((Excerpt))
Seventeen Ohio universities and community colleges are ready to become semester-based schools, ending decades of colliding calendars among the state’s 37-member higher education system.
But the effort, which has taken years and millions of dollars to complete, is not universally liked by students, many of whom feel they will be caught in the middle during the transition.
Preparing for the change, which begins with fall classes in August, has cost the schools more than $26 million in the past four years. The state did not allocate extra money to pay for needed technology upgrades or thousands of hours of staff time to revise curriculum.
“It’s been, I think, a really tremendous effort, and a tremendous effort during very difficult economic times in the state of Ohio,” said Wright State President David Hopkins. “We came together and agreed it was time for us to do this and do it together.”
Read more at DaytonDailyNews.com

Wright State student-athletes make a lasting impact on local family, more to come
Wright State names Rajneesh Suri dean of Raj Soin College of Business
‘Only in New York,’ born at Wright State
Wright State president, Horizon League leaders welcome new commissioner
Wright State celebrates homecoming with week-long block party