Soaring student debt, competition from online programs and poor job prospects for graduates are shrinking the applicant pools for many universities and, as Bloomberg reports, the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities warns "there will clearly be some institutions that won’t make it...through these difficult steps." Rather stunningly, Moody’s found that expenses are outpacing revenue at 60 percent of the schools it tracks even as many try to slash their way to balanced budgets," and concluded "what we’re concerned about is the death spiral... this continuing downward momentum for some institutions." As Harvard professor Clayton Christensen has warned, as many as half of the more than 4,000 universities and colleges in the U.S. may fail in the next 15 years, and is "not sure a lot of these institutions have the cushion to experiment with how to stay afloat."
As Bloomberg reports,
Dowling College (on Long Island), which got a failing grade for its financial resources from accreditors last month, epitomizes the growing plight of many small private colleges that depend almost entirely on tuition for revenue. It’s been five years since the recession ended and yet their finances are worsening. Soaring student debt, competition from online programs and poor job prospects for graduates are shrinking their applicant pools.
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There is an English professor at UMES that told her English 101 class that she cannot wait till people of color rise up and slaughter whites, and that her only hope is that she is alive to see it. And people wonder why colleges are in trouble.
ReplyDeleteI see three parts to this problem...
ReplyDeleteThe colleges are getting a too-big-to-fail mentality and are charging more to exorbitantly grow their infrastructure.
As 11:11 points out above in their perfect example of why not everyone should go to college...rabble-rousing students that shouldn't even be there...especially by the faculty (that shouldn't be there either based on her attitude).
Even when they graduate - the pickings for job opportunities are pretty slim...even worse if you get a liberal-arts type degree.
The comment from UMES while disappointing, is not surprising!