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Mmm's avatar

I think one of the major problems is that Christian colleges are competing with so many other places just to get enough students... and the reason for that is, most families (even Christian ones!) are not out to find a college that is transformational: they are instead pursuing ROI, social mobility, a decent paying job, a particular major connected to a hoped-for career, or even the reinforcement of their conservative political leanings (Liberty or Hillsdale, anyone?)... most of what they really want are those transactional things. If plenty of interested applicants (and their parents) prioritized Christian transformation, our colleges wouldn't be facing the dire prospects most of them are facing (scanning the comments on CT's social media posts about that article bear this out: many Christians jump on to comment that going to a public college is just as good, if not better). Because of these dynamics most Christian colleges have (for decades) had to start joining the higher ed marketing game of highlighting these other things they provide, OR ELSE THEY'LL FAIL. So perhaps the real, prior issue is: why don't more families, especially Christian ones, care more about transformation, spiritual growth, learning Christian theology (and other fields) with faithful Christian scholars, etc.? Why don't they prioritize sending their kids to Christian colleges?

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Ben Joubert's avatar

In my area of the world, western Canada, the different Christian institutions have all started to develop these one year gap programs. They are each structured slightly different. Some partner with local churches and others are only course work. It seems there is a shift to want to provide something different from the usual degrees, to something that is more formationally minded. But it is really interesting to consider how they market these programs. Thank you so much for your reflections! It was excellent

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