*This is the school I attend and I'm on full financial aid.
College in Need Closes a Door to Needy Students
by Jonathan D. Glater

PORTLAND, Ore. — The admissions team at Reed College, known for its free-spirited students, learned in March that the prospective freshman class it had so carefully composed after weeks of reviewing essays, scores and recommendations was unworkable.
Money was the problem. Too many of the students needed financial aid, and the college did not have enough. So the director of financial aid gave the team another task: drop more than 100 needy students before sending out acceptances, and substitute those who could pay full freight.
The whole idea of excluding a student simply because of money clashed with the college’s ideals, Leslie Limper, the aid director, acknowledged. “None of us are very happy,” she said, adding that Reed did not strike anyone from its list last year and that never before had it needed to weed out so many worthy students. “Sometimes I wonder why I’m still doing this.”
That decision was one of several agonizing ones for this small private college, celebrated for its combination of academic rigor and a laid-back approach to education that once attracted Steven P. Jobs, the chief executive of Apple, to study on its leafy campus minutes from downtown.
With their endowments ravaged by the financial markets and more students clamoring for assistance, private colleges like Reed are making numerous changes this year in staff, students, tuition and classes that they hope will tide them over without harming their reputations or their educational goals.
Reed and others have admitted more students to bolster revenue with larger classes. Many are cutting costs by freezing or reducing salaries, suspending hiring and postponing building maintenance and construction. And the cost of attendance is rising; in Reed’s case, by 3.8 percent, to nearly $50,000 a year for its 1,300 students.
But Reed has put off drastic measures like spending more of its endowment, closing some departments or selling some real estate near campus. Instead, college officials are counting on the economy to turn around quickly, as became apparent when they allowed a New York Times reporter to sit in on budget discussions this spring.
“Like everybody, we are trying to start by trying to cut the stuff that is least likely to inflict real pain on the program,” said Colin Diver, Reed’s president. When he talks about Reed’s short-term response to the recession, Mr. Diver concedes he is torn, wondering whether a broader reassessment would be in order.
Perhaps it would be a good thing, he said, if the recession could refocus college administrators on the quality of higher education, rather than on investments in climbing walls (Reed does not have one) and other “country club” aspects of college life that have fueled an academic arms race reliant on tuition increases and fund-raising.
“The catering to consumer tastes — I keep trying to say, we are in the education business,” Mr. Diver said, describing the pressure to keep up with wealthier colleges and expressing a frustration rarely voiced publicly by college presidents. “The whole principle behind higher education is, we know something that you don’t. Therefore, we shouldn’t cater to them.”
But no college president wants to be first to make major changes in the college experience; Reed, for example, is not abandoning plans for a new performing arts center. “If we’re going to change our ways, we’re really going to need to be pushed,” Mr. Diver said, referring to colleges generally. “It’s not going to well up from within.”
So for now, the changes are modest and nearly invisible to students. The impact is mostly in the composition of the student body over the next four years.
Reed has for now cast aside its hopes of accepting students based purely on merit, without regard to wealth, and still meeting their financial need. Only the nation’s richest colleges do that. What’s more, when Reed turned to its waiting list this year, it tapped only students who could pay their way.
This year, the financial aid office put together its own, separate wait list for students whose circumstances had changed or whose financial requests were incomplete. Though Reed had pruned its admissions list for financial reasons before, it always found a way to help the few students with unexpected setbacks. This year, dozens of requests came in. Only a few got extra.
“We had so many of these people,” Ms. Limper said, “we had to say, oh my goodness, we can’t offer aid to everyone who needs it.”
Continue reading the article here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/10/business/economy/10reed.html?pagewante...
Coast
2two
Dolce & Gabbana
"But Reed has put off drastic measures like spending more of its endowment, closing some departments or selling some real estate near campus."
1"we are in the education business"
So they're not accepting 100 students in a recession but not exercising any of these (possibly) money raising options? What are they waiting for? What kind of education emergency would provoke action?
Reed doesn't have many departments, so that would be pretty drastic, especially when you consider some departments only have 2-4 professors. It would compromise the students already attending and Colin would never do that. I think spending the endowment compromises the long term ability of Reed to stay open, though I'm not familiar with how that works.
And the reason they don't want to sell the real estate, the real estate they own for the most part is directly on the same block the campus is on, is that they purchased some of it at such a ridiculously high price, that if they sold it they would be losing money. The last acquisition of the "farm" house, not actually a farm, the owners held out for a million and some change. The house was probably only worth 250,000-300,000 and even that's mostly cause of location. I'm not saying they shouldn't sell, but that's most likely the reason. Also Reed converts the houses into dorms and by convert they just add a key card lock so it wouldn't be difficult to take those off and sell them, but they would lose on-campus student housing.
The bottom line is Colin Diver doesn't want to compromise the quality of Reed education, which is why most students want to go, it's not exactly a big name outside of the college circuit, for what may be a short term inability to accept all students. I think he's afraid that if he compromises the budget now that it will set unwanted precedents for the future.
2I can understand the fear - my kid's school has millions set aside for renovations while turning applicants away - but it does seem an odd choice "we won't educate you now so that in the future, we can educate someone else really well." Hard to explain to the worthy student bounced now that it's just an unlucky draw.
3No Steph I understand, even though the article says the current students don't feel it many do. I took a leave for med reasons and I may not be able to go back as soon as I would like to.
4Steph, this one argument you have 100% of my support. It is outrageous that some universities have literally BILLIONS of tax free dollars in endowments and gifts, and still charge outrageous tuition's and fees.
5But Reed doesn't have billions Grandpa, they actually receive less money than the average private college of the same rank.
6College becomes more unattainable every year.
7I think that anyone can get a loan and pay it back like I did. I got 0 financial aid. It stopped me from going right out of high school. But I eventually bit the bullet and got myself some loans. Stop whining. When you graduate, and get a paying gig you can pay it back.
8I worked my way through college, worked full time nights, and school full time days. Today, No one can a a job whose salary would allow them to take more then one or two courses. Tuition increases have run ahead of inflation since the mid late'60's, while the classes have gone from 20 or so students to an entire hall, of students. That kind of escalation lies squarely on College executives, and tenured professors "living large", and providing very little "service" at the same time.
9Hainan, some might not be comfortable in coming out of school and possibly owing more than they will make in a years salary for many years to come.
10Then if you don't feel comfortable, don't go to a school like Reed. Go to Junior college and a state college. The amount you owe should be minuscule compared to tuition at other "prestigious" colleges that teach the same thing.
11It's all a bunch of excuses. Those private colleges are there to make money and nothing else. I am sorry but not everyone can attend private colleges. either suck it up and take a loan or stop complaining.
12I find bitter 'do it the hard way, I did' talk to be very strong evidence that the best way to make the world a better place is to reach out and help each other - dissipate some of the anger and hostility.
13I agree Steph, I definitely think you should always be ready to struggle for what you want in life and Hainan I agree that if you can't go to the school you want that shouldn't stop you from going to school at all, but if someone is working hard I don't think it's wrong to give them a helping hand.
Also it's a grave generalization that private schools and their faculty make tons of money. Yes the big name Ivies do, but the small privates don't most of the time. In fact we lost an amazing candidate for the Religion department to Harvard who offered to pay him more than Reed could.
14Faculty works really hard with their research and their students to qualify for independent grants that aids them in their work and puts money back into the school for equipment and student research.
15I agree with Grandpa. It's impossible to pay for college now without support.
16I'm sorry that they had to turn needy students away, but it's better than the college closing their doors and turning all the students away.
17First...shameless attempt to get people to join my fight so look at my website....
http://demand-refund-college-rip-off.110mb.com
Pay close attention to the pages...the typical titles for pages contain different material than you'd think..."News on 110mp" is very enlightening.
Second...brick and mortar colleges have "sold" us all on the idea that an "expensive" education is a "better" one....NEWSFLASH...all colleges must use the same guidelines for course listings as per department of education. I used the same book AND same syllabus when I was forced to re-take a course at a "big time college" because they claimed that the class I took elsewhere was not up to their "standards"----SAME but 12 times the amount I paid for it the first time!! SAME class SAME book SAME information SAME homework.
Third...brick and mortar colleges are going to get a huge wake-up call soon when people realize they can get a majority of that same education online...and for less money. (majority meaning...you can't do practical work on-line for some professions---I'd freak if someone told me they got a nursing degree ALL online)
Finally...if you want to really look at where the money at your college goes to it can be found online. They are required to publish it--you just have to know where to look. Try google search "finance/budget/your school" You will be surprised to discover many professors being paid full pay while they rest at home and write their doctorate dissertations. Some are getting full pay while on sabbatical...go figure? Others are getting another degree at the facility they are working---for free--because they are staff.
Sorry...the whole "you get what you pay for" in education is a LIE. They have sold us on that idea and it is FALSE. Of course, if you want to pay 12 times what some one else pays for--the SAME class elsewhere--if it strokes your ego---fine. Do that. It is your money and your big IOU's that will come due when you graduate. Just remember how much you wanted that prestige...and the bill that you'll get for it.
In the workplace, a degree is a degree...HR does not care where you got it. It will not get you more pay for the same job as someone with a "bargain" education.
Sorry...that is reality.
18Wow...I just read my last post here and shook my head. I hope I didn't come across as b*tchy...my real intent was to show another side. It does read as sort of snotty and for that I am sorry. I must have been having a REALLY frustrating day.
19Post A Comment
To post comments, please log in or register.