit hybrid, British Columbia, est. 2005, survives but I'm sure it's watching its back…
•
Posts: 18,158
Threads: 968
Likes Received: 5,976 in 4,503 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Feb 2016
•
|