What do you think it would take to get a STEM program and some degrees at UM? Approval from the BOR?
Griz til I die said:I 100% agree with this, and I’ll give you an example. I go to UM right now, and I graduated from Butte Central in 2016. A lot of my friends growing up we’re Griz fans. A couple of the girls in my class got a picture with Selle when he was still playing, then one day they just decided out of the blue they were going to MSU. When I asked her why she was going to MSU after growing upGrizGeneral said:These two are so related and probably play a bigger part on UM's enrollment than people realize (Looking at you Engrstom!). Also known as the "Flutie effect." Interesting article today about Lane Kiffin, one part stated,
"Kiffin's impact has transcended football. Kelly told ESPN earlier this month that FAU's out-of-state applications for the 2018 fall semester were up 35 percent."
Another classic example of this is Gonzaga. Freshman enrollment at Gonzaga was 569 as of 1998. In 1999 (after Zags went to Elite 8) it was 701 and up to 979 in 2001 (65 percent increase).
Of course, many applicants could care less about sports, but there is still a big chunk that do, and it's a lot more fun when you've got a good sports team.
Ironically, those protesting professors who are having their funding cut may actually benefit from Hauck's return...
A Griz fan, she didn’t really have a reason, she just said that MSU is sweet and cooler than UM. When I asked her why it’s cooler than UM, she just said it was sweet. That actually kinda pissed me off. The majority of my class went to MSU. A couple of them transferred home to Tech, and we actually had a couple transfer to UM, but MSU still has more kids from our class. This is right when our downfall in football started, and I think the minute we make a deep playoff run, people will start coming around.
AZDoc said:Winning doesn't do anything for attendance at a university...
https://www.ndsu.edu/data/enrollment/annual/
signedbewildered said:Bobby is the reason (game) attendance went down and enrollment crashed. If you don't believe me just ask the educators that know these things....
"Hauck's previous tenure contributed to the climate that resulted in the Department of Justice and the Department of Education investigations, which have had horrible consequences for UM in terms of enrollment and reputation." ~ (The 29 faculty concerned about current state of University)
"Bobby Hauck, more than any other person, was responsible for the culture of impunity with respect to sexual harassment and assault by athletes that led to a federal investigation, the firing of multiple high level university employees, the precipitous decline in enrollment and the widespread perception that the university was unsafe for women." ~ Patrick Burke (UM Teacher Honors College, Philosophy dept and Ecological Restoration)
......
Let's see....chicken or egg? Enrollment/Attendance up, Hauck here. Hauck leaves, enrollment/attendance drops. (But it's Hauck's fault. Are you following this?)
My theory is winning record, attendance and enrollment will eventually climb now that Hauck is back but the fans, boosters and especially media should do what they can to keep him around this time because we KNOW what happens when he leaves.
Right?
GGNez said:signedbewildered said:Bobby is the reason (game) attendance went down and enrollment crashed. If you don't believe me just ask the educators that know these things....
"Hauck's previous tenure contributed to the climate that resulted in the Department of Justice and the Department of Education investigations, which have had horrible consequences for UM in terms of enrollment and reputation." ~ (The 29 faculty concerned about current state of University)
"Bobby Hauck, more than any other person, was responsible for the culture of impunity with respect to sexual harassment and assault by athletes that led to a federal investigation, the firing of multiple high level university employees, the precipitous decline in enrollment and the widespread perception that the university was unsafe for women." ~ Patrick Burke (UM Teacher Honors College, Philosophy dept and Ecological Restoration)
......
Let's see....chicken or egg? Enrollment/Attendance up, Hauck here. Hauck leaves, enrollment/attendance drops. (But it's Hauck's fault. Are you following this?)
My theory is winning record, attendance and enrollment will eventually climb now that Hauck is back but the fans, boosters and especially media should do what they can to keep him around this time because we KNOW what happens when he leaves.
Right?
And...mind you, enrollment actually continued going up for 2 years after he left.
Stop_HammerTime69 said:AZDoc said:Winning doesn't do anything for attendance at a university...
https://www.ndsu.edu/data/enrollment/annual/
Gonna throw something out there that might add more to the picture. North Dakota's education system is currently involved in massive cuts, despite the big oil boom overlapping on the timeline. The University of North Dakota dealt with massive cuts, ending numerous programs and shrinking the overall graduate school by over a quarter, on top of cutting quite a few sports, not the least of which was women's hockey, and hockey is a big f***[*]' deal there, even the women. My mom, a professor there, ended up leaving that school after the last academic year.
NDSU on the other hand didn't have to deal with any of that. Though it might not look like it, they experienced the "Flutie effect" at the right time to stay stable, not necessarily grow. It wasn't involved in massive cuts, a 30% across the board, the way their in-state counterpart was.
hokeyfine said:so its not football......... what is um doing to try to catch this stem effect?griz71 said:hokeyfine said:then how does msu explain their enrollment success? certainly not because of "winning" football teams and certainly not because of um's perceived campus issues.
It is called the STEM effect.
spsyk said:hokeyfine said:so its not football......... what is um doing to try to catch this stem effect?griz71 said:hokeyfine said:then how does msu explain their enrollment success? certainly not because of "winning" football teams and certainly not because of um's perceived campus issues.
It is called the STEM effect.
By offering a degree in Harry Potter Theory, will get millennial’s to get into student load debt.
behappp said:spsyk said:hokeyfine said:so its not football......... what is um doing to try to catch this stem effect?griz71 said:It is called the STEM effect.
By offering a degree in Harry Potter Theory, will get millennial’s to get into student load debt.
My daughter got a major in poli sci and a drama minor and is now making more $ than I could ever dream of writing code in silicon valley. It's a brave new world old man.
Retiredram1 said:As a retired educator, I believe that MANY of those who chose Bozeman believe they are going to be engineers and when they reach a saturation point in the career field (many believe that time is here) and grads cannot get those high paying jobs, you may see a change.
behappp said:spsyk said:hokeyfine said:so its not football......... what is um doing to try to catch this stem effect?griz71 said:It is called the STEM effect.
By offering a degree in Harry Potter Theory, will get millennial’s to get into student load debt.
My daughter got a major in poli sci and a drama minor and is now making more $ than I could ever dream of writing code in silicon valley. It's a brave new world old man.
So Kustra absolutely believed football success meant more than just football success.Audrey Dutton said:Sports is "an enormous investment" for Boise State University, but one that has paid off for the school as a whole, said BSU President Bob Kustra. "That Fiesta Bowl of 2007 really gave us a set of strategies on how we could take the rest of the university on the national stage that football took us in that year."
…
Kustra experienced dazzling high points, notably the Broncos’ 2007 Fiesta Bowl win over Oklahoma, the favored team.
“I was gobsmacked,” said Kustra.
He didn’t have a sense of what that win would mean for the university — helping catapult it into an era of growth and national recognition — until he came in to work the next morning and found 300 emails from fans and friends across the county.
…
Retiredram1 said:As a retired educator, I believe that MANY of those who chose Bozeman believe they are going to be engineers and when they reach a saturation point in the career field (many believe that time is here) and grads cannot get those high paying jobs, you may see a change.