Alabama
Related: About this forumBreaking Down the Spending at One of America's Priciest Public Colleges (Auburn) - WSJ
AUBURN, Ala.—In recent decades, Auburn University added hundreds of millions of dollars in spending to its budget. The additional money didn’t go to the English department, nor to the sociology department. Some science departments only got a trickle more. Instead, much of the money went toward administrative salaries, buildings and, no surprise, sports. Auburn piled millions more each year into paying down the debt it borrowed for campus upgrades, including an $84 million basketball arena. It hired hundreds of administrators and professional staff. Spending on the president’s office and other administrative departments often increased far faster than that on many academic subjects.
To help pay for its transformation, the school has raised tuition and fees again and again. By one measure, students’ costs have grown faster than at almost any other major public U.S. university. Auburn’s net price, the average amount in-state freshmen pay after grants and scholarships—covering tuition, fees, room, board and other costs—topped $25,000 annually in 2021-22, according to Education Department data. That’s a 60% increase from 15 years prior, adjusted to today’s dollars.
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Opened 164 years ago, Auburn was once geared toward the state’s working class, as was typical of public institutions funded by the sale of donated federal lands, called land-grant universities. More recently, the school, nestled in the hills of east-central Alabama, had loftier ambitions. In 1997, its board set forth a mission statement: Auburn would become one of the nation’s pre-eminent land-grant universities in the 21st century. The school set out to erect state-of-the-art facilities, bring in top professors, develop research programs and add resources to support students. It now has nearly 27,000 undergraduates. All that added to the school’s bottom line.
Auburn’s budget in 2016 totaled $1.2 billion in today’s dollars, a jump of 82% from 2002. Though enrollment grew during that time, it did so at a slower pace, rising by about 20% during the same period. One of the biggest reasons for the growing costs at Auburn, as at many such schools, was the school’s expanding footprint. Among Auburn’s projects built between 2002 and 2016: A $20 million building that is home to information technology staff. A $20 million kinesiology building with labs focused on physical activity and human movement. A $16 million indoor sports facility project that allows student athletes to practice during bad weather.
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House of Roberts
(5,881 posts)since Bear Bryant called them the 'Cow College'. (Tide fan here, don't misinterpret me, one of my favorite screenshots is Toomer's Corner after Cam Newton won them the National Championship. You could hardly see the green for the TP. I hold no favor for the fuckwit who poisoned those trees.)
Jeebo
(2,383 posts)He was born in 1911, so his degree must have been about 1932 or 1933. It was called Alabama Polytechnic Institute then, but so many people called it Auburn because that was the name of the town where the campus was, that they eventually officially renamed it Auburn University. I also have an older brother who got a bachelor's degree in education from Auburn. I went to the University of Alabama myself. I had no idea Auburn was that expensive.
-- Ron
bamagal62
(3,789 posts)Coaches. It gets expensive.
Wonder Why
(5,199 posts)question everything
(49,699 posts)eppur_se_muova
(38,488 posts)some high school teachers the first time. Later, they were offering lectureships for less pay than I got as a grad student, even *without* taking inflation into account.