OldJacketFan
Helluva Engineer
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The poll numbers are interesting so far. 60/40 in favor.
I have not voted as of yet, but I would be inclined to vote no. What would the advantages/disadvantages be? I would like to know what everyone believes the change would accomplish. As I see it:
Advantages:
Freedom to add Colleges and degree programs without interference.
Ability to terminate ineffective employees more easily.
Disadvantages:
No in-State tuition.
Most likely higher tuition for all students.
Even if the Trustees were free to make any decisions, there is no guarantee that they would make changes to help the athletics programs. Mr. Brock donated a lot of money to build the indoor practice facility, but is that a guarantee that he would vote to potentially dilute the academic reputation of the school to help the football program? I believe the calculus requirement is set by the school, and not by the Regents, so Ga Tech could change that now if it wished. I see the two being almost equal: A Board of Regents that I have little ability to persuade or a Board of Trustees that I have little ability to persuade.
Those two issue I think are a non factor based on other schools that are private. As I noted Vandy, through their endowment, makes sure that if a student is admitted and has the financial need the money is there. I think Tech would still offer a break for in state students as they are the life blood of the school.
Have you considered the quality of your public officials there? You'd probably have to explain the difference in public and private. Several times.Why on earth would the State of Georgia give up ownership of the Georgia Institute of Technology?
Who's going to pony up the cash to purchase from the state 400 acres of prime real estate in downtown Atlanta?
I have not voted as of yet, but I would be inclined to vote no. What would the advantages/disadvantages be? I would like to know what everyone believes the change would accomplish. As I see it:
Advantages:
Freedom to add Colleges and degree programs without interference.
Ability to terminate ineffective employees more easily.
Disadvantages:
No in-State tuition.
Most likely higher tuition for all students.
Even if the Trustees were free to make any decisions, there is no guarantee that they would make changes to help the athletics programs. Mr. Brock donated a lot of money to build the indoor practice facility, but is that a guarantee that he would vote to potentially dilute the academic reputation of the school to help the football program? I believe the calculus requirement is set by the school, and not by the Regents, so Ga Tech could change that now if it wished. I see the two being almost equal: A Board of Regents that I have little ability to persuade or a Board of Trustees that I have little ability to persuade.
Advantages? No interference from the political hacks on the BOR. The ability to partner with Emory or something similar to broaden the student/alumni base and curriculum. The ability to partner with private or publicly held businesses without interference along with the ability to make decision that benefit TECH long term. Those are just a few off the top of my head.
BOT - made up of gt grads - one even gave us in door practice facility has been tough on calculus and you say "there is no guarantee that BOT will make changes that will help gtaa". I trust them if they are tech men.
Do we know for certain the property ownership? If it is owned by the State no doubt it would be a huge hurdle. But then perhaps a long term lease would the answer.
It's a public university owned by the state and located on state land. While this post is a fun place to discuss hypotheticals, the reality is that the state of Georgia will never allow GT to "go private." Nor, IMO, should they.
Please help me find the record between gt and uga for the last 20 years. Its not T HECK WG . Its T HELL WG and thats broken.The only recent interference that I recall was the denial to add degree programs that already exist at GSU. I do know that there is history from the 30s that the Regents removed the Evening School of Commerce from Ga Tech and put it underneath UGA.(It later split from UGA and formed GSU) If the desire is to have lighter programs of study, Ga Tech currently has: Intercultural Studies, Modern Languages, Literature Media & Communications. The school still requires that those programs be academically challenging. The school doesn't need permission from the BOR to reduce the academic requirements of those existing fields of study.
If Ga Tech were private, I don't know that Emory would want to merge. I don't know of any reason that BOR would object if Tech and Emory wanted to enter into research partnerships or allow cross-enrollment.
The GTRI already has contracts with many businesses. The BOR might have interfered with some, or explicitly rejected some partnerships, but I am not aware that they have.
I believe that Tech is in very good shape as an academic institution. It is ranked as a top 40 National University, and a top 10 Engineering University. That is higher than UGA.
There might be more interference from the BOR than I am aware of. I could be convinced that going private is the best thing for Tech. However, I think going private is a sledgehammer approach, and I haven't yet seen anything that makes me believe things are so broken as to need it.
Please help me find the record between gt and uga for the last 20 years.
If the only reason to go private is to help athletics, then the answer is an overwhelming NO. IF the Institute wanted to reduce the academic prestige, it already can with majors such as Intercultural Studies. The BOR does not prevent GT from taking away the calculus requirement. The BOR does not prevent GT from reducing the academic load of any of its degree programs. GT could already make such degrees easy and recruit people who could not really do any of the course work, but they choose not to. The BOR is not stopping them, GT has more pride in its academics than the majority of SEC schools.
The entire purpose of Intercollegiate Athletics should be for schools to compete against each other. What really should happen is that the NFL should form developmental leagues. Any athletes that only want an opportunity to play professionally should not attend or be required to attend college. No school should lower its standards in order to compete in athletics. Unfortunately many, if not the vast majority of Div 1 programs do.