Xavier’s Enrollment Challenges | Page 3 | The Boneyard
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Xavier’s Enrollment Challenges

It's not just the Big East Catholic schools that are having enrollment problems. There is a shrinking college-age population.

Especially in the Northeast & Midwest. This is why I think the B1G needs to add UNC or some other southern school(s). Need more proximity to both students and recruits.
 
Small, private, non-elite colleges are going to go extinct. It'll start at the bottom but work its way pretty high up that ladder I figure. In CT, I bet Mitchell and Albertus Magnus will close by 2035. Possibly U of Bridgeport as well
Yeah largely agree. Why would anyone go to a super-expensive mediocre private school when there's likely a more modest-ly priced, same-quality public school.
 
Applications to Xavier have surged over the past decade, up 60% (due to the common app), but the yield of accepted students has plummeted by about half. Oddly, SAT scores have gone up over time. Acceptance rates are in the high 80s, so they need to figure out how to improve their yield. Cincinnati, a direct competitor, has grown enrollment as they have increased their acceptance rate to the high 80%. And I would assume their addition to the Big 12 has increased their appeal to students.
Xavier gives automatic enrollment to all Cincinnati catholic school graduates now and they still are seeing a dip in attendance. They're in deep, deep trouble.
 
Xavier is suffering the same fate many 2nd and worse tier privates are going to face. They have priced themselves out of their market. Tuition is about 50k, just short of 70k if you live on campus. It offers a good education, but at those prices there are other options. And with the pending demographic cliff many medium and small privates will merge or vanish over the next two decades.

I do believe Xavier will figure it out, but others won't.
 
Xavier is suffering the same fate many 2nd and worse tier privates are going to face. They have priced themselves out of their market. Tuition is about 50k, just short of 70k if you live on campus. It offers a good education, but at those prices there are other options. And with the pending demographic cliff many medium and small privates will merge or vanish over the next two decades.

I do believe Xavier will figure it out, but others won't.
Just a quick note for those that haven't gone through the college application / decision process recently. We're mixing arguments in this thread. Many are saying that private schools will fail because they are too expensive, but also acknowledging how many northern kids are going to southern public schools instead.

Private schools need to make themselves competitive with out of state public school costs and attraction. Xavier isn't far off on cost, but I don't know if Xavier is attractive as a school for kids not from OH. For comparison, here is Xavier vs. a couple options.
  • Xavier tuition, fees, housing, meal plan: $67,256.
  • UConn is $58,780.
  • Clemson is $57,600.
  • Alabama $50,458 (and that's not for the awesome greek houses or dorms)
  • Georgia is $44,420 (bargain)
  • Michigan is $80,208 (and $5k more for juniors and seniors).
EDIT: Also adding that private schools are generally more generous with merit and financial aid (other than Alabama that is throwing money at high achievers to improve their student body). I'd be surprised if the actual cost of attendance at Xavier for a strong candidate isn't the same or less than the out of state public schools.
 
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I'll play devil's advocate for a moment. Yes, many small schools may not survive. I think we are underestimating the number of kids who want to go to a small school, who want to play sports at the DIII level, and who come from families who like the "prestige" of going to a small private school. I know many kids are not getting into UConn these days and that is just one reason they are looking south, among others of course.
 
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Just a quick note for those that haven't gone through the college application / decision process recently. We're mixing arguments in this thread. Many are saying that private schools will fail because they are too expensive, but also acknowledging how many northern kids are going to southern public schools instead.

Private schools need to make themselves competitive with out of state public school costs and attraction. Xavier isn't far off on cost, but I don't know if Xavier is attractive as a school for kids not from OH. For comparison, here is Xavier vs. a couple options.
  • Xavier tuition, fees, housing, meal plan: $67,256.
  • UConn is $58,780.
  • Clemson is $57,600.
  • Alabama $50,458 (and that's not for the awesome greek houses or dorms)
  • Georgia is $44,420 (bargain)
  • Michigan is $80,208 (and $5k more for juniors and seniors).
EDIT: Also adding that private schools are generally more generous with merit and financial aid (other than Alabama that is throwing money at high achievers to improve their student body). I'd be surprised if the actual cost of attendance at Xavier for a strong candidate isn't the same or less than the out of state public schools.
I randomly picked a private school in CT and here's what I came up with ...

University of New Haven: 76th in US News (Regional Universities North), Tuition: 50k
Southern CT: 64th in same category, Tuition: 13k (27k out of state)
Eastern: 66th, 14k (18k)
FitchburgSt (MA): 72nd, 12k (18k)
Central: 76th, 13k (17k)

How is this sustainable for UNH?

Yes I know I'm looking at sticker price and not the actual price being paid. The former is easier to find quickly online.
 
I randomly picked a private school in CT and here's what I came up with ...

University of New Haven: 76th in US News (Regional Universities North), Tuition: 50k
Southern CT: 64th in same category, Tuition: 13k (27k out of state)
Eastern: 66th, 14k (18k)
FitchburgSt (MA): 72nd, 12k (18k)
Central: 76th, 13k (17k)

How is this sustainable for UNH?

Yes I know I'm looking at sticker price and not the actual price being paid. The former is easier to find quickly online.
I don't think we're really disagreeing. I don't think schools like UNH can compete directly with a directional state school like Southern or Eastern CT. I'm assuming that the latter are just as good (probably better) than UNH academically and I doubt UNH offers anything extra as far as student life or opportunities. I think schools like UNH are in trouble.

I'm looking more at a school like Fairfield University. I don't know much about Fairfield other than a lot of kids from our town go there. I wouldn't call it "elite." About $79k before any aid. Ranked 139th in National Universities. If a kid from NJ has no interest in a NJ state school, then he's comparing Fairfield vs out of state universities (like UConn) and the $20k per year difference may get shrunk by aid and it's a totally different academic/life experience.

There are plenty of people that have plenty of money. Their kid won't want to go to UNH or Eastern CT. They'll go out of state and that's who the private schools need to compete for.

DISCLOSURE: I have two kids in non-elite (I use the term "elite" sparingly) private colleges so I'm biased. I'm acknowledge I'm overpaying.
 
I'll play devil's advocate for a moment. Yes, many small schools may not survive. I think we are underestimating the number of kids who want to go to a small school, who want to play sports at the DIII level, and who come from families who like the "prestige" of going to a small private school. I know many kids are not getting into UConn these days and that is just one reason they are looking south, among others of course.

Lol. That is largely what this discussion is based on. Those kids don't exist in large enough numbers any more.
 

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