Gov. Stitt signs two higher education related executive orders

By Fox23.com News Staff

OKLAHOMA — Governor Kevin Stitt signed two executive orders on Thursday aimed at improving Oklahoma’s public higher education system.

The executive orders prioritize data-driven decision-making, accelerated pathways to graduation and performance-based faculty employment to align colleges with workforce needs and to hold universities accountable to tuition payers and taxpayers, Gov. Stitt’s Office said.

“Here in Oklahoma, we want to deliver higher education that meets workforce needs and keeps our talent at home. It’s a win-win,” said Gov. Stitt. “I’m pushing for a 90-hour bachelor’s degree pathway to cut costs and get students into good jobs. I am also pushing tenure reforms that tie accountability to performance at public institutions.”

Highlights from Executive Order 2026-07: Data and Accelerated Degrees include:

  • Directs the Oklahoma Employment Security Commission and Regents for Higher Education to enhance tracking of post-graduate wages, job types, hours worked and employment locations for better return-on-investment analysis.
  • Orders a 90-day feasibility study on 90-credit-hour “accelerated” bachelor degrees to slash time and costs while maintaining quality, accreditation and job relevance.
  • Requires Regents to use outcomes data when approving, reviewing or sunsetting academic programs.
  • Initiates Performance-Based Funding in the appropriation of higher education dollars, tying institutions’ state funding to workforce and employment outcomes, affordability and the state’s strategic economic development priorities.

Highlights from Executive Order 2026-06: Tenure Reform include:

  • Establishes a state policy for accountability within the tenure system at higher education institutions. 
  • Allows research universities to retain tenure with mandatory 5-year reviews and performance standards. 
  • Instructs regional universities and community colleges to phase out new lifetime tenure, shifting to renewable contracts tied to teaching effectiveness, student completion, job placement, and economic alignment. Existing tenures remain with reviews. 
  • Instructs institutions to certify compliance to Regents.

Gov. Stitt’s Office said these reforms empower the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education to implement changes that foster innovation, reduce barriers to workforce entry and ensure public dollars drive measurable success.

You can read both executive orders by clicking here and here.

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