write your paper. But this concept is not going to happen. The only way Universities act as landlords is in the form of student housing (dorms and on-campus apartments). I don't see any possible way Universities would have an interest in providing and maintaining housing for any other type of tenant.
My questions:
What happens when the student's loan comes due and they fail to make payments?
What happens when the tenant stops paying?
Who does the tenant contact when a repair is needed and who pays for the repair?
Who does the tenant enter into the lease contract with...the student or the university?
There's a lot I don't understand.
Furthermore, think about who becomes a university professor. It is people who are degreed above and beyond the students they are teaching. More questions:
Where do you expect to find a master or doctorate prepared real estate investor to develop such a program?
How will this type of program become accredited?
What is the degree track?
What would a curriculum for this track look like? it must include theory, research and participation in professional activities.
How will this be funded, universities are supported by endowments and taxes, programs cannot rely on tuition alone.
This sounds like a very difficult paper to write, and impossible to defend. But, none the less, I wish you well.