Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just announced they are cutting 20 majors. They’re not in good financial shape.
Large majority of states continue to reduce funding to state universities. What’s happening at UVM will happen all over if we as a society continue to lose interest in funding our institutions.
Give me a break. Schools receive plenty of financial resources as it is. Any school struggling financially right now has clearly mismanaged finances for years and/or is lacking the value proposition one would expect from an institution promising students a brighter future in exchange for a hefty sum of money.
Anonymous wrote:If you are a Virginian, why would you choose UVM over UVA? UVM is ranked #48 in the public college category while UVA is #4. You would be paying much less if you attend UVA while also getting a higher quality elite education than the much much more expensive fees at UVM ($60,000!)
Anonymous wrote:I know 2 kids who are freshman there now and both love it. Great job with covid and they are having a good experience
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just announced they are cutting 20 majors. They’re not in good financial shape.
This. They are this very minute in the process of eliminating a whole slew of programs. If your DC is interested in languages or the humanities, it's time to look elsewhere, and even if those aren't their preferred subjects, they're likely to find a demoralized faculty and greatly reduced liberal arts education. Once those programs are gone, they're not coming back in any recognizable form, since they'll lose faculty and they won't be making tenure-track hires in those areas, and they won't have cohorts of kids in those fields. Before this, I wouldn't have hesitated to recommend VT, but not under these circumstances.
It's distressing. So much for a liberal arts education. It strikes me as extremely short sighted to cut humanities faculty and programs, including the Vermont Studies program at the flagship university. The university cut Classics, Religion (how do you understand politics without courses in religion?), Geology (in VT?!?), etc. Also, the administration seems to have cut these programs without faculty input. Sad all around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just announced they are cutting 20 majors. They’re not in good financial shape.
Large majority of states continue to reduce funding to state universities. What’s happening at UVM will happen all over if we as a society continue to lose interest in funding our institutions.
.Anonymous wrote:Any firsthand experience from parents or students? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They just announced they are cutting 20 majors. They’re not in good financial shape.
This. They are this very minute in the process of eliminating a whole slew of programs. If your DC is interested in languages or the humanities, it's time to look elsewhere, and even if those aren't their preferred subjects, they're likely to find a demoralized faculty and greatly reduced liberal arts education. Once those programs are gone, they're not coming back in any recognizable form, since they'll lose faculty and they won't be making tenure-track hires in those areas, and they won't have cohorts of kids in those fields. Before this, I wouldn't have hesitated to recommend VT, but not under these circumstances.
Anonymous wrote:They just announced they are cutting 20 majors. They’re not in good financial shape.