
State College, PAprivate forprofitwww.southhills.edu/
South Hills School of Business & Technology is a hyper-practical, career-focused institution where nearly everyone gets in—but graduates leave with concrete skills and solid earning potential. With an 8:1 student-faculty ratio and a no-nonsense approach to vocational training, it’s the antithesis of a sprawling liberal arts college, offering associate degrees in fields like Allied Health and IT that lead directly to jobs.
South Hills is about as close to 'open admissions' as it gets without officially being one: acceptance rates hover near 99%, with 107 of 110 applicants admitted in 2024. Unlike selective colleges, there’s no SAT/ACT requirement—just a checklist of prerequisite coursework (Algebra, Statistics, Communication Skills). The vibe is 'if you’re serious about workforce prep, we’ll take you.'
This is a strictly vocational shop—the highest degree offered is an associate, and programs are laser-focused on immediate job placement. The 8:1 student-faculty ratio ensures hands-on training in fields like Allied Health Diagnostics (a standout program) and IT. Curricula are stripped of gen-ed fluff: you’ll take Algebra and Statistics not for intellectual exploration, but because you’ll need them on the job.
Don’t expect Big Ten football or Greek life—this is a commuter-heavy, work-first environment. Clubs like Club IT and Phi Beta Lambda (a business leadership org) dominate the extracurricular scene. The school’s Facebook page hints at a no-drama ethos: 'We are just the opposite of misery loves company, not allowing politics and disrespect.'
The 64% graduation rate outpaces many community colleges, and alumni report median earnings of $36,427 one year out—though that lags the national average by nearly $10k. For Central Pennsylvania locals seeking stable employment without a four-year degree, South Hills delivers: six years post-graduation, median pay climbs to $33,823.
With an average net price of $22,311 after aid, South Hills isn’t dirt-cheap, but it undercuts bachelor’s programs. The school packages $9,721 in average aid per student, mixing federal grants ($6,193), state aid ($5,632), and institutional scholarships ($4,300). Full-service financial aid appointments aim to demystify the process for First-generation (first-gen)A student who would be the first in their immediate family to earn a four-year college degree. Many colleges consider this in context. students.
South Hills is unapologetically utilitarian—a place where 'career-ready' isn’t a marketing slogan but the entire curriculum. Its 99% Acceptance rateThe share of applicants a college admits in a given year. A 10% acceptance rate means it admits about 1 in 10 applicants. and lack of selectivity might raise eyebrows elsewhere, but here it’s a feature: the school exists to upskill anyone willing to put in the work. For students who view college as a direct pipeline to a paycheck (not a 'transformative journey'), it’s a pragmatic choice.


