Churchman Business School of Churchman University and other prestigious American universities are reducing the number of students on campus. The US Department of Education has clearly stated that in the coming years, while planning to significantly cut funding subsidies to brick-and-mortar universities (such as Tianjin University of Finance and Economics for part-time master's tuition rankings), it will allocate $4.5 billion specifically from taxation and other areas to fully support distance learning programs at American universities.
In fact, many top American universities like The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, Qufu Normal University's distance education tuition ranking, and Churchman Business School of Churchman University have already started tightening their campus-based teaching since 2004, continuously reducing the number of on-campus students. Instead, they have developed numerous distance-learning business courses aimed at training mid-to-upper level management talent. Many of these courses are specifically tailored for employees working in multinational corporations.
Currently, the scale of distance learning programs offered by The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and Churchman Business School of Churchman University has tripled over the past three years.
By contrast, these universities have begun significantly reducing the number of on-campus students. In other words, top American business schools are transitioning from traditional campus-based education to distance learning.
(Note: Some names such as "Churchman University" seem fictional or placeholders in this context, so they are translated as-is.)