Anonymous wrote:Emerson is doing fine.
Anonymous wrote:Small Catholic colleges in states with declining Catholic population and a lot of higher ed choices, like Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, etc. Schools like Anna Maria, LaSalle, Immaculata. These are places that had a mission of educating working class commuter students but over time raised tuition and started chasing middle class kids with “merit” money instead, and started running massive deficits.
Anonymous wrote:University of Chicago. Duh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Allegheny College
Earlham College
Beloit College
Cornell College
Lake Forest College
Juniata College
Wittenberg University
Bethany College
I didn’t know Beloit was struggling so much. Only 100 students in the next class.
Where did you get Juniata? I’m curious because DC seriously considered it. It’s a great little school. I didn’t see any red flags.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
Agree. Oxy was $30 million in debt to Covid and has never recovered. Last year’s freshman enrollment dropped by a shocking 15%, for some reason, and couldn’t even be saved by waitlist candidates. https://www.theoccidentalnews.com/news/2025/11/05/college-adjusts-spending-and-admissions-tactics-in-the-wake-of-enrollment-decline/2916071. That may be because it’s selectivity is already high at 45%, has a shockingly low yield at 4% (College Vine) and less than 15% of alums donate. The school reacted by curtailing faculty spending, stop faculty hiring of replacements and brought in an admissions specialist who decided the best way to deal with the yield problem was to offer “Occidental commitment scholarships” if $15k to those ED students who accepted. But that costs money that the school doesn’t have. It’s also now reaching into the endowment (with board’s permission) to make up the 15% loss in full pay students. So when a school says they give a lot of merit, beware. Oxy’s doing it to drive up its yield numbers (and its $96k a year to boot!). Avoid.
I’m surprised by their decline in student population (15% is a lot!), but it doesn’t look like they’ve run any deficits via their 990.
https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/951667177
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Occidental
Agree. Oxy was $30 million in debt to Covid and has never recovered. Last year’s freshman enrollment dropped by a shocking 15%, for some reason, and couldn’t even be saved by waitlist candidates. https://www.theoccidentalnews.com/news/2025/11/05/college-adjusts-spending-and-admissions-tactics-in-the-wake-of-enrollment-decline/2916071. That may be because it’s selectivity is already high at 45%, has a shockingly low yield at 4% (College Vine) and less than 15% of alums donate. The school reacted by curtailing faculty spending, stop faculty hiring of replacements and brought in an admissions specialist who decided the best way to deal with the yield problem was to offer “Occidental commitment scholarships” if $15k to those ED students who accepted. But that costs money that the school doesn’t have. It’s also now reaching into the endowment (with board’s permission) to make up the 15% loss in full pay students. So when a school says they give a lot of merit, beware. Oxy’s doing it to drive up its yield numbers (and its $96k a year to boot!). Avoid.
Anonymous wrote:Occidental