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re: SEC Enrollment Numbers
Posted on 4/28/15 at 12:06 am to MustangReb
Posted on 4/28/15 at 12:06 am to MustangReb
You want a break down? It looks like the actual Oxford campus shrank by 400 students last year:
LINK
Total enrollment - 23,096
Minus...
UMMC - 2,984
Tupelo - 905
Southaven - 923
Booneville - 89
Grenada - 110
That leaves Oxford enrollment as: 18,085
By comparison, the Fayetteville campus added 900 to its total over last year.
LINK
quote:
Enrollment for Fall 2014 is at an all-time high, with a total of 23,096 students -- an increase of 805 students or 3.6% over last fall.
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A record 2,984 students are enrolled at the UM Medical Center in Jackson, up by 250 students (9.1%) over last fall.
For this year’s freshmen class, the average ACT score is 24.3 and Overall High School GPA is 3.49—both of which are the highest in UM history.
Demand remains strong at UM's Regional Campuses:
Tupelo (905 students), Southaven (923 students), Booneville (89 students), and Grenada (110 students).
Total enrollment - 23,096
Minus...
UMMC - 2,984
Tupelo - 905
Southaven - 923
Booneville - 89
Grenada - 110
That leaves Oxford enrollment as: 18,085
By comparison, the Fayetteville campus added 900 to its total over last year.
This post was edited on 4/28/15 at 12:09 am
Posted on 4/28/15 at 6:58 am to EKG
No offense taken EKG and I appreciate the write up.
I think A&M is certainly better equipped than many other schools at accommodating that amount of students. In the end, it's these differences that we end up finding endearing about our different universities.
I do also think that education as we know it is going to transform dramatically in the coming decades. Student loans will become unsustainable as tuition soars and more and more students go to get a college degree (since it is pretty much a requirement for a good job) which in turn will water down the potency of that degree in securing a good job. The digital age will change things (not talking about the failed attempts of Everest etc). Spending 4 years going to college racking up debt is an old concept that many will look for a competitive alternative. Once that competitive alternative is there, affordable and accepted, enrollment in our traditional brick and mortar schools will begin to fall. There will be an education bubble that will burst and those that are trying to grow as fast as possible will be left with an overinflated infrastructure that they can no longer support.
Just my thoughts.
I think A&M is certainly better equipped than many other schools at accommodating that amount of students. In the end, it's these differences that we end up finding endearing about our different universities.
I do also think that education as we know it is going to transform dramatically in the coming decades. Student loans will become unsustainable as tuition soars and more and more students go to get a college degree (since it is pretty much a requirement for a good job) which in turn will water down the potency of that degree in securing a good job. The digital age will change things (not talking about the failed attempts of Everest etc). Spending 4 years going to college racking up debt is an old concept that many will look for a competitive alternative. Once that competitive alternative is there, affordable and accepted, enrollment in our traditional brick and mortar schools will begin to fall. There will be an education bubble that will burst and those that are trying to grow as fast as possible will be left with an overinflated infrastructure that they can no longer support.
Just my thoughts.
This post was edited on 4/28/15 at 7:01 am
Posted on 4/28/15 at 9:56 am to flyAU
A&M is a great school. Huge, but also a really good school.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 9:59 am to wmr
Yeah, University of Arkansas system is a whole other thing.
Here's a relatively accurate breakdown of the campuses.
LINK
The Fayetteville branch of the law school is included in Fayetteville campus numbers because it is actually on the Fayetteville campus. Everything else is independent, otherwise "University of Arkansas enrollment tops 50,000 students!"
12 campuses, including 5 of the community college "branch" type campuses.
Here's a relatively accurate breakdown of the campuses.
LINK
The Fayetteville branch of the law school is included in Fayetteville campus numbers because it is actually on the Fayetteville campus. Everything else is independent, otherwise "University of Arkansas enrollment tops 50,000 students!"
12 campuses, including 5 of the community college "branch" type campuses.
This post was edited on 4/28/15 at 10:02 am
Posted on 4/28/15 at 10:21 am to Numberwang
LSU has way too many satellite campuses. The system needs to shut down Alexandria and Eunice, plus give LSUS to Louisiana Tech. LSU already has its med school in New Orleans and is getting a brand new facility, and the only thing LSUS is good for is the med school.
Eunice is nothing more than a baseball pipeline
Eunice is nothing more than a baseball pipeline
Posted on 4/28/15 at 10:22 am to cave canem
Comparing farm land was not what I was referring to
Posted on 4/28/15 at 11:42 am to tigerbait2010
quote:Has the LA legislature budged on funding yet?
LSU has way too many satellite campuses. The system needs to shut down Alexandria and Eunice, plus give LSUS to Louisiana Tech. LSU already has its med school in New Orleans and is getting a brand new facility, and the only thing LSUS is good for is the med school. Eunice is nothing more than a baseball pipeline
Posted on 4/28/15 at 2:44 pm to lsupride87
quote:
I hate the approach Bama and Lsu has taken in the last 10 years
LSU''s total BR campus enrollment in the spring of 2000 was 30861. Whatever you think their approach is, the University has definitely not sold out just to keep their stats climbing.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:00 pm to RANDY44
quote:
RANDY44
SEC Enrollment Numbers by RANDY44
quote:
I hate the approach Bama and Lsu has taken in the last 10 years
LSU''s total BR campus enrollment in the spring of 2000 was 30861. Whatever you think their approach is, the University has definitely not sold out just to keep their stats climbing.
Now, if you add the enrollment from LSU Alexandria, LSU Eunice and LSU Shereveport, it is considerably more than 30,861.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:11 pm to RANDY44
quote:
I hate the approach Bama and Lsu has taken in the last 10 years
quote:Well, that's 410 students less than what y'all have now, so LSU has had no growth in 10 years.
LSU''s total BR campus enrollment in the spring of 2000 was 30861. Whatever you think their approach is, the University has definitely not sold out just to keep their stats climbing.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:12 pm to lsupride87
quote:
lsupride87
quote:Where is luspride87 getting his enrollment numbers?
Look at the enrollment numbers of both LSU and Bama in the last 10-15 years. We have both exploded numbers wise. We have taken the same approach
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:31 pm to tigerbait2010
quote:
-South Carolina, Tennessee, Mizzou, and Vandy fans normally don't give enough fricks to jump in on the thread
This is true.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:35 pm to GetCocky11
UT can't really get bigger. We are landlocked by the river and the city of Knoxville. Adding more students would be a mistake, we're at our carrying capacity, and were okay with it.
Go America!
Go America!
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:35 pm to RT1941
quote:So comparing main campus in one year to system from another year makes sense?
Where is luspride87 getting his enrollment numbers?
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:38 pm to lsupride87
We have grown by 3,000 students just in the last 3 years. He was comparing system enrollment in 2000 to main campus enrollment in 2015. A little intellectually dishonest dont you think?
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:39 pm to RT1941
quote:
Where is luspride87 getting his enrollment numbers?
The same place you got your sig from apparently.
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:42 pm to Korin
LSU took had huge growth until 2005, then steadied out, and now is on the path of growing again Im not sure why yall dont want to believe me
We are at 44k now as a system. I am ok with our main campus at 30, that is a sustainable number that we have held at for a few years. But 14k through the other campuses is ridiculous like the other poster said
We are at 44k now as a system. I am ok with our main campus at 30, that is a sustainable number that we have held at for a few years. But 14k through the other campuses is ridiculous like the other poster said
This post was edited on 4/28/15 at 3:44 pm
Posted on 4/28/15 at 3:48 pm to lsupride87
That brings up another point. Why is LSU not at 44k in the OP'S list? It looks like others schools are listed at their system enrollment
This post was edited on 4/28/15 at 3:49 pm
Posted on 4/28/15 at 4:05 pm to RT1941
quote:
Well, that's 410 students less than what y'all have now, so LSU has had no growth in 10 years.
Thanks for making my point.
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