Anonymous wrote:All it takes in college sports is one good coaching hire to begin a turn around. Has everyone forgotten about Indiana and Curt Cignetti already?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only person I know that went to Syracuse became a social worker with massive amounts of debt. In no way, shape or form was her degree worth it.
This isn't a Syracuse issue, this is a student issue.
Anonymous wrote:The only person I know that went to Syracuse became a social worker with massive amounts of debt. In no way, shape or form was her degree worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the significant drop in applications at Colgate, Middlebury, Bucknell. URochester, St, Lawrence, Kenyon, Oberlin, Hobart all struggle to fill enrollment targets. Moderate and Conservative kids/families don’t want that vibe at $100k for a meaningless degree from Northeast and Midwest Podunk locations. The facts are clear loads and loads of kids from high income families don’t need Syracuse and the others. Look at car decals on $100k luxury cars in most wealthy suburbs as long as the town is super lefty. Those folks aren’t going to Bama or Ole Miss.
Significant drop in applications? Bucknell had a high of 11,707 applications for the Class of 2026. I haven't seen numbers for the class of 2030 yet, but last year they had 11,561 applications. That's a decline of 1.2%. Hardly significant. Similarly, Middlebury had 11,831 applications for the class of 2029 and 11,458 for the class of 2030. That's a 3.2% decline year-over-year.
It isn't just the number of applications, it's the quality also. If a college's reputation is slipping, fewer higher achieving students apply. Those who used to look at the college as unobtainable now start applying. It's a vicious cycle and one that Syracuse seems to be caught up in. For the lower rated SLACs, they need to avoid that fate.
Anonymous wrote:It is sad to me that rather than just pointing out difficulties that Syracuse is facing as points of fact, some people seem to get tremendous pleasure in disclosing these and/or insulting Syracuse. Why be so childish and nasty? What did Syracuse do to you? Grow up. So sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at the significant drop in applications at Colgate, Middlebury, Bucknell. URochester, St, Lawrence, Kenyon, Oberlin, Hobart all struggle to fill enrollment targets. Moderate and Conservative kids/families don’t want that vibe at $100k for a meaningless degree from Northeast and Midwest Podunk locations. The facts are clear loads and loads of kids from high income families don’t need Syracuse and the others. Look at car decals on $100k luxury cars in most wealthy suburbs as long as the town is super lefty. Those folks aren’t going to Bama or Ole Miss.
Significant drop in applications? Bucknell had a high of 11,707 applications for the Class of 2026. I haven't seen numbers for the class of 2030 yet, but last year they had 11,561 applications. That's a decline of 1.2%. Hardly significant. Similarly, Middlebury had 11,831 applications for the class of 2029 and 11,458 for the class of 2030. That's a 3.2% decline year-over-year.
Anonymous wrote:Look at the significant drop in applications at Colgate, Middlebury, Bucknell. URochester, St, Lawrence, Kenyon, Oberlin, Hobart all struggle to fill enrollment targets. Moderate and Conservative kids/families don’t want that vibe at $100k for a meaningless degree from Northeast and Midwest Podunk locations. The facts are clear loads and loads of kids from high income families don’t need Syracuse and the others. Look at car decals on $100k luxury cars in most wealthy suburbs as long as the town is super lefty. Those folks aren’t going to Bama or Ole Miss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only person I know that went to Syracuse became a social worker with massive amounts of debt. In no way, shape or form was her degree worth it.
This isn't a Syracuse issue, this is a student issue.
Anonymous wrote:The only person I know that went to Syracuse became a social worker with massive amounts of debt. In no way, shape or form was her degree worth it.