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Keystone College

Coordinates:41°33′32″N75°46′30″W / 41.559°N 75.775°W /41.559; -75.775
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Private college in La Plume, Pennsylvania, US
This article is about the private college in Pennsylvania. For the private school in Texas, seeKeystone School. For the private school in Beijing, seeKeystone Academy.
Keystone College
Former names
Keystone Academy (1868–1934)
Scranton-Keystone Junior College (1934–1944)
Keystone Junior College (1944–1995)
MottoProgress Through Effort
TypePrivate college
Established1868; 157 years ago (1868) (as academy)
1934; 91 years ago (1934) (as college)
Endowment$8 million
PresidentJohn F. Pullo, Sr.
Academic staff
43 FT/ 90 PT
Students1051 (2023)
Undergraduates978 (2023)
Postgraduates73 (2023)
Location,,
United States
Campus276 acres (112 ha)
ColorsBlue and orange
NicknameGiants
Websitekeystone.edu

Keystone College is aprivate college innortheastern Pennsylvania, United States. Although the college's official mailing address isLa Plume,Pennsylvania inLackawanna County, much of the campus is inFactoryville inWyoming County. It was founded in 1868 and enrolls approximately 1,200 students in around 40 undergraduate and graduate degree programs. In November 2024, following over a decade of enrollment and revenue decreases, the college'saccreditor, by theMiddle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE), planned to withdraw its accreditation, but the decision on an exact withdrawal date is now subject to an appeal.[1]

History

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"Keystone Academy" was founded in 1868 by John Howard Harris. The academy was originally chartered by theCommonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1868, with instruction beginning the following year in the localBaptist church inFactoryville. At the time it was chartered, Keystone Academy was the only high school betweenBinghamton, New York andScranton, Pennsylvania.Louis Arthur Watres was a longtime trustee of Keystone Military Academy, and was one of the leaders who transformed the school into "Scranton-Keystone Junior College" in 1934.[2]Laurence Hawley Watres succeeded his father as a trustee, and remained on the board until 1962, when he was designated a trustee emeritus.[2] In 1944, the name was shortened to "Keystone Junior College". The current name Keystone College was adopted in 1995.

In 1998, the school received approval from thePennsylvania Department of Education to offerbaccalaureate degree programs. In 2014, Keystone received approval to offermaster's degrees.[3]

In 2012 the college enrolled 1,683 students but a decade later it enrolled only 1,131 students.

Middle States issues

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In early 2024, the college explored a merger with theWashington Institute for Education and Research (WIER), a Washington, D.C. non-profit organization, but the deal fell apart. Shortly thereafter, the college'saccreditor, theMiddle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE), issued the college a "show-cause order," requiring the college to prove compliance with its accreditation standards by August 1 or have its accreditation withdrawn. The college has already provided MSCHE with a teach-out plan that described how students can complete their degree programs if the college closes.[4] On June 25, 2024, the college laid off 29 faculty and staff and closed three programs with low enrollments.[5] In August 2024, the college announced it had signed a merger agreement with the Washington Institute for Education and Research, whereby Keystone would become a subsidiary of WIER.[6][7] In November, the Middle States commission voted to withdraw its accreditation of the college effective December 31, 2024, and pending an appeal by the college.[1] On December 20, 2024, the MSCHE noted that the December 31 deadline was no longer in effect and that the commission would "revise the effective date that accreditation will cease as appropriate based upon the final disposition of the appeal."[8] In the meantime, one of the conditions of the appeal was that Keystone College could not market to, recruit or enroll new students.[8][9]

In late February 2025, Middle States withdrew their decision to withdraw accreditation and Keystone College remains accredited. Middle States has given the college until September 2025 to provide further data about their long-term financials.[10][11]

Campus

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Sickler Hall

Keystone's scenic 276-acre (1.1 km2) campus, located at the gateway to theEndless Mountains of Northeastern Pennsylvania, features hiking trails and a freshwater stream. The campus is 15 miles northwest of Scranton onU.S. Routes 6 and11, and is located in both Lackawanna and Wyoming counties.

Woodlands Campus

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Keystone's 170-acre Woodlands Campus features approximately seven miles of hiking trails that are open to students and the public seven days a week from dawn until dusk.[12]

Academics

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Keystone College offers more than 50 degree options at the undergraduate and graduate levels in several academic divisions within two schools.

  • Turock School of Arts and Sciences
    • Communication, Art, and Humanities
    • Biological and Physical Sciences and Mathematics
    • Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • School of Professional Studies
    • Business, Management, and Technology
    • Education

Athletics

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Keystone athletics logo

Keystone's 16 teams (nicknamed theGiatns) compete in theUnited East Conference as aDivision III school under theNCAA. The teams are known as the Giants in honor of alumnusChristy Mathewson who played for theNew York Giants baseball team from 1900 to 1916.

Men's teams

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Men's sports teams include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, lacrosse, soccer, track and field, and wrestling.

Women's teams

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Women's sports include basketball, cross country, field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, track and field, and volleyball

Publications

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The Key is the student newspaper.The Keystonian is the college magazine for alumni and friends.

Notable alumni

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References

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  1. ^abHudson, Walter (November 26, 2024)."Keystone College to Lose its Accreditation".Diverse: Issues In Higher Education. RetrievedNovember 26, 2024.
  2. ^ab"Col. L. H. Watres, 82, Hero of WW1, Is Dead".Scranton Times. Scranton, PA. February 7, 1964. pp. 3,12 – viaNewspapers.com.
  3. ^"Keystone to offer master's degrees for the first time in history".Keystone College. 2014-10-08. Retrieved2019-06-07.
  4. ^Spitalniak, Laura (May 3, 2024)."Keystone College in 'danger of imminent closure,' accreditor says".Higher Ed Dive. RetrievedMay 3, 2024.
  5. ^WRITER, JIM LOCKWOOD STAFF (2024-06-25)."Keystone College cuts 29 faculty/staff positions, closes three low-enrollment programs".Scranton Times-Tribune. Retrieved2024-07-11.
  6. ^Kelly, Chrisann (2024-08-16)."Keystone College Announces Signed Merger Agreement".Keystone College. Retrieved2024-08-20.
  7. ^"Keystone College agrees to merge with D.C.-based nonprofit".Higher Ed Dive. Retrieved2024-08-20.
  8. ^ab"Keystone College".Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Retrieved2024-12-24.
  9. ^"Keystone College appeal filed, prepares for spring semester".Scranton Times-Tribune. 2024-12-21. Retrieved2024-12-24.
  10. ^"Middle States delays withdrawing Keystone College accreditation after college provides information that could save it".Scranton Times-Tribune. 2025-02-28. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  11. ^"Keystone College".Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Retrieved2025-03-03.
  12. ^"Trolley Trail Dedication".Keystone College. 2017-08-14. Retrieved2019-06-07.

External links

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41°33′32″N75°46′30″W / 41.559°N 75.775°W /41.559; -75.775

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