More
students not necessarily better
Charm
of small student body attracts people
Bigger
is not always better.
TCUs freshmen enrollment has increased from 1,426
in 1999 to 1,596 in 2003.
Along with the enrollment increase, students have seen
big tuition increases.
Is this coincidence, or not?
Part of the reason tuition is going up almost 12 percent
next year is to hire 16 additional full-time faculty.
Would the additional faculty be necessary if the enrollment
cap was more strictly enforced?
Its
inevitable that the more students a university has,
the more its going to cost to run the university
overall.
Its also important to keep in mind the universitys
housing situation. TCU touts itself as a university
with great residence halls and on-campus apartments.
Will the university still brag about its residence halls
next year when all the dorms are so crowded that every
RA will be required to have a roommate and some students
will live in lounges?
Who knows, some students may even be housed in hotel
rooms on University Drive.
Many students chose to come here because of TCUs
size. Some people like the warmth, attention and charm
that come with a small student body. If the size of
the student body keeps increasing, its fair to
say all those things may disappear in time.
University officials need to concentrate on the core
of the student body by attracting quality students,
not simply a larger quantity of them.
After
all, its the quality of students that will lead
TCU into the future.
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