Telling off the Dean would just be icing on the cake.
Did you see Above the Law yesterday?
And cutting that much from a library budget really hits the school's ability to serve the students, so it's a short-sighted thing to do.
We've been working really hard to make sure we're still giving them good service. My staff is fabulous.
Did you see Above the Law yesterday?
No. What did I miss?
-t, I really wish I understood what you just posted.
What did I miss?
Someone sent them an email from the Dean.
For undergrad institutions, the population of college-aged kids is down after a long Gen Y boom, and it seems like the ridiculous prices of private colleges are finally affecting enrollment, except at the really top schools. I know I will be thinking seriously at in-state tuition unless my kids get into a really stellar private college, and I come from a private-college family,
RIFs suck. I'm sorry.
I found out today that a job for which I interviewed in MI will not be mine. I'm getting a lot of "your skill set is fabulous and you interview really well," from people who don't end up hiring me. Howsabout "Yeah, you're ok; can you start in two weeks?"
Cereal.
it seems like the ridiculous prices of private colleges are finally affecting enrollment, except at the really top schools
And it's not just the private colleges, either. Students at my state university alma mater today pay more for books than my family paid for tuition, fees, and housing when I went. Among other things, state contributions to the university have declined precipitously.
Someone sent them an email from the Dean.
Pardon my phrasing, but fuck that shit. I have noticed things becoming more conservative there over the past few years. I completely agree with that alumnus. I had no issue with Prof. Destro while I was there, but then again I wasn't aware of how dogmatic he could be. For crying out loud, Fr. O'Brien taught me family law, which includes divorce and children out of wedlock issues. And there was never a problem. I'm sorry to see the place take a much harder line than previously. It just reaffirms my decision to donate my money elsewhere.
I agree, but $25,000 + books (to use the example of Ohio State, which is pricey as in-state flagships go) is still a lot less than $54,000 + books (College of Wooster, which is a nice Ohio SLAC that some friends attended). At the very top schools, our (very healthy) income is still low enough that we'd get need-based aid, but a lot of private colleges don't have the deep pockets that the Ivies do.
My grandmother, Radcliffe 1933, paid $300 a year (actually she was a scholarship girl). My aunt, Radcliffe 1961, $600. If I'd gone to Harvard, 1994, $20,000. Now, class of 2015, $60,000.
I'm pretty sure my father literally paid for the University of Chicago with his summer job, and I know that was at least theoretically possible at that point.
In kind of random news, I saw a story that Sweetbriar is closing because enrollment is too low to support the school.