Still have to adjust for an expected 20% decrease in enrollment in 6 years.As a STEM school Wentworth is well positioned to survive. As opposed to a school that trained pre-school teachers and social workers e.g. Wheelock.
Still have to adjust for an expected 20% decrease in enrollment in 6 years.As a STEM school Wentworth is well positioned to survive. As opposed to a school that trained pre-school teachers and social workers e.g. Wheelock.
Stefal -- No -- Tom is on track -- all of the hand wringing applies to useless BA degrees offered by the huge number of small liberal arts schoolsStill have to adjust for an expected 20% decrease in enrollment in 6 years.
A college for the computing age
With the initial organizational structure in place, the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing moves forward with implementation.
Terri Park | MIT Schwarzman College of Computing
February 4, 2020
Advancing computing
Despite the unprecedented growth in computing, there remains substantial unmet demand for expertise. In academia, colleges and universities worldwide are faced with oversubscribed programs in computer science and the constant need to keep up with rapidly changing materials at both the graduate and undergraduate level.
According to Huttenlocher, the computing fields are evolving at a pace today that is beyond the capabilities of current academic structures to handle. “As academics, we pride ourselves on being generators of new knowledge, but academic institutions themselves don’t change that quickly. The rise of AI is probably the biggest recent example of that, along with the fact that about 40 percent of MIT undergraduates are majoring in computer science, where we have 7 percent of the MIT faculty.”
Stefal -- No -- Tom is on
I'm sure that Wentworth like BU, Northeastern, UMass Lowell are all expecting to see increases in student enrollment.
Stefal -- Like I indicated it's not necessarily all STEM -- there is a definite hierarchy of the topics with Bio and Computing leading now in the future [next decade] there will likely be a boom in nano and materialsWentworth literally says the opposite in their own presentation, the one I posted a screenshot of. They expect up to 20% decrease by 2026, and they don't offer any BA's.
I can also say with good authority that at least one of UMass Lowell's engineering departments is forecasting future enrollment to drop.
Its based off the decrease in population of children after Baby Boomers' children, the last of whom are graduating now, not based off whether students are more aware BA's have less ROI than BS degrees.
That attachment you posted is referring to enrolment overall in the Northeast, not Wentworth. As Northeastern and BU become even more selective Wentworth will continue to benefit from students who didn't make the cut there.Wentworth literally says the opposite in their own presentation, the one I posted a screenshot of. They expect up to 20% decrease by 2026, and they don't offer any BA's.
I can also say with good authority that at least one of UMass Lowell's engineering departments is forecasting future enrollment to drop.
Its based off the decrease in population of children after Baby Boomers' children, the last of whom are graduating now, not based off whether students are more aware BA's have less ROI than BS degrees.
MASSACHUSETTS Like other Northeastern states, Massachusetts depends on immigration to sustain growth. But unlike its neighbors — immigration is down by a third in New York — Massachusetts sustained international growth through most of the decade.
The difference lies in the state’s thriving university and tech sector, which brings in a larger proportion of high-skilled immigrants. Boston also had an influx of millennials during the decade, which helped offset the flow of older residents to other states.
Massachusetts alone accounted for more than half of the population growth in the Northeast during the decade.
“The growth that we saw with the millennial wave, can that be sustained?” said Susan Strate, a demographer at the UMass Donahue Institute. “Coupled with a decrease in the international migration that made us strong growers in recent years, it’s a pivotal point in Massachusetts.”
Hi CBeckFJ, welcome to archboston! Bumps on topics just to ask for status updates are usually discouraged. If you want to ask a question regarding a status update, please use the running thread here: https://archboston.com/community/threads/🔹-whats-happening-with-project-x.5089/Any update on either this or 500 Huntington?
The HorrorHi CBeckFJ, welcome to archboston! Bumps on topics just to ask for status updates are usually discouraged. If you want to ask a question regarding a status update, please use the running thread here: https://archboston.com/community/threads/-whats-happening-with-project-x.5089/
The horror of what...?The Horror
Any update on either this or 500 Huntington?
I wonder if the new Sweeney developer is.....Northeastern?Update on 500 Huntington included in this NPC
2022-01-18_Notice of Project Change (NPC)_Wentworth - New Sweeney Field Athletics Complex.pdf | Powered by Box
Notice of Project Change (NPC) due to lapse of time since the original project approvalbpda.app.box.com
Already a thread running for 500 huntington. https://archboston.com/community/th...ences-complex-500-huntington-ave-fenway.6648/As a recent Wentworth architecture graduate, it looks like 630 Huntington Ave is being put on hold for the new Sweeney Field to be completed next year and 500 Huntington Ave should be the next project in line.
Also, a revised master plan with Perkins and Will should be on the way.
Looking at the way these forums work, maybe we should create a new thread for Sweeney Field/500 Huntington Ave?