Anonymous wrote:I question the methodology, but overall it is clear that most of his Struggle and Perish colleges are in real trouble. Multiple colleges have closed in New England in just the last two years. Multiple others are in real jeopardy. That's also true of huge numbers of colleges in the midwest. Many of the SLACs that are in the soup were originally founded as boarding schools (high schools) or as women's junior colleges (used to be quite commonplace) that were given permission to award degrees. They have no financial cushion, they provide no services, their co-curriculars are zip-zero. There is no question but that a number of his Struggle and Perish colleges will definitely shut down, many within a year or two.
Anonymous wrote:If fall ends up online, I could see the dominos start to fall. Online education just doesn't compare to in person, and a lot of schools don't have the name brand that would be the only reason to pay the extra money. Can't imagine spending the money on a SLAC when it's online and I say that a loyal alum of one.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not really sure what purpose this serves to current students unless the school is in the perish category.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that the author only chose a certain number of schools, implying that he chose somewhat ''known'' ones. That tells me that the really struggling ones (a couple I can think of) were so unknown they didn't make the list.