When officials at Sweet Briar College announced earlier this month that the Virginia women's’ school would close at the end of this year, the news drew the attention of countless national media outlets and panicked alumnae looking for ways to save the school.
After all, how often does a “rich girl’s school,” as one student described Sweet Briar in the New York Times, just suddenly shut down?
It’s pretty rare for a more than 100-year-old school with a national reputation for a beautiful campus, close-knit community and accessible professors to just up and close. In the 10 years leading up to 2013, five nonprofit colleges and universities closed a year on average, according to a study from higher education researchers at Vanderbilt University. But the trend is likely to accelerate in the coming years, as colleges cope with lower tuition revenue due in part to lackluster enrollment, student worries about employment prospects and being saddled with debt after graduation.
“We expect that there will be more college closures over the next three to four years,” Susan Fitzgerald, a senior vice president at Moody’s. “I don’t think it’s going to be a landslide of college closures, but we are coming through a very tough period of time.”
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Even the rich folks are feeling the pain of the Obamanation.
ReplyDeleteDo away with all colleges and return to the concept of working for a living.
ReplyDeletelook at the whole picture...only the wealthy will be able to afford to educate their children. People are much easier to control when they lack education. The death of a nation.
ReplyDelete