Yup. And why in tarnation to we need to spend half a billion on a football stadium? We can just all watch the games online, it's pretty much the same thing, right?
quote:The stadium is paid for by the season ticket holders. Those people see value in watching the game live. There are more than 20 times as many people who watch the game online/tv (not in person) as the number of people who watch the game live. So there are a lot more people who see value in not watching it live than watching it live. Probably averages close to 97% to 3%. Thanks for making my point about the marketplace.
Yup. And why in tarnation to we need to spend half a billion on a football stadium? We can just all watch the games online, it's pretty much the same thing, right?
quote:You know, we had these things called "books" that gave you that ability long before the internet.quote:Online classes will become more prevalent in future education. I'm in real estate and business brokerage and I'm seeing a lot more of our education offered online. This is a very cost effective way to learn for a lot of people, including me. Online education will allow the world's best educators the opportunity to educate more students then they can face-to-face. It will allow students access to the world's best educators instead of being stuck with poor professors.
Are more online classes the way to develop that close-knit network?
quote:Cecil lives in a universe where markets don't make sense and guvgoodhair and his boys are actively trying to destroy it all with their crony-ness (It's fun watching Cece and his pals play-pretend to be chancellor like Kramer and Newman play risk on the subway)quote:The stadium is paid for by the season ticket holders. Those people see value in watching the game live. There are more than 20 times as many people who watch the game online/tv (not in person) as the number of people who watch the game live. So there are a lot more people who see value in not watching it live than watching it live. Probably averages close to 97% to 3%. Thanks for making my point about the marketplace.
Yup. And why in tarnation to we need to spend half a billion on a football stadium? We can just all watch the games online, it's pretty much the same thing, right?
quote:Sid this is a good discussion that doesn't need posts like that. There's not need to insult posters with whom you disagree. Jeff and I have had a running debate on this, and I don't know that either of us has insulted the other with scatological insults. And I'm assuming some things about your age based upon your posting style, but I've been a free market libertarian since before you were born, so I'm pretty sure I understand and appreciate markets.
Cecil lives in a universe where markets don't make sense and guvgoodhair and his boys are actively trying to destroy it all with their crony-ness (It's fun watching Cece and his pals play-pretend to be chancellor like Kramer and Newman play risk on the subway)
Now pls show Cece some courtesy and quit spoiling his jack-off thread with your facts.
quote:Dont think anyone has that answer. I see that answer being determined by the marketplace over the next 50 years. But I do believe that online classes/video conferencing will revolutionize education in a manner that the car revolutionized transportation over 100 years ago.
The discussion is what is the optimum number, which courses, and under what circumstances
quote:
We need to be more concerned with academics than population.
A higher academic university is much more attractive to potential students than a larger university. Much more.
quote:quote:
We need to be more concerned with academics than population.
A higher academic university is much more attractive to potential students than a larger university. Much more.
Agreed - and so I am concerned about our ability to get those very best and brightest to enroll here.
It is one thing for them to get accepted - but when it comes time for them to for them to commit, has our size created a situation where our resources are spread so thin (scholarships, services, etc.) that they wind up going elsewhere for the more attractive packages/offers?
quote:
All I could find were the 2013-2014 numbers online for number of Merit Scholars enrolled:
Stanford 188
Yale University 180
Texas A&M University 162
Princeton 151
MIT 142
UT Dallas 104
Baylor University 88
University of Texas at Austin 65
Rice 51
quote:http://www.ou.edu/content/admissions/nationalmerit.html
OU is home to over 750 currently enrolled National Merit Scholars.
quote:
Throughout the major U.S. tech hubs, whether Silicon Valley or Seattle, Boston or Austin, Tex., software companies are discovering that liberal arts thinking makes them stronger.
quote:
University of Texas, AustinStudent Population: 52,059 Undergraduate Population: 39,979 Student to Faculty Ratio: 18 Total Annual Cost: $51,352 In-State Tuition: $9,830 Out-of-State Tuition: $34,836 Percent on Financial Aid: 63% Average Grant Aid Received (FT/First-Time): $6,144 Percent Admitted: 40% SAT Composite Range: 1140-1380 ACT Composite Range: 25-31
Texas A&M University, College StationStudent Population: 55,697 Undergraduate Population: 44,072 Student to Faculty Ratio: 23 Total Annual Cost: $39,873 In-State Tuition: $9,685 Out-of-State Tuition: $26,583 Percent on Financial Aid: 79% Average Grant Aid Received (FT/First-Time): $5,917 Percent Admittede: 69% SAT Composite Rangef: 1070-1290 ACT Composite Rangef: 23-29
quote:Closest I can get quickly is another DARS link. See page 31 of the Fall 2014 data which breaks down students by SAT percentiles.
Can anyone provide a factual number of how many students we lose if we raised our SAT minimum from 1070 to 1140 (where tu's is apparently)?? I'm wondering how much of the problem this will fix?
quote:quote:Closest I can get quickly is another DARS link. See page 31 of the Fall 2014 data which breaks down students by SAT percentiles.
Can anyone provide a factual number of how many students we lose if we raised our SAT minimum from 1070 to 1140 (where tu's is apparently)?? I'm wondering how much of the problem this will fix?
SAT 1145 is the mean for the 40th percentile. So it looks to me like excluding students at or below 1140 that would lose about 2500/6748 first time in college students. I can't find the data to show whether or not 1140 is really a minimum at Texas.
quote:quote:Closest I can get quickly is another DARS link. See page 31 of the Fall 2014 data which breaks down students by SAT percentiles.
Can anyone provide a factual number of how many students we lose if we raised our SAT minimum from 1070 to 1140 (where tu's is apparently)?? I'm wondering how much of the problem this will fix?
SAT 1145 is the mean for the 40th percentile. So it looks to me like excluding students at or below 1140 that would lose about 2500/6748 first time in college students. I can't find the data to show whether or not 1140 is really a minimum at Texas.
quote:I've heard that the key to getting into ENGR is to accept and declare as early as possible, not necessarily having better qualifications. They basically fill up and then stop taking kids. It may be that the top 10%ers who don't have the other credentials are more likely to decide early, while other students are waiting to hear back from other schools. But I've been told that if you even think it's a possibility that you want to be an ENGR student at TAMU, you should tell us you're coming and grab a slot even if you end up going to another school.
I know of kids rejected by A&M who had scores above 1250. I know of one kid who had above 1300 and didn't make in to Engineering since he was outside the top 25% of his very comoetitive high school. The reason given is there weren't enough open slots after the top 10% were admitted.
The university has to accept the top 10%, but they aren't required to admit them to engineering and business colleges. There should be minimum SAT requirements for each college with the Liberal Arts college taking all the top 10% who don't make the cut. This is what tu does and it works.