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BlueWaveNeverEnd

(10,198 posts)
Fri Mar 31, 2023, 07:23 PM Mar 2023

Plunging enrollment, financial woes, trustee exodus. Whittier College confronts crisis

The grounds of Whittier College are lush and the buildings stately. But the once-bustling quad is often all but empty these days, students say, and inside the Wanberg Hall dormitory, carpets smell musty, the WiFi is spotty, and 25 students share two restrooms with toilets that frequently break down and take ages to fix.

The eerie quiet outside and fetid bathrooms inside are signs of the turmoil roiling one of California’s oldest liberal arts colleges, President Nixon’s alma mater and a higher education institution rooted in its Quaker heritage of social justice and respect for diversity.

Since 2018, enrollment has plummeted by about 35%, from 1,853 students to about 1,200, according to college figures. Annual revenue has plunged by 29% over roughly the same period, audited financial statements show.

Partly to save money, Whittier cut football and three other sports programs last year, and the college has said it plans to sell the president’s residence, Wardman House, a hilltop mansion with views to the ocean.


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More than 850 colleges have closed since 2004, according to the education news source Hechinger Report. Last year, Marymount California University, a Roman Catholic liberal arts college in Rancho Palos Verdes, closed, and Mills College, a women’s school in Oakland, merged with Northeastern University to avoid closing altogether. Holy Names University in Oakland will close at the end of the spring semester, unable to recover from the double hit of pandemic challenges and the economic downturn.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-03-30/whittier-college-hit-with-low-enrollment-financial-woes

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Plunging enrollment, financial woes, trustee exodus. Whittier College confronts crisis (Original Post) BlueWaveNeverEnd Mar 2023 OP
Not shocking since there is a decline in the number of students graduating from high school. TexasTowelie Mar 2023 #1
it's difficult to start up a STEM program from scratch.. expensive, special equipment. BlueWaveNeverEnd Apr 2023 #3
Hubby's Alma mater Antioch Colle in Yellow Springs, Ohio hangs by a thread SleeplessinSoCal Mar 2023 #2

TexasTowelie

(116,771 posts)
1. Not shocking since there is a decline in the number of students graduating from high school.
Fri Mar 31, 2023, 07:35 PM
Mar 2023

Liberal arts universities tend to orient themselves to the traditional college-aged students from 17-22. There aren't many students who are older that pursue liberal arts education. I graduated from a liberal arts university, but even I noted that the last significant fundraising campaign was for the STEM building--what's odd is that three years after renovation and new construction there are things already breaking in the building.

BlueWaveNeverEnd

(10,198 posts)
3. it's difficult to start up a STEM program from scratch.. expensive, special equipment.
Sat Apr 1, 2023, 10:43 PM
Apr 2023

I hope Whittier College survives. Liberal arts education is needed too

SleeplessinSoCal

(9,669 posts)
2. Hubby's Alma mater Antioch Colle in Yellow Springs, Ohio hangs by a thread
Fri Mar 31, 2023, 08:01 PM
Mar 2023

For a very long time.

Found this article about dual enrollment:

"High-school students taking college courses for credit helped to fuel an increase in community-college enrollment this spring — and brought attention to the outsize role dual-enrollment students have played in the health of the higher-ed sector that’s been most beleaguered by the pandemic...."


https://www.chronicle.com/article/enrollment-at-community-colleges-is-stabilizing-the-growing-presence-of-high-school-students-is-why

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