Hold on there, junior.
Yes, Houston's graduation rate needs improvement. But it's not 18% either.
USNWR uses the 6-year graduation rate. 51% of the 2009 class graduated in 6 years. See the 2015-16 Common Data Set.
The graduation rate is climbing. By 2021, the 6-year graduation rate is projected to be 65%. See this slide from last fall's presidential address.
Finally, UH introduced UHin4 in 2014. Kids who sign up and stay on track to graduate in 4 years have their tuition frozen at the freshman level.
70% of this year's freshmen signed up.
We're getting our house in order.
@CougarRed Let me begin by saying that I'll try to use small words, so you can understand what I'm saying.
The very fact that you come to a UConn message board to post whatever vapid thought entered your head means that you've already lost the conference realignment argument. I would NEVER go to a UH message board to post. Why? Because your school is irrelevant. You're irrelevant academically, and you're irrelevant athletically.
Your fans seem to get jacked up winning a CONFERENCE championship (once). We get jacked up winning NATIONAL championships (plural).
You're proud of your six year graduation rate? First of all, a six year graduation rate is meaningless. Second, your six year graduation rate is a joke.
UH grads are what UConn grads hire to clean the bathrooms at the office. That's assuming the UH grad could pass a background check, which we both know is a 50-50 proposition at best.
You've sold out your student allotment of football tickets (5,000) exactly TWICE in the last 2 years. That's despite having 40,000+ students, with 8000+ beds on your campus.
Last year, during your most successful football season in program history, your coach publicly reprimanded students, alumni, and the city at large for not supporting the program. Not exactly a strong statement if you can't even draw during what was, at the time, an undefeated season.
Finally, let's not forget who hung that one loss on you guys last season. UConn - a supposed "joke" of a football program.