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Enrollment Management Strikes Back at Syracuse

A University's Move from Inclusion to Exclusion

Enrollment Management

This blog post is the fifth in a periodic series aimed at lifting the veil on the enrollment management industry. Earlier posts in the series can be found here.

In November 2019, Syracuse University (SU) was in turmoil. An outbreak of racist incidents sparked two weeks of protests that 鈥渆lectrified鈥 the campus, .

鈥淏lack, Latino, Asian American, Jewish, Muslim, Indigenous and international students descended on Syracuse鈥檚 new $50 million campus center for a sit-in under the slogan #NotAgainSU,鈥 the Times reported. The university鈥檚 handling of the incidents was so shoddy that it drew a , as well as from , which declared, 鈥淭his campus needs reform.鈥

For many of students of color, the focus of the protests went beyond the racist incidents themselves to a university administration they couldn鈥檛 trust 鈥 led by a chancellor, , who seemed to be wholly focused on building the university鈥檚 prestige at their expense.

鈥淭he administration has made severe mistakes not only over the past two weeks, but the past five years,鈥 the leaders of #NotAgainSU demanding Syverud鈥檚 resignation.

The showed just how far a break the university had made with the vision of its former chancellor, Nancy Cantor, who was essentially forced out of the post a half dozen years earlier over her efforts to make the institution more inclusive.

As I previously wrote, Cantor spent nearly a decade leading Syracuse University and, during that time, transformed the institution into one of the most economically and racially diverse universities of its caliber. During her tenure, she significantly increased the proportion of underrepresented minority students in the incoming class to nearly 32 percent, up from 19 percent when she arrived in 2004. She also boosted the share of Pell Grant recipients the university enrolled, to more than a quarter of freshmen annually. To help these students, the university nearly tripled the amount of money it spent on need-based aid.

But instead of being celebrated for Cantor faced a backlash from some prominent white faculty members and alumni who were alarmed that the university鈥檚 acceptance rate had risen and its U.S. News & World Report rankings had fallen about a dozen spots. 鈥淢y fear is that the university is moving away from selective to inclusive,鈥 , a history professor, told in October 2011. Such a move, Bennett argued, was 鈥渁 road to nowhere for a place like Syracuse, which is asking parents to pay a lot because they think they鈥檙e going to increase their kids鈥 life chances.鈥

Despite publicly standing behind her, Syracuse鈥檚 Board of Trustees proved to be sympathetic to those arguments. After Cantor announced she was leaving to become the chancellor at Rutgers University鈥檚 Newark campus, the board chose Syverud, the dean of the law school at Washington University in St. Louis, to replace her. Washington University was the at the time.

A key selling point for Syverud was that both of the law schools he had led 鈥 first Vanderbilt and then Washington University 鈥 had seen their U.S. News rankings rise under his stewardship. In announcing the hiring, touted Syverud鈥檚 record of 鈥渂ringing the Washington University and Vanderbilt University law schools to greater prominence鈥 and stressed the importance of 鈥渞ais[ing] SU鈥檚 profile."

While Cantor had been dismissive of the rankings, Syverud and made raising Syracuse鈥檚 ranking a top priority. To accomplish this goal, his administration put in place a standard enrollment management strategy 鈥 similar to those employed by many other selective public and private colleges –designed to make the university more exclusive.

鈥淪yverud鈥檚 overarching intention with each decision is to boost the university鈥檚 prestige,鈥 an ally of the chancellor in 2017.

Playing the 鈥淢erit鈥 Aid Game

Syverud knew that the key to rising up the U.S. News rankings was to . U.S. News judges colleges in part by the average standardized test scores of its incoming students. But to do so, he needed to free up money that the university could use to provide competitive scholarships to top students.

In that pursuit, Syverud made a controversial move that signaled that he was making . The university announced it 2014 that it was scaling back its involvement with the , which helps selective colleges enroll groups of promising urban public school students, many of whom are students of color and financially disadvantaged. To participate in the programs, the colleges must guarantee four-year full-tuition scholarships to participants.

Cantor, in her last three years as chancellor, had made Syracuse , accepting groups of 10 each from three of the foundation鈥檚 sites in Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Miami. Under Syverud, the university cut two of these programs, reducing the number of new participants each year from 30 to 10, all coming from Miami.

In , Ryan Williams, Syracuse鈥檚 then-associate vice president for enrollment management and director of financial aid and scholarships, denied that the move was made to make Syracuse more exclusive. Instead, he said that the university needed 鈥渇lexibility鈥 to devote its financial aid 鈥渄ollars where it thinks its highest need may be.鈥 Ryan acknowledged, however, that a share of the money saved from eliminating Posse scholarships was going to be used to create new non-need-based scholarship programs to recruit higher-achieving students.

Syverud鈥檚 decision to eliminate financial aid that mostly went to lower-income minority students to pay in part for scholarships that were likely to go predominantly to white wealthy ones outraged the Posse participants and other students of color on campus. , with students reeling from the university鈥檚 sudden change in direction.

鈥淎t what point do we stop increasing the prestige of a school without taking out the color of the school?鈥 a freshman who was part of one of the Posse programs .

Syverud by allowing the Atlanta Posse program to continue for one more year. Meanwhile, using the money saved from the Posse programs for non-need-based scholarships was just the start. From 2012-13 to 2019-2020, the university nearly quadrupled the amount on money it spent on non鈥憂eed-based aid, in inflation-adjusted dollars, to $42 million yearly. Meanwhile, the number of freshmen receiving this aid increased by more than five times during this time, from 307, or 9 percent of the class, to 1,581, or 43 percent of the class, according to data that the university reports to magazines that rank colleges.

Beautifying the Campus

Syverud also knew that simply throwing more money at higher-achieving students wouldn鈥檛 be enough necessarily to win them over. To attract these students, many of whom came from affluent families, he made a significant investment in beautifying the campus and adding top-shelf amenities that these students and families have come to expect.

First he authorized the university to spend $6 million to construct with a heated pathway, to give the campus 鈥渁 greater sense of physical connectedness.鈥 And then he devoted $118 million to renovating the Carrier Dome, Syracuse鈥檚 sports stadium, adding a retractable roof and making 鈥渟tate of the art upgrades to the building鈥檚 sound and lighting.鈥 The remodeling included adding 鈥渁 new center-hung scoreboard,鈥 which was 鈥渢he first of its size in collegiate sports, featur[ing] four panels that are each 20 feet high by 62.5 feet wide and a 6-foot ribbon board that wraps around the bottom.鈥 And finally he devoted $50 million " that included "massage chairs, a built-in pharmacy, and an esports room for video gaming," as well as "a pet therapy room" for students "with puppies to play with."

The university鈥檚 no-holds-barred spending on amenities outraged many faculty members who complained that their wages had been left stagnant and that the university was leaving faculty vacancies unfilled. 鈥淚t鈥檚 jarring when on the one hand we鈥檙e being told we have to be fiscally disciplined, and on the other hand there seems to be an unlimited amount of money for fixing up the Dome and installing heated sidewalks and a better gym,鈥 Tom Perreault, a professor of geography, told the Daily Orange, university鈥檚 independent student newspaper in e.

But the chancellor鈥檚 champions on campus praised him in that article for carrying out a plan to improve Syracuse鈥檚 standing in rankings, and its competitive position among its peer institutions. 鈥淚f we want to move up with them or surpass them, we need to have a plan,鈥 Joanna Masingila, the then-dean of the school of education said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 trying to get the university, the campus, to have a plan. 鈥 Getting everybody moving together with a plan, I think that鈥檚 a good strategy.鈥

Finding a More Lucrative Way to Achieve Diversity

Syverud has never acknowledged that his administration has reduced socioeconomic and racial diversity on campus. But he didn鈥檛 have to. The decision to eliminate Posse programs made that shift abundantly clear to students of color on campus.

Syracuse administrators, however, continued to tout their commitment to diversity by pointing to their success in From the fall of 2012 to the fall of 2018, the number of international freshmen the university enrolled grew by 77 percent — from 370, or about 11 percent of the class, to 656, or 18 percent.

For enrollment management purposes, boosting international student enrollment is a win-win, allowing colleges to make their campuses more diverse while increasing their net revenue. Foreign students who study in the U.S. tend to come from wealthy families and, as a result, are typically able to pay the full price of admission, without requiring financial aid.

At What Cost?

According to the metrics that enrollment managers tend to value, Syverud鈥檚 strategy was fairly successful, at least until the pandemic struck. The average SAT scores of incoming students rose by about 120 points to 1,280 under Syverud鈥檚 leadership, the acceptance rate dropped, and most importantly the university鈥檚 U.S. News rankings improved. By 2018, Syracuse was , nine spots better than under Cantor (although it has slipped to ).

But Syracuse has paid a very high price for these 鈥渋mprovements.鈥 The university cut in half the share of Pell Grant recipients it enrolls annually, from to just . And it also cut nearly in half the share of underrepresented minority students from a high of nearly 32 percent under Cantor to under Syverud. The university enrolls at least 300 fewer Black freshmen each year than it did when Cantor left. Where Black students once made up 9 percent of the freshmen class, they made up just 6 percent by 2018.

After Cantor鈥檚 departure, minority students at Syracuse worried about the direction the university was headed. Syverud , assuring the campus community of his commitment to diversity. However, his decision to eliminate the Posse programs spoke volumes. Activists on campus are to restore those programs. Meanwhile, that the university conducted on equity and diversity on campus that, 鈥淎 surprising number of student participants admitted they don鈥檛 trust anything the university says.鈥

Stephen Burd is editing a forthcoming book with Harvard Education Press on the enrollment management industry.

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Stephen Burd
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Stephen Burd

Senior Writer & Editor, Higher Education

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Enrollment Management Strikes Back at Syracuse