Thanks Sharp.
Talk about cherry picking a favorable stat.Quote:
At A&M in 2015, a student would have had to score higher than a 25 on the ACT to rank in the top 75 percent of incoming freshmen. That's slightly up from 2010.
Not necessarilly a diploma mill, but they are letting kids in that do not have the skills to make it at the university level. They are happy to take their money until they quit or flunk out. I have friends that have kids at A&M now that would not have been admitted when I attended.MaysGrad09 said:Quote:My kids are going to Texas.Quote:
UT is capping at 50K and trying to reduce back to 45K.
Mine too. **** Sharp and the regents for turning A&M into a diploma mill.
Quote:
Texas A&M University's fall enrollment is 71,109 a 1,644 student, or 2.4%, increase from last year's total of 69,465 students.
According to the university, the enrollment numbers are due in part to planned growth in areas including a 20% increase in transfer students, which saw a record number of 3,458 people.
just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be a aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if your the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy collage. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
oldfart79 said:
you had a chance you could have gone to texas
wangus12 said:
What's crazy is I know some really good kids with good grades and extra-curriculars that didn't get in. Who the hell are they letting in at this point
FIFYoldfart79 said:just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be an aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if you're the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy college. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
wangus12 said:
What's crazy is I know some really good kids with good grades and extra-curriculars that didn't get in. Who the hell are they letting in at this point
oldfart79 said:just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be a aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if your the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy collage. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
winorgetadog said:oldfart79 said:just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be a aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if your the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy collage. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
Wrong. First of all, it's a university. An academic center, and a place where I take pride in graduating with my engineering degree from. He's right in saying all this forced growth waters down the value of a degree. It's OK and not 'elitist' to want to uphold our academic reputation. Did you graduate from A&M? Your anti-intellectual bs is unnecessary and odd to me. This shouldn't be an argument.
Also your grammar sucks.
Pot meet kettle.ABB02 said:winorgetadog said:oldfart79 said:just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be a aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if your the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy collage. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
Wrong. First of all, it's a university. An academic center, and a place where I take pride in graduating with my engineering degree from. He's right in saying all this forced growth waters down the value of a degree. It's OK and not 'elitist' to want to uphold our academic reputation. Did you graduate from A&M? Your anti-intellectual bs is unnecessary and odd to me. This shouldn't be an argument.
Also your grammar sucks.
Before you turn into the grammar police you might want to ensure that you aren't ending your sentences with prepositions.
MaysGrad09 said:Quote:My kids are going to Texas.Quote:
UT is capping at 50K and trying to reduce back to 45K.
Mine too. **** Sharp and the regents for turning A&M into a diploma mill.
Kozmozag said:
It's much easier to get in now, write a bleeding heart essay, and proclaim your activism and you are in. They may ask you to go to blinn, but anyone can get in a&m. Sharp is exactly who we think he is. He is the aggie joke.
Yes. Think it was 33k or so this year.standfast said:
Football related question. Do they cap the number of sport passes for students? Surely with 100k+ capacity at some point they will have to cap the student section thus leaving kids that WANT to go to games unable. Does anyone know how they handle things like this? Seniority? Students only getting a certain number of homes passes a year? TIA
oldfart79 said:just a note to you sir, everybody that wants to be a aggie should have a chance to be one, as long as he can pass in the class room and pay for it. easy to get in to am but hard to finish. if your the type that has problem with someone getting in to a school then head to rice or to some ivy collage. you elitist snobTXAggie2011 said:Growing the student body faster than we canQuote:
More students is a bad thing??? Da fuq???
a) Build the infrastructure, hire high caliber professors, etc... means a weakened environment and education for students.
b) Attract that many additional students of quality equal or higher quality than what we have means we have to accept students of lower quality.
If we can have 80,000 students in 10 years and not lower our standards, then maybe I'm OK with this. If not, I have a big problem with it.
(In actuality, I wish we had higher standards than what we currently have.)
TAMU bball fan said:
Sharp is boasting that a record number - more than 8,700 students - are graduating this spring. Enrollment could be over 80,000 students in 10 years.
They're more than doubling the size of the engineering school - from 11,000 students in 2015 to 25,000 students in 2025, along with growth in the other colleges.
Here's the latest:
http://tribtalk.org/2015/06/25/a-new-pathway-for-engineering-students-in-texas/