Anonymous wrote:What schools do you see students getting excited about that largely may not have have been on the radar five or so years ago? Be sure to include what may have made the difference in terms of the popularity shift. Please be respectful, this could be a useful tool since there are no college tours right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
No. Financial difficulties. Moody downgraded it. Google it.
We're talking about the college, not the oil company.![]()
Not PP, but colleges do have credit ratings which are very important to them. In this case, google says:
New York, September 26, 2019 -- Moody's Investors Service has revised the outlook for Occidental College (CA) to negative from stable. Concurrently, we have assigned a Aa3 rating on the proposed Taxable Bonds, Series 2019 and affirmed the Aa3 ratings on approximately $84 million of rated debt
Precisely my point. Moody's does rate schools and Occcidental's was downgraded Dec. 2019 to negative. I'm an alum. Since the coronavirus pandemic hit, I've been asked three times to send money in to tide it over. Oxy's situation is so poor that it cancelled the football season and team two years ago for lack of funds. Its endowment is at a low of 434M (or was before the pandemic). It's sister college, Pomona, which started around the same time and once upon a time drew from the same high school applicant base is 2.35 billion. That's why Moody's downgraded it.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure about "growing" because it's become extremely popular at my kid's school since I started tracking college destinations -- Tulane.
During my generation it was considered a safety school and not even a first choice safety school. Now it's become an ED favorite.
Not sure what their secret sauce is I guess NOLA is a big draw but was still very surprised.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure about "growing" because it's become extremely popular at my kid's school since I started tracking college destinations -- Tulane.
During my generation it was considered a safety school and not even a first choice safety school. Now it's become an ED favorite.
Not sure what their secret sauce is I guess NOLA is a big draw but was still very surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Pennsylvania SLACs like Dickinson, FM, and Ursinus
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
No. Financial difficulties. Moody downgraded it. Google it.
We're talking about the college, not the oil company.![]()
Not PP, but colleges do have credit ratings which are very important to them. In this case, google says:
New York, September 26, 2019 -- Moody's Investors Service has revised the outlook for Occidental College (CA) to negative from stable. Concurrently, we have assigned a Aa3 rating on the proposed Taxable Bonds, Series 2019 and affirmed the Aa3 ratings on approximately $84 million of rated debt
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t places like Lafayette and Gettysburg super pricey?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
No. Financial difficulties. Moody downgraded it. Google it.
We're talking about the college, not the oil company.![]()
New York, September 26, 2019 -- Moody's Investors Service has revised the outlook for Occidental College (CA) to negative from stable. Concurrently, we have assigned a Aa3 rating on the proposed Taxable Bonds, Series 2019 and affirmed the Aa3 ratings on approximately $84 million of rated debt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
No. Financial difficulties. Moody downgraded it. Google it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of kids who are very smart, middle or lower middle class and don’t want to go far away to college are choosing GMU. It really appeals to kids who want/need to be near their families in NoVA.
Florida, South Carolina, Clemson, and Alabama have been popular with kids here for years. The next wave of popularity in Southern schools will be Tennessee, Auburn, Florida State, and UCF.
Not Auburn.
Alabama isn't popular from here either. Why anyone would send their kid out of state to Alabama besides football??
Popular is Wisconsin, Indiana, College of Charleston, University of South Carolina, Tennessee. These all became popular in the last ten years. Elon as well.
Locally I’d say Alabama and Auburn are both more popular OOS options than Tennessee.
Anonymous wrote:Occidental