K-State, Garden City Community College team up to let southwest Kansas residents earn degrees without relocating

Topeka — A long-distance collaboration between Kansas State University and Garden City Community College offers residents of southwest Kansas the opportunity to earn a four-year college degree without relocating.

The agreement would combine remote instruction with on-site laboratory experiences as students completed the initial 60 to 75 hours of course credits at the community college in Garden City before finishing a bachelor’s degree at the land-grant university based in Manhattan.

The memorandum of understanding signed last month would focus attention on students with an associate degree interested in undergraduate programs within K-State’s College of Agriculture, including animal science, agribusiness or crop science. GCCC and KSU could add program offerings based on regional industry needs.

“Southwest Kansas has been a four-year educational desert for far too long,” said Garden City Mayor Manuel Ortiz.

The percentage of the population in southwest Kansas with a four-year college degree is nearly half the statewide average. In the region, 17.9% of residents have earned a four-year degree compared to the state average of 33.9%.

GCCC President Ryan Ruda said the partnership would prove to be transformative in terms of higher education in southwest Kansas. GCCC’s expertise is in delivering certificates and associate degrees, while K-State’s forte is in four-year bachelor’s degrees and graduate school programs.

“By enabling bachelor’s degree completion right here in Garden City, we’re offering students a unique chance to advance their careers while staying rooted in their communities,” Ruda said.

KSU President Richard Linton said the land-grant mission of the university included the placement of educational opportunities within the reach of Kansans regardless of background or hometown. He said broadening options for a high-quality bachelor’s degree through the public college and university was a “powerful step in making higher education a reality for the hardworking people of southwest Kansas.”

Lona Duvall, president of the Finney County Economic Development Corporation, said the alliance would fill a critical educational gap and enhance economic development in the region. It should serve to build the skilled workforce in ways beneficial to local businesses and help in attracting new industry, Duvall said.

In the future, officials said, community surveys would be conducted to determine priorities in terms of expanding four-year degree offerings in southwest Kansas through GCCC and KSU. Likely options include education and health sciences, officials said.

— Tim Carpenter reports for Kansas Reflector.