Canedude08
Sophomore
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2014
- Messages
- 8,098
Poorly informed college applicants use it, but it's impact is extremely overrated and has been for a long, long time. Let's be honest, the two largest considerations made by kids in regards to college is name recognition and cost. Miami has gone away from the huge, generous financial aid packages that made it a choice for talented kids that could have attended other schools, but weren't poor enough to qualify for significant aid. That was the case with me, I came from a middle class family, so I wasn't poor enough to get a ton of need based aid, but Miami's financial aid package was so **** good, it more than made up for the fact that Miami isn't an Ivy or a high end liberal arts school. A lot of kids, that would have ended up at state schools(Like me) were able to become 'Canes, because there wasn't a huge cost gap.Agree that USNWR methodology is off and doesn’t capture the full picture. However, college applicants heavily use it. It sucks but it’s the reality of the situation. Adm. Stavridis also would’ve been a home run hire. A huge issue with UM, in selecting Frenk and with other high profile decisions, is how absolutely incompetent the BOT is. Other than a few members, most people on it want to keep the status quo going regardless of results.
Dr. Shalala was HUGE on making Miami affordable for kids that qualified. The problem was that the program was a victim of its own success. As more and more high end kids started coming(Which helped Miami climb the rankings, alongside huge fundraising drives), **** near everyone qualified for the merit aid, and it became an issue in regards to cost. When you go on campus now, it's mostly extremely rich kids, very little economic diversity, mostly because the school doesn't give out the aid as readily as they once did. I don't think it's an accident that alumni giving is dropping off, these kids view Miami as an economic transaction, nothing more. Compare that to my generation, we came from **** near everywhere, a lot of us feel that being 'Canes forever changed our lives and we want to help the school in any way we can. Yes, the school will always have a ton of wealthy kids, but when you basically have a student body that lacks any kind of vitality or true diversity, you miss out on that deep loyalty that really drives fundraising and support.