GivemTheAxe said:
75bear said:
BearBoarBlarney said:
I was stunned to read that Sonoma State University's enrollment has dropped by 38% since its high in 2015.
I know folks talk about the coming enrollment cliff in higher education, but I didn't realize that some CSU system campuses were feeling it to this extent.
In that same time period, Cal Poly Humboldt went from 8,500 to its current 6,000.
People are having fewer kids.
Oakland has its own set of problems including a totally incompetent leadership starting with the Mayor (who can't even bother to file a timely application to get millions in State aid for its police)
However Oakland's educational system is in part suffering the same problems that the entire US is suffering- declining enrollment. The Baby Boom was an aberration.
There are different start dates for the Baby Boom. Some have set the date as early as 1944 when couples started marrying earlier some. Have set it at 1945. Currently most have set it at 1946. But by the late 1960's the birth rates were falling precipitously
For over twenty years the US benefited from exponential growth
But throughout most of US history the US benefited from massive amounts of immigrants (documented and undocumented). Contrary to what some politicians say. Those immigrants and their children provided the human resources and drive that made America great.
Those immigrants and their children provided the students who filled up American elementary schools high schools and later colleges.
With the Baby Boom generation. The US did not have a great need for massive immigration.
Now that the Baby Boom generation is aging out. The reality of our need for immigrants is Becoming more obvious. Who will provide the Human Resources to keep our status of living (including our colleges and our college
Football teams) going.
Granted the foregoing explanation is a generalization. And people can try to criticize and pick it apart. But the general trends cannot be ignored.
My two cents from the Insider thread on the topic, as modified for brevity:
College in the US (including at Cal) are very expensive compared to in other countries, due to the high level of student amenities, activities, entertainment and technology costs).
American schools invest in attractive facilities and student services, which can increase costs that are passed on to students. We build way more expensive, high maintenance buildings in comparison to other countries. American schools have way more expensive administrators, a fair amount of which is for compliance with governmental mandates to be eligible for federal and state money. Americans tend to view college partly as a fun time to "try out" adult hood, so competing colleges respond with ever nicer services, programs, athletics and other activities for students to enjoy, and American parents in the past seem willing to underwrite these costs. Higher college costs in the US prices tend to be followed by ever more generous government supported financial aid; thus, raising prices tends to be a bit of a race between schools to capture more of the government aide pie. This doesn't help students who don't qualify for aide, and one would expect, as certain degrees may be less value relative to college costs, parents are reconsidering the value of the American college education.
Specifically to athletics, American college athletics is on an astronomically different scale where events often are well attended, athletes may receive scholarships, preference in admissions, NIL, media attention, and training for professional or Olympic aspirations, which generally is not the case outside the US.