<p>Ucb,
I don’t agree that a school like Northwestern, with a distribution like the following is a regional school. </p>
<p>40% , Midwest
21% , Mid Atlantic
16% , South/Southwest
15% , West
6% , Northeast
7% , Non US</p>
<p>One can’t deny that a meaningful % of Northwestern students come from its home region, but a regional school? I definitely don’t think so. </p>
<p>This geographic pattern is the case for most of the privates in the USWNR Top 25-30. And I would certainly not consider these schools as anywhere near as regional as the vast majority of publics. </p>
<p>alex
Of course, the physical plants at nearly all of the colleges in the USA have changed/improved and many in extremely impressive fashion. If you’ve been around to many US colleges in the last decade, then you know that the most common feature at all of these schools is the ongoing construction of new buildings! </p>
<p>I think you also neglect the evolution of the student populations at these colleges as well as the resources that fund them. State Us are obliged to keep up with the population changes in their states and the operating pattern is usually that every year the schools are continually being asked to do more with less. While the population growth in Michigan has likely been miniscule, if not negative, I’d still be willing to wager that U Michigan’s undergraduate population is up sharply over 25 years ago. U Virginia makes that information public and its undergraduate enrollment has increased by 25% over that time. </p>
<p>Over the last 25 years, all schools have almost certainly seen some growth in undergraduate enrollment, but the key question is whether the colleges have maintained/increased services for this larger student population. If you or anyone has it, I’d be interested to see how enrollments have changed at schools across the USA, public and private.</p>
<p>In addition, there have been evolutionary declines in staffing levels at many colleges over the last 25 years and I believe that this trend has been more prominent for the State Us. This has coincided with an inexorable decline in state funding at most State Us. As a result, I’m guessing that measurements like average class size, student/faculty ratios, etc. at State Us have also deteriorated over that time vis-</p>