Oso planning to go pro
I don’t think you understand how expensive increasing the pool of “qualified applicants” would be. That’s not easy nor is it inexpensive.
This is kind a cool model that Marquette may want to look at to see how a fellow Jesuit school is reaching out to the underserved population. https://www.luc.edu/arrupe/about/aboutarrupecollege/
+1. Loyola has been owning Marquette's shorts. This utilizes their fixed assets, keeps tuition costs reasonable, works to assimilate first generation students, and fills their recruiting pipeline. Two year colleges are disproportionately minority because of costs, high school academic resources and students being firsts. These programs are forward-looking as they adapt to the reality of the marketplace. All the while keeping with their core mission...and raising their USNWR rankings.
And many of these students succeed better at a two year setting. Without risking as many resources. I think Marquette should really look at something like this. And it wouldn’t impact rankings because legally it is a separate institution.
Marquette has established transfer agreements with MATC and Oakton Community College, an Illinois community college with campuses in Des Plaines and Skokie. Not sure if there are other partnerships in the pipeline.https://www.marquette.edu/explore/transfer-students-matc-guaranteed-admission.phphttps://today.marquette.edu/2019/02/marquette-partners-with-oakton-community-college-to-smooth-transfer-process/
Honest question: who is the "they" you're referring to in this sentence? It seems to me that Marquette's recent focus suggests that "they" (i.e., the powers that be at Marquette) aren't really saying that "they" want to be a "National University." Of course "they" will welcome students from all over, but the emphasis seems to be shifting to a more regional approach.Not trying to be a smart ass here, I'm just wondering what you're referring to.
I graduated in the mid-80's so I am speaking from an anecdotal angle that might be a little better than yours. There is no way that 40% of Marquette students were from the East Coast. If you don't believe me, pull up some yearbooks from that time period. They contain the permanent addresses of all of the graduating seniors.http://cdm16280.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p4007hilltop/id/15390Also, what makes you think you can gauge the number of students from the East Coast based on the people who show up for Marquette Club functions in NYC? Did it ever occur to you that transplants might need to network more than homegrown folks and that's why they participate?
I agree the 40% figure is probably exaggerated, but I was told roughly that number by more than 1 MU administrator in admissions both whom had been there a while during my tenure as well as other alums anecdotally. Even if the actual figure is only half that, which could very well be true, that’s a lot more than they get from the region today, that’s the point I’m trying to make.
Slightly off/on topic .. didn't Marquette once make a big push to get students from Guam?
I recently learned that Xavier has been pulling 2-3 times as many students from Connecticut than Marquette as well as in Massachusetts. Was surprised at the numbers and did not expect. I figured they would have been relatively equal.
Cincinnati is 4 hours closer to Connecticut than Milwaukee is. That might have something to do with it.Here is a dashboard that shows the class of 2022 by state (Click on location):https://www.marquette.edu/oira/fresh-dash.shtml
Raises hand.Leo Flynn, from Admissions, went to Guam every year. He came to my high school and was, without a doubt, the primary reason I ended up at Marquette. I think there was 15-20 of us in ‘87. My recollection is that MU had more kids from Guam than any school not on the west coast.
Also with Elgin Community College.
I really want that to be true and I hope it is because even though it's an excuse/alibi it would be a valid one. My gut says it's not though. Where MUFANCT and I come from, as many graduating seniors attend colleges half way or completely across the country as they do stay within 200 miles so I don't think that's it. I know Xavier isn't halfway across the country from here but it's far enough, and chances are with the exception maybe of traveling there for the start of Freshman year, I'll bet most of those students are flying not driving. If the school you're attending is far enough away to warrant the expense of flying, whether you're on the plane for 1.5 hours or 4 hours is inconsequential. At least it would be to me. MU's marketing and popularity in this region is inferior to Xavier's, but I don't buy that slightly closer proximity is the reason.
Fair enough. [/quoteXU's basketball program has also unfortunately performed better than ours over the last 5 years so that probably has a lot to do with the disparity MU Fan in CT cited. Probably more than anything else I'd guess.
I think MUFICT said that his daughter would have come to MU if they would have matched XU's scholarship offer.