The Pleiades—seven sisters lofted into the night sky by Zeus—shine crisply through the eyepiece of a handsome new telescope that Austin College bought to top off its two-year-old science building. David Whelan, an assistant professor of physics, describes the star cluster’s astronomical significance after Amy Anderson, who is double-majoring in physics and theater, has given visitors some background on the sisters—daughters of Atlas and a sea nymph who were pursued by the lusty Orion till Zeus put them eternally out of his reach. It’s a perfect liberal-arts-college moment—professor and student, science and the humanities—playing out under a dome open to the cosmos.
What it’s not is a moment that comes cheap. The telescope cost about $1-million all told—a lot of money for this 1,300-student college an hour north of Dallas. Mr. Whelan, who was hired last fall, says the instrument is equally valuable for research and teaching. Working alongside a professor, “it’s within a student’s reach to observe a small subset of stars, perform the data reduction, and present results at the end of a semester,” he says.
Coincidentally, the instrument also serves another purpose. From its perch on the roof of the $40-million science building, the telescope overlooks a campus quadrangle that every admissions tour crosses. So even during the day, the telescope and its dome make an important statement about the kind of college Austin is.
The science building and two student-housing projects are the biggest of several bets Austin College made during the recent recession, the most serious since the 1930s. The bets were important because the college’s administrators say that to achieve long-term financial stability, it needs to expand its enrollment, attracting more students even as competition from other colleges and universities increases. It’s a challenge many of the smallest liberal-arts colleges face.
The recession may be over, but with middle-class incomes remaining stagnant and politicians talking endlessly about the needs of the work force, liberal-arts colleges like this one find themselves operating in a marketplace much different from that of 10 years ago. Their small size, their comparatively high cost, and sometimes even their traditional pitches about the lifelong value of a liberal-arts education work against them now, making their situation even more precarious than that of many larger institutions. Small colleges are discovering—some faster than others—that they have to be acutely sensitive to the evolving whims of students and the concerns of parents, as well as nimble enough to meet the marketplace on its terms.
“Since 2008 the economic landscape has changed and become more difficult for small colleges,” says Carol Ann Mooney, president of St. Mary’s College, in Indiana, a women’s college with an enrollment of 1,500. “In general the economy is feeling very volatile. In higher ed I see a much less predictable future.”
Some small colleges, such as St. Mary’s, are expanding nontraditional offerings like graduate programs and online courses. Others, such as Austin and Randolph-Macon College, are bolstering old strengths—particularly the personal attention students get from professors—and marketing them with new vigor. A few colleges—among them Agnes Scott College—are making radical changes in their curricula and identities. And almost all are searching for ways to make bring in extra revenue from housing, summer programs, and the like.
It’s still too early to say which approaches will work, in part because each college’s circumstances are different. Nonetheless, small-college leaders are united in saying their institutions, as a group, face bigger challenges than ever before. “I was lucky enough to start my presidency in 2004,” says Ms. Mooney, of St. Mary’s. While her college has been more fortunate than some, she says, “those early years seem like a picnic now.”
Austin College had survived rough patches before the recent recession. Founded in 1849 in Huntsville, Tex., the college moved here to Sherman in 1876. Then, in 1913, a fire destroyed the rambling main building; the residents of Sherman contributed to a Greek Revival classroom building in yellow brick that is today one of the campus’s oldest structures.
Ilana Panich-Linsman for The Chronicle
Marjorie Hass, president of Austin College, stands outside new cottage-style student residences. The college has added nearly 200 new beds.
The recession didn’t hit Austin harder than other colleges, but the timing was especially awkward: The stock market crumbled after the Board of Trustees had hired a new president, Marjorie Hass, but before her first day in office, July 1, 2009. She came to Austin from Muhlenberg College, in Pennsylvania, where she had been provost, and on arriving she found that the value of the endowment was dropping—the recession eventually cost it about $27-million—salaries had been frozen, and benefits had been cut.
“There were a number of things we had to look at very quickly,” she said. “Like any liberal-arts college, there were vulnerabilities. You have a model that is very tuition dependent and dependent on contributions and endowment, and the downturn affected all three.”
She consulted the board. As she describes it, the question boiled down to, “Would we pull back and hunker down and balance the budget through cuts, or would we make some investments that we believed would enhance revenue over time?”
“There wasn’t much fat in the budget,” she says, “so we’d be cutting into the lean—and then what we would be offering would be of less value.”
“We ultimately did decide on a somewhat aggressive strategy"—in part, she thinks, because the board included “some guys in oil and gas” who had more of an appetite for risk than businesspeople back in Pennsylvania did. “They’re used to a regular cycle of ups and downs in their investments,” Ms. Hass says.
The most visible element of the revenue plan involved building a new residence hall for underclassmen and a series of handsome duplex cottages for seniors—a total of nearly 200 beds, completed in about 12 months. Enterprising donors came up with a plan to help the college avoid the tight credit market by creating a company just to finance and build the new housing and turn it over to the college. Now the additional beds bring in “about half a million a year” in revenue that would otherwise have gone to off-campus landlords, according to Ms. Hass.
Not everything went smoothly, however. “There were positions we didn’t renew,” she says, and 60 students staged a sit-in when the college decided it couldn’t afford to fill a position in classics. Another challenge was “making clear to the faculty why we could spend money on buildings"—including the $40-million science center—while the salary pool wasn’t growing.” She ended up offering “Budget 101" sessions to faculty and staff members because “they had to feel they could stand behind the integrity of the changes.” Conversations about money have been “painful at times,” she says, but “the faculty is now really well versed in the college’s finances.”
Although the college’s situation has improved significantly since, Ms. Hass is still worried about deferred maintenance—she says has a list of $15-million or $20-million of projects that could use attention—as well as about creating “a sustainable plan for faculty and staff salaries.”
Randolph-Macon College, in Ashland, Va., also hopes to grow—even though its current enrollment of 1,400 is its largest ever. Robert R. Lindgren, the president, says during a chilly golf-cart tour of the campus that the institution’s strategic plan calls for adding another 100 students, though that would put the college “at the edge of some tipping points.”
“Scale is so important,” he says. “The proportion of students who want a school as small as this is shrinking. Students want a little more commotion.” A bigger enrollment means more members for teams and clubs and spreads more widely the cost of “what our provost likes to call ‘the one-ofs’—the football coach, the president,” and the like. Perhaps most significantly, he says, more students means more choices in the dining hall. “Food is the toughest thing about our scale,” he says. “My long-term view is that places like ours need to be in the 2,000s. If you do that right, you won’t lose the connections.” But he’s quick to say he doesn’t have a precise study backing up his opinion.
What Randolph-Macon does have, though, is what it calls “The Edge,” a cleverly named advising and career-planning program carrying out the strategic plan’s recommendation that the college focus on student outcomes. The program was inspired by a Wake Forest University career-development effort that Mr. Lindgren read about in this newspaper in 2010, prompting a visit to Wake Forest’s vice president for career development, Andy Chan. Afterward, Randolph-Macon ramped up faculty advising and added new career-oriented elements, including a “boot camp” weekend in which sophomores retreat to a nearby hotel to polish their personal narratives, get advice from alumni, and attend a dinner designed help them with etiquette.
“We took advantage of a lot of things we were doing anyway, but we talk about them in a ‘brand’ way,” says Mr. Lindgren, adding that the goal is to “convey to students and their parents that we care about what happens when they leave here.” Apparently it’s working: “I’ve had parents stop me and say, ‘That’s a game changer,’ " he says.
Indeed, many small institutions see little hope of prospering if they continue to offer just what they always have. “Being known as a fine women’s liberal-arts college in the South didn’t cut it,” says Elizabeth Kiss, president of Agnes Scott College, in Atlanta (her last name is pronounced “quiche”). She says the college needs to add at least 200 students to its current enrollment of 900.
Doing that, though, requires persuading high-school women who aren’t considering women’s colleges—Ms. Kiss calls them “the over-my-dead-body group"—to see something that makes Agnes Scott worth applying to. After working with consultants who tested several ideas in a series of “simulated modeling decision” interviews with high-school students, the college settled on repositioning itself around global learning and leadership, and also around connecting students with careers.
The college calls its new approach “Summit,” adding the tag line “Leading Everywhere,” and it’s set to start this coming fall with the goal of “preparing every student to be an effective change agent in a global society.” As soon as they arrive on the campus, Ms. Kiss says, students will spend three days in a leadership program before starting one of 10 new first-year courses, each of which includes a weeklong trip during the spring semester. Every student will also assemble her own board of advisers, with a faculty member, a staff member, a career mentor (often an alumna), and a peer. The student’s progress will be captured in a digital portfolio, which the president describes as a way of “getting students to do that where-am-I-heading work.”
“It’s really exciting, and it’s a gamble,” says Ms. Kiss. “And it’s energized our campus.” That’s a good thing, because the shift requires the trustees to approve significant expenditures, the faculty to make big changes in the curriculum, and the admissions office to market a program that’s still being designed. “It’s looking really promising,” she says. “We’re well ahead on enrolled students.”
Not every small college feels compelled to roll out a game changer, of course—some are comfortable. Whittier College, in California, has grown from 1,250 students in 2005 to nearly 1,700. “We’re trying to march it back a little,” says Sharon D. Herzberger, the president. She gives some of the credit for the growth to the same recession that caused problems for other colleges, because appropriations cutbacks forced California’s big state universities to trim their offerings, meaning it took some students extra time get into courses they needed to graduate.
“That helped us. Parents would say that four years of Whittier was not that much more than five and a half years of the UC down the road,” she says. Even so, “we’re trying to be creative in helping people in our area keep costs down.” Among other approaches is encouraging students to earn credits elsewhere before enrolling at Whittier.
Even colleges that don’t have big financial worries keep a close eye on their markets as well as on national trends. “Scripps is in good shape, but I do see the tension with access,” says Lori Bettison-Varga, president of Scripps College, a California women’s college that is part of the Claremont Colleges consortium. “The challenge for us is the broad socioeconomic range—we’re fighting the barbell,” she says, meaning that while poor and rich students are fairly easy to enroll, “our institutions are very much out of reach to the middle class.”
Austin has a $136-million endowment—bigger than those of many colleges its size, but not so big that it doesn’t depend heavily on tuition revenue. The latest strategic plan calls for adding 150 students, for a total enrollment of 1,450, says Ms. Hass, but “we may want to grow larger than that.” The campus could accommodate 1,500 without major changes, she says, though it would have to use classrooms and other spaces more efficiently.
But where will those additional students come from? Austin mostly recruits here in Texas, where the public universities have both world-class reputations and big-time football programs that are magnets for students. And in a region with few liberal-arts institutions, many students and their families have only a limited idea of what a liberal-arts education is, and even less understanding of why it should cost more than attending a university with 300-student courses. What’s more, consultants are now telling colleges from states with less-healthy demographics to try recruiting in Texas—which is “very bad advice,” Ms. Hass jokes.
“We focus a great deal on outcomes for our students,” she tells a crowd of potential applicants and their parents in a campus auditorium during one of the college’s admissions events. She says Austin students almost all finish their degrees in four years—rather than linger on campus on their parents’ dime—thanks to Austin’s small classes and professors who know students’ names. “At big universities,” she says, gesturing with her reading glasses as she paces the stage, “faculty members have other responsibilities, and undergraduate teaching is kind of an afterthought.”
As it strives to remain competitive, Austin has beefed up its marketing efforts—most recently adding a student-staffed call center, which the admissions and development offices share. And, like many other colleges, Austin considered a “price reset"—cutting its $48,000 sticker price to some slightly-less-daunting number and then reducing aid accordingly—but administrators didn’t see that it would improve the bottom line.
“We do have some students from families of significant means,” Ms. Hass says, and there didn’t seem to be any point to charging them less when even at the current rate they’re not paying the full cost of their education (gifts and endowment income make up the balance). Plus, she says, many families take pride in the size of the aid package offered to their son or daughter.
Still, she says, “there will be dads with tears in their eyes who say, ‘I know this is the right place for my daughter,’ and there are times we have to say, ‘You’re right, there’s no way our aid will stretch that far.’ "
Her real concern, though, is long term: She sees the American middle class becoming ever weaker, and she worries that the implications could be drastic for small colleges devoted to giving students from ordinary families a lifelong set of intellectual skills and to broadening their horizons.
“Schools like ours have essentially been middle-class operations,” Ms. Hass says, and if those families disappear, many small liberal-arts colleges could disappear with them. “It’s the middle class,” she says, “that has these aspirations.”
Lawrence Biemiller writes about a variety of usual and unusual higher-education topics. Reach him at lawrence.biemiller@chronicle.com.