Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to IndustriesEducation Technology

Scaling Experiential Learning at Slippery Rock University with Dr. John Rindy

Regional public universities face growing pressure to improve student outcomes with shrinking resources, making experiential learning a strategic priority. Dr. John Rindy of Slippery Rock University discusses how the institution is scaling experiential learning programs to drive persistence, graduation rates, and career readiness. The conversation explores practical frameworks for embedding real-world learning across a regional public university context.

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Education Technology teams put it to work with Executive Thought Leadership.

Promoted content from signals in higher ed on MarketScale.

By Darin Francis · Career ReadinessDr. John RindyEarly College ExperiencesExperiential Learning
Share

Key takeaways

01

Experiential learning has shifted from optional enrichment to a core institutional strategy at regional public universities.

02

Slippery Rock University is actively scaling experiential learning to address enrollment pressure and labor market demands.

03

Student persistence and timely graduation are directly tied to meaningful, career-connected learning experiences.

Regional public universities are being asked to do more with fewer students, fewer dollars, and less margin for error—making student persistence, timely graduation, and career outcomes central institutional concerns. Under mounting enrollment pressure and a shifting labor market, experiential learning has moved from a “nice to have” to a strategic imperative. Research consistently shows that students who participate in work-based or applied learning are more likely to persist and graduate, and institutions are increasingly being asked to prove that these experiences are intentional, equitable, and scalable. Against a backdrop of demographic decline in the Northeast and Midwest, the stakes are clear: connecting learning to careers is no longer optional—it’s central to institutional sustainability.

So how can a tuition-driven public university design experiential learning that reaches students early, supports retention, and aligns academic and enrollment goals without overwhelming faculty or staff?

That question is at the heart of this episode of Signals in Higher Ed, hosted by Darin Francis. Darin is joined by Dr. John Rindy of Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, who shares how the institution has built a data-informed, relationship-driven model to scale experiential and work-based learning as a core student success strategy. The episode explores how organizational structure, early intervention, and a clear “why” can turn experiential learning into a lever for persistence and graduation.

The main topics of conversation…

  • Early college work-based learning as a retention strategy: How Slippery Rock uses paid, non-credit experiential learning in the first and second years to build context, motivation, and momentum toward 60 credits—a milestone associated with a 94%+ graduation rate.
  • A three-function student success model: Why the Center for Career & Academic Progress integrates student-facing services, internal consulting, and applied research to move retention and completion metrics.
  • From “buy-in” to enrollment: Dr. Rindy’s philosophy on leadership, faculty partnership, and why sustainable change depends on enrolling people in ideas rather than selling them.

Dr. John Rindy is a senior higher education leader with deep expertise in student retention, career education, and data-informed persistence strategy, currently serving as Assistant Vice President for the Center for Career & Academic Progress at Slippery Rock University. He has led campus-wide transformations that produced record-setting first-year retention (86%+), scaled work-based and experiential learning, and integrated predictive analytics, internal consulting, and applied research to drive student success and career outcomes. With prior experience as a CEO/COO in healthcare, a dean, a long-serving faculty member, and a career education innovator, Rindy brings a rare blend of executive leadership, academic partnership, and operational execution across education and industry.

Article written by MarketScale.

signals in higher ed

Part of this channel

signals in higher ed

Proven outcomes in higher education, from the people who achieved them.

Visit the channel →

About the author

Darin Francis
Darin FrancisManaging Partner & CEO

With 20 years of experience at the intersection of higher education and edtech, Darin Francis brings a wealth of knowledge and a deep passion for driving meaningful change in the sector. Having led teams, crafted go-to-market (GTM) strategies, and worked closely with institutions, Darin is uniquely positioned to help edtech companies navigate the complexities of U.S. and Canadian higher education. Darin Francis, based in Detroit, MI, US, is currently a Managing Partner and CEO at Harbinger Lane Consulting.

Education Technology: are you visible to AI?

Before they reach out, Education Technology buyers ask AI engines which vendors to trust. See how AI describes your company today, and where competitors show up instead.

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Education Technology Insights

Higher Ed's Seed Round: How Universities Decide Which Programs to Build

Higher Ed's Seed Round: How Universities Decide Which Programs to Build

The decision-making process for universities when choosing which online programs to develop and fund involves strategic considerations. These decisions are influenced by factors such as demand, resources, and institutional goals. Administrators need to weigh these elements to ensure successful and sustainable online education offerings.

  • 01Universities consider demand and resources in online program planning.
  • 02Institutional goals influence the choice of programs to fund.
  • 03Strategic decision-making is crucial for successful online education.

Jun 30, 2026

Teacher Stress Is Still at Crisis Levels in 2026. EdTech Vendors Selling Into Schools Need to Understand Why That Matters.

Teacher Stress Is Still at Crisis Levels in 2026. EdTech Vendors Selling Into Schools Need to Understand Why That Matters.

In 2026, more than half of US teachers continue to face significant job-related stress. This ongoing issue poses a primary adoption barrier for EdTech vendors and enterprise L&D teams targeting school districts. Understanding and addressing teacher stress is crucial for the successful implementation of educational technology.

  • 01Over half of US teachers experience high stress levels in 2026.
  • 02Teacher stress is a major barrier for EdTech adoption.
  • 03EdTech solutions must address stress to succeed in schools.

Jun 29, 2026

How Raptor's StudentSafe tackles behavioral threat assessment and student well-being

How Raptor's StudentSafe tackles behavioral threat assessment and student well-being

Raptor Technologies has transitioned from visitor management to enhancing student well-being with its StudentSafe platform. This move addresses school district needs for improved behavioral threat assessment. StudentSafe is designed to bolster educational security and student safety.

  • 01Raptor Technologies is expanding into student well-being.
  • 02The StudentSafe platform focuses on behavioral threat assessment.
  • 03StudentSafe responds to demands from school district customers.

Jun 26, 2026

Explore More Education Technology Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Education Technology.

Browse Education Technology Hub

About the Experts

Darin Francis
Darin Francis

Host, Signals in Higher Ed

Darin Francis is the host of the Signals in Higher Ed podcast, which focuses on trends, technology, and strategy in higher education. He engages with university leaders and practitioners to explore how institutions can adapt to enrollment challenges, workforce demands, and student success imperatives. His work centers on surfacing actionable insights for higher ed professionals.

DJ
Dr. John Rindy

Faculty/Administrator involved in Experiential Learning

Slippery Rock University

Dr. John Rindy is an educator at Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, a regional public university in the State System of Higher Education. He is involved in scaling experiential learning initiatives aimed at improving student persistence, timely graduation, and career readiness outcomes.