Not everyone wants to study STEM. |
Its the Michigan weather forecast brought to you by DCUM. |
Name one Big Ten flagship that has lost 40% of its enrollment or has plummeting enrollment. |
What a long, misleading, inaccurate post. An utter hack job. Many universities have Greek housing on their campus (Duke, JMU, CNU, W&L Sororities). The financial model for this student housing is the same as for dormitories. The buildings and the bonds that finance them are typically paid for by the associated rental fees. In the W&M Fraternity housing you cite, the source was 9(c) bonds paid by the rental fees. It was not funded with endowment, tuition, state general fund appropriations or any other source that was diverted to auxiliary operations from academic operations as you are trying to imply. If you look at the cost, which you suggest is extravagant, the two story houses are only slightly more on a per bed basis than the new 6 floor UVA Alderman dormitories, which were constructed during a similar time period using the same funding mechanism (bonds paid for by rental fees). And to put the cost in some context, both the Alderman Road dormitories at UVA and the new fraternity houses at W&M are only about one-fifth the cost per bed of the new residential colleges Yale recently built (over $500M for 800 beds, or $650K+ per bed). You also didn't get the funding of the football stadium correct, either. The largest donor was the estate of Walt Zable, the man for whom the stadium was already named. Walt Zable cited his experience playing football at W&M as instrumental in his development, and he went on to found an 8,000 employee technology company. He does not have another building on campus named for him. Do you think Mr. Zable was coerced by the administration to donate to football? The next two largest donors to the stadium project have given much more money to projects outside of athletics, including donations to the business school, law school, and the expansion of the alumni center. One of those donors was from the same family that made one of the largest donations for the expansion of UVA's football stadium. All of this is a distraction on your part. Among top national public universities, William & Mary ranks highest in USNWR ranking of undergraduate teaching and it has the best faculty to student ratio. It is also rated highest among publics in student surveys in Princeton Review and Niche for professor quality, preparation, and commitment to student success. Again among top national public universities, W&M has the highest percentage of undergraduate students that go on to earn PhDs of all types and the second highest that ear PhDs in STEM fields after UC Berkeley. It has one of the highest medical school acceptance rates for public universities. Based on student surveys, Princeton Review includes both W&M's library and science lab facilities on its best list. The investments in academic facilities dwarfs the two projects you cited above during the same period of time. This includes construction and renovation of 500,000 square feet of science space, a new business building, library renovation and expansion, new arts facilities, law school expansion, and a new school of education facility. The cost of these alone is about 25X the stadium expansion cost. |
Nobody said anything about those. Those aren’t the only type of colleges that exist, you know. |
yeah someone did- Everything in the middle west, especially cold weather northern states is in decline. Smart middle west 12th graders can go to places like Alabama, Auburn and Ole Miss for less than in-state Big Ten. |
Penn State (though not in the Midwest) in the big 10 costs roughly $37,000/year for instate students and gives virtually zero grant financial aid, so I’d agree with your assessment. |
| University of VA |
Is Penn State losing enrollment? |
Yeah but then they have to go to “Ole Miss” |
For certain southern kids, going to an SEC school and joining a top frat or sorority is very much the goal. I’d go almost anywhere for a full ride, and Ole Miss offers full rides to top students. |
Um, does anyone really think that Mississippi or Alabama is a "bustling" region of the country with good career prospects? I mean, no harm intended, but both those states rank at the bottom in terms of educational level, poverty, health care, etc. No thanks. |
If you’re a smart kid in Kansas who gets offered full tuition to Bama or a full ride to Ole Miss, you would be foolish not to take it. And tons of kids are taking it. They have excellent cost of living as well. Sorry you don’t understand that. Parts of Arkansas are lovely due to the presence of Walmart HQ. |
Not everyone SHOULD study STEM. We'll be all the poorer of a society if everyone did, and I don't mean financially. |
Global warming will take care of this issue.] |