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re: SEC enrollment
Posted on 3/28/17 at 2:59 pm to lsupride87
Posted on 3/28/17 at 2:59 pm to lsupride87
quote:
Just doesnt seem big enough to ever truly be considered a town that can retain college graduates in numbers that are material..
That's one of the great things about living here. Fayetteville seems like a "small college town". The metro area is over 525,000 per census estimates which were discussed ad nauseum on this board last week.
The Fayetteville metro is growing faster than Nashville metro on a percentage basis.
Posted on 3/28/17 at 5:37 pm to MaroonNation
I know it doesn't make sense. Ole miss always reminded me of southeastern la university in the sec. It's a puny little place.
Posted on 3/28/17 at 6:08 pm to TarHeel408
quote:
Does this include grad student?
I'm guessing it does, since I seriously doubt we have 11k-plus undergraduate enrollment. We're a pretty small school.
Posted on 3/28/17 at 11:14 pm to wmr
quote:
SEC enrollment
quote:
Galveston, Qatar, Israel, & Law School are all branches.
I don't know why colleges do this when talking about enrollment.
Arkansas has a medical school in Little Rock and a second Law school branch down there. The med school kids can get student tickets to football games (or they could when I was in school) but they aren't included in "University of Arkansas" enrollment.
Your main campus is your enrollment. When you start listing other campuses elsewhere in your official enrollment, it's because you're trying to seem larger than you really are.
We even have a small satellite branch of the med school in Fayetteville with <300 students right now but it isn't included in the official enrollment figures.
A&M Galveston, Qatar, and Israel are different than the other schools in the system. In each of those schools, students transfer back and forth without penalty. The Qatar and Israel deals are recruiting tools. So you can do your first two years at home as an international student and your last two in Texas, or students from the main campus can go overseas for 1 or 2 years. TAMU Galveston is different because it was part of A&M before A&M was made a system. The law school is a new acquisition, so I don't know its status.
I agree the numbers on the main campus should be the only one used in these types of things. A&M throws in the others, because that is how the campuses are managed financially. Whereas the rest of the system schools are managed financially and operationally similar to the University of Texas system. The entire system has roughly 150k students while the Texas system has over 200k students. Texas has done a better job with their system schools, particularly over the last 20-25 years.
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