Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 12:31     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I read the article and Birmingham Southern is the only one that surprised me. Many of these were tiny women’s colleges - so they never had any endowment to speak of - that went coed in the 70s to survive.


I don’t see how the size of the women who attend a particular college is relevant.


Surely you can’t be serious…

It was obviously a joke...and don't call me "Shirley".
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 12:19     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.


Can you elaborate?

Most schools that are labelled as "conservative" are this way if they aren't bible-thumping colleges bought by Prager U : Claremont Mckenna, W&L, Hampden Sydney for example all have the conservative "bro" vibe, but still have admin who care about diverse student bodies and have quality education. Trump institutes are like Liberty University and Hillsdale College.
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 12:14     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.


Can you elaborate?


Their motto is the Premier Life Skills Univeristy. But their second motto is that they are a God, Family, Country school. No overt political stuff at all. But that is the backdrop. Big program for Veteran's Day. President of the college is an immigrant -- came as a college student to the US speaking almost no English and made it. That first gen proud of America vibe. Optimistic view.
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 12:07     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.


How do they make good on their pitch that you will have a job?


Bias -- DC there. Relentless focus on graduating in four years and building your resume with internships, other experiences and polishing you on resume and interview skills. Last year the job and/or graduate school rate was 99% after graduation. HYP would be alarmed but HPU views everything you do as part of getting a job after college. Even if you are in the school of education to be a teacher -- sales is part of what they teach and practice. They focus on what employers say is lacking in today's new hires -- low trainability, adaptability, can't work in a team, can't write for work, can't solve problems and they make that a focus in all classes.
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 12:05     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.


Can you elaborate?
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 11:47     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I read the article and Birmingham Southern is the only one that surprised me. Many of these were tiny women’s colleges - so they never had any endowment to speak of - that went coed in the 70s to survive.


I don’t see how the size of the women who attend a particular college is relevant.


Surely you can’t be serious…


Reading is fundamental!
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 11:45     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I read the article and Birmingham Southern is the only one that surprised me. Many of these were tiny women’s colleges - so they never had any endowment to speak of - that went coed in the 70s to survive.


I don’t see how the size of the women who attend a particular college is relevant.


Surely you can’t be serious…
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 11:38     Subject: Re:WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:Would anyone know of small colleges in VA that might be showing signs of being in danger of closing down?


Lynchburg had recent layoffs

Sweet Briar just barely survived a few years ago

I would hate to see these schools close. My daughter was accepted to Randolph and really liked it there. She chose a different LAC with just over 1k students, only because the other school had both programs she wanted as possible majors. But Randolph is a very special little school for a great price.
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 11:08     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.


How do they make good on their pitch that you will have a job?
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 10:53     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High Point Acceptance rate was 50% this year. There pitch is not just nice stuff here but also come here and you will have a job when you come out. They are taking market share. I see them on the good side of this realignment. Also they are conservative in a Reagan not maga way and are pulling a lot of people. Only 20% come from NC. They are pulling out of North East and MidWest.
Anonymous
Post 06/23/2024 10:16     Subject: Re:WashPost: one US college closing per week

Would anyone know of small colleges in VA that might be showing signs of being in danger of closing down?
Anonymous
Post 06/22/2024 15:24     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The colleges that will be in trouble:

For-profit colleges everywhere. Their scams have been exposed and their students often can't get aid. Good riddance.

Very small privates with small endowments that, as others have said, started out as: obscure women's colleges, junior colleges, or religiously affiliated with smaller and shrinking denominations that can no longer financially support them.

Larger privates with small endowments that grew recently, and especially those that are in shrinking parts of the US. High Point and Libertv are easy ones to see shrinking. I don't want to pick a fight with Northeastern boosters, but it's hard to see big enrollments continuing there when BU NEU, and maybe BC are all fishing in the same shrinking pool.

Non-flagship state colleges in dying parts of the country will shrink. They have almost no endowments and state legislatures will eventually push for shrinking and consolidating. This process is already underway in PA, with a few of its former teachers colleges (which all greatly expanded over the past 30 or 40 years) being slated to consolidate.

State flagships in declining states will shrink enrollment. They won't disappear, but enrollments will shrink at places like WVU, UMass, UNH, and Minnesota.




Agree with part but not the rest. High Point is growing not shrinking. You will see a larger and larger enrollment there. They are taking from the pool that you correctly say is in trouble. No idea on Liberty.

On Boston -- BC does not fish in the same water as BU never mind NEU. BC overlap are Ivy's, UVA, ND, and the like. If anything NEU is the safety for BC. I don't see NEU in trouble. They have a model and will take from the places below them.

I also do not see those state school you listed in any trouble or cutting back at all. They will all take from the failing pool of places that you listed. UMAss in particular. They will fill seats at the flagship from the non-flagships. Those will take seats from the failing ones.



I have to think that a place like High Point will be in trouble. It's grown like crazy by offering high end amenities to attract full-pay kids who can't get into places like Tulane or Wake Forest. When we go over the demographic cliff, Tulane and Wake Forest will say yes to those less than stellar, but full-pay, students. And if they need a little merit to be more attractive, they've got endowments to get them through the challenge. High Point is already accepting almost 80%. But even if they take everyone, they'll be left with a more needy group of students, and it will be hard to keep up the amenities. And once the amenities and the general sense of affluence are gone, then the magic is gone. And High Point will be in trouble.


High point was never known for academics. Wake and Tulane are known for decent academics. A lot of small liberal arts colleges in New York and PA will also be in trouble. Schools like Urisnus or Union are on shaky ground as is. With more kids choosing state schools, these schools will not have as many customers. A kid 20 years ago from the Northeast who would have gone to Union or WPI for engineering can get merit at Aubuurn or Purdue.



Why don't you do a little research instead of making up crap and typing it up?

Forbes give financial rankings of A+ to Union, A- to WPI, and B+ to Ursinus. Seems like they can all weather the storm.
But the one you defend, High Point, gets a C.



High Point seems like a house of cards that will eventually collapse.

\

With an endowment of 173+ million? Hardly.


For a school with that many students, High Point's endowment is next to nothing. It should be at least five times that size, preferably ten times that size.

I don't see your point. $173mil is pretty comfortable in a school that is as small as high point (4000 students, it's the size of a big high school). It also is operated in middle of nowhere North Carolina, which is a pretty cheap place. They're fine and will survive for middling Southern students who need an easy business education.
Anonymous
Post 06/22/2024 15:20     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Due to my job, I'm aware of at least 200 hundred colleges in the US, and not one of these colleges rang a bell.

You don't need to focus on T25 to avoid this. Probably most of the T125 are safe financially from this kind of chaos. Just research the specific school's financials before you apply.

Anonymous
Post 06/22/2024 15:05     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I read the article and Birmingham Southern is the only one that surprised me. Many of these were tiny women’s colleges - so they never had any endowment to speak of - that went coed in the 70s to survive.


I don’t see how the size of the women who attend a particular college is relevant.

You have to be kidding.
Anonymous
Post 06/22/2024 14:47     Subject: WashPost: one US college closing per week

Anonymous wrote:I read the article and Birmingham Southern is the only one that surprised me. Many of these were tiny women’s colleges - so they never had any endowment to speak of - that went coed in the 70s to survive.


I don’t see how the size of the women who attend a particular college is relevant.