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SignUp Now!Why would you even post this? I think that some of us have a certain level of distaste for all things aggroid for historic reasons. And other than the usual adversarial distaste that is found in intercollegiate athletics, lo and behold!, some of it may be justified. Some on this board do care. In case you did not know it, there are more than a few olden fartes on this board. Maybe there are reasons why some feel the way that they do. Maybe you should consider that, instead of assuming that your version of Texas athletic reality is the same that everyone else sees or experiences. As a beginning, try reading a few of the posts on this thread. If that does not enlighten you, try asking someone who has been around a while. You might learn something.WHo cares! I have Aggie friends but why make this post. No one on this board really cares. Maybe they do but I do not know why. We care about Texas!!!! We are TExas!!!!!!Bring on the Aggies
Here is something to keep in mind when dealing with aggys. UT Austin has about 36,000 undergrads and about 48,000 total students on campus. TAMU College Station has a couple thousand more undergrads and about 54,000 total students. The operating budget of UT Austin (just the main campus, not the system) is right at $2.4 billion. The operating budget at TAMU College Station is right at $1.3 billion. The ags have about 10% more students than UT Austin but the annual operating budget for TAMU Farmville is a BILLION DOLLARS less than the budget for UT Austin. UT Austin spends ONE BILLION GODDAMNED DOLLARS more to educate fewer students. One billion dollars is more than the entire operating budget of OU Norman (which has roughly 26,000 undergrads). I don't care if you start with the ballet majors, move to the pottery majors and go from there. ONE BILLION DOLLARS each and every year is going to eventually result in some serious effects on the overall quality of the educational experience offered to the students on campus.Today, I had an aggy TASO football officiating associate ask me, "Who is Coach Strong?"
No, he wasn't being facetious or condescending. Just being an ignorant aggy. You can't make this stuff up!![]()
I must say. That does explain a lot.Here is something to keep in mind when dealing with aggys. UT Austin has about 36,000 undergrads and about 48,000 total students on campus. TAMU College Station has a couple thousand more undergrads and about 54,000 total students. The operating budget of UT Austin (just the main campus, not the system) is right at $2.4 billion. The operating budget at TAMU College Station is right at $1.3 billion. The ags have about 10% more students than UT Austin but the annual operating budget for TAMU Farmville is a BILLION DOLLARS less than the budget for UT Austin. UT Austin spends ONE BILLION GODDAMNED DOLLARS more to educate fewer students. One billion dollars is more than the entire operating budget of OU Norman (which has roughly 26,000 undergrads). I don't care if you start with the ballet majors, move to the pottery majors and go from there. ONE BILLION DOLLARS each and every year is going to eventually result in some serious effects on the overall quality of the educational experience offered to the students on campus.
Don't ever kid yourself that the quality of the education offered at UT Austin and that of TAMU College Station or OU Norman are in any way similar. Ask anyone in academia at any university what an increase of a billion dollars a year to the operating budget would do to improve the quality of the education offered to students on campus.
I give the aggys a lot of sh!t and for good reason. Just wait until you see what happens to the "quality" of the graduate from their university once Rick Perry's "reforms" start running their enrollment up to 70,000 with a cap on tuition at $10,000 for four years. Meanwhile, $100 crude prices continue to pour billions more into the PUF so the endowment continues to grow both from new contributions as well as from investment returns. Additions to the PUF from royalties total almost a billion dollars a year. I can't think of any state that adds a billion dollars a year of state funds to their university endowments and I can't think of any private university that gains close to a billion dollars a year to its endowment from alumni gifts.
Yep. The total operating budgets of LSU and Univ of Alabama are less than $1 billion. The total endowment of U of A is less than this year's addition to the PUF. The numbers are just insane. By almost any metric, UT is an incredible place. The only area we are failing is in athletics.I must say. That does explain a lot.
It is next to impossible (unless you rely on the payscale.com survey) to quantify a return on the investment (ROI) of a college education, so any "ROI" on a college degree is meaningless. UT Austin is about to expand to the tune of a half a billion dollars with the system's fourth med school to start with and to grow from there. That, in addition to the other improvements on campus.Yeah, I despise Rick Perry's vision for public schools in this state, and I hate the idea of becoming a degree factory, something that we have slowly been moving towards for years. With a billion dollars more in the budget, the ROI isn't substantially higher in education as it should be, although it seems like both our schools are constantly in the news for research and the like consistently. UT-Austin hasn't expanded much recently due to being essentially landlocked and embedded within the area outside of downtown Austin. Is the plan to continue to build up the satellite campuses to eventually become tier 1 quality campuses (UTSA)?
Graduating with a college degree isn't in its own right an accomplishment simply because the mission of various universities differs greatly. The experience at selective universities that are intellectually challenging isn't the same as universities with open enrollment and are less academically demanding. We can all cherry pick given individuals such as Bill Gates or Michael Dell who dropped out of college and became highly successful and claim there is no value in a college education. The value of a college education isn't measured by the outliers. The value of a college education is measured by the collective contributions of those who had the opportunity to broaden their knowledge. As graduates of UT, we as a collective of individuals define the value of the UT experience.I miss the point in bad mouthing Aggies school system...thought this was about football? The lets play who's degree is more powerful game is silly in my opinion. It's about the person and what they do with it. I mean some of you guys are essentially trashing kids who attend colleges for the sake of the rivalry..as if graduating for college isn't in it's own right an accomplishment. Things like this strengthen my feeling that the Texas V Aggie game needs to come back. The rivalry is spilling into areas that it need not.
I don't see how the UT System has any other choice. There's no room for expansion on the 40 Acres. UTSA, UTA, and UTEP should benefit from TX's growing educational needs. Perry's vision for higher education needs to be reevaluated.Yeah, I despise Rick Perry's vision for public schools in this state, and I hate the idea of becoming a degree factory, something that we have slowly been moving towards for years. With a billion dollars more in the budget, the ROI isn't substantially higher in education as it should be, although it seems like both our schools are constantly in the news for research and the like consistently. UT-Austin hasn't expanded much recently due to being essentially landlocked and embedded within the area outside of downtown Austin. Is the plan to continue to build up the satellite campuses to eventually become tier 1 quality campuses (UTSA)?
UT Austin is spending a half billion dollars as a down payment on building a whole new medical college that will occupy four city blocks. How does that not qualify as expansion?I don't see how the UT System has any other choice. There's no room for expansion on the 40 Acres. UTSA, UTA, and UTEP should benefit from TX's growing educational needs. Perry's vision for higher education needs to be reevaluated.
Bigger isn't necessarily better for TAMU. But I guess y'all have a 102k seat stadium to fill now.
Good point. Can't believe I forgot about that! D'oh...UT Austin is spending a half billion dollars as a down payment on building a whole new medical college that will occupy four city blocks. How does that not qualify as expansion?
lol. Both sets of faculty and administrators are not fighting the same fight against Perry and his "reforms." Bill Powers risked his career to resist the stupidity that Perry is successfully pushing on TAMU. The administrators at A&M wrote a letter three years ago and then turned predictably meek and compliant. At the end of the day, Bill Powers and the Texas contingent will provide the leadership on the issue and that aggys will demand the benefits from the UT side's efforts in the name of "fairness." We are all familiar with the TAMU modus operandi.Sounds like a bunch of mumbo jumbo to make you feel better about your education because there is little to no tangible evidence to say that there is a massive difference between the schools in quality (not like it should matter). Aggies are supposed to be the delusional ones, but you are essentially claiming that an Aggie education or experience as faculty doesn't change lives for the better which is constantly found to be to the contrary. Our schools are in the news constantly for game changing research and bringing further grants to the schools for further exploration of useful research. However, your biggest claim basically is that UT excels in disciplines not involving a regimented approach therefore they are changing the world through thinking; these disciplines involving science and math will be the ones to change the world much more than the main areas that UT has us beat in (liberal arts). Also, I highly disagree with the idea behind this statement, "More importantly, the state of Texas will be much better off as the culture of the University of Texas gains greater separation from that of aggy". Not in whether or not it is true but rather in the premise that A&M and Texas are moving apart in every way, our schools are more intertwined than ever within academia, both sets of faculty and administrators are both fighting the same fight against Perry and there is constant feedback between the two schools through delegations. Degree holders from both schools are much more tolerable in any discussion and tend to have much more respect for each other, I would suggest you follow suit and not downgrade an education for the sole purpose of propping up your own.
Mike - I agree with you as far as the quality of degrees - either from UT or A&M, they are both the same. A&M is a fine academic school and to say otherwise is ridiculous. However, pointing out that A&M does not have a Liberal College, like UT, is no more significant then me pointing out that A&M has a College of Agriculture. So, what is your point?Sounds like a bunch of mumbo jumbo to make you feel better about your education because there is little to no tangible evidence to say that there is a massive difference between the schools in quality (not like it should matter). Aggies are supposed to be the delusional ones, but you are essentially claiming that an Aggie education or experience as faculty doesn't change lives for the better which is constantly found to be to the contrary. Our schools are in the news constantly for game changing research and bringing further grants to the schools for further exploration of useful research. However, your biggest claim basically is that UT excels in disciplines not involving a regimented approach therefore they are changing the world through thinking; these disciplines involving science and math will be the ones to change the world much more than the main areas that UT has us beat in (liberal arts). Also, I highly disagree with the idea behind this statement, "More importantly, the state of Texas will be much better off as the culture of the University of Texas gains greater separation from that of aggy". Not in whether or not it is true but rather in the premise that A&M and Texas are moving apart in every way, our schools are more intertwined than ever within academia, both sets of faculty and administrators are both fighting the same fight against Perry and there is constant feedback between the two schools through delegations. Degree holders from both schools are much more tolerable in any discussion and tend to have much more respect for each other, I would suggest you follow suit and not downgrade an education for the sole purpose of propping up your own.