Bradley, among many schools, badly botched how it handled the pandemic years. Seeing the policies they put in place and how they were both restrictive and unfair to the student body could not have helped. I certainly wouldn't have sent my kids to BU in 2020 through 2022 based upon the required steps for enrollment and life on campus.
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I'm an avid fan of Bradley basketball. I am not a fan of Standiford. He took full control when a relatively minor basketball issue arose, gag-ordered the entire staff, then threw a player (the best player Bradley’s had in a decade) under the bus, yanked his scholarship, and ran him off. Didn’t even bother to wait til the player was completely exonerated of the false charges
(except a minor team-rule curfew violation). Torpedoed 2 seasons.
Anyway, he’s now been in full charge for 3 1/2 years, so if a crisis appears now, you can’t hardly blame anyone but him. When Glasser created a massive enrollment decline, Roberts corrected it fully in the first year he was here.
BU continued with record freshman enrollment in 2016, 2017 & 2018 to completely recover from the Glasser debacle - https://www.pjstar.com/story/news/ed...g/20063277007/
Roberts retired in early 2020, the bad decisions during Covid were not his. They were Liberty & Standiford.
Also check an old thread on this forum titled “Bradley freshman enrollment”
Especially this --> LINK ... and again in 2017- LINK .... and again in 2018 - LINKLast edited by yoda; 08-03-2023, 08:12 AM.
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Originally posted by yoda View PostI'm an avid fan of Bradley basketball. I am not a fan of Standiford. He took full control when a relatively minor basketball issue arose, gag-ordered the entire staff, then threw a player (the best player Bradley’s had in a decade) under the bus, yanked his scholarship, and ran him off. Didn’t even bother to wait til the player was completely exonerated of the false charges
(except a minor team-rule curfew violation). Torpedoed 2 seasons.
Anyway, he’s now been in full charge for 3 1/2 years, so if a crisis appears now, you can’t hardly blame anyone but him. When Glasser created a massive enrollment decline, Roberts corrected it fully in the first year he was here.
BU continued with record freshman enrollment in 2016, 2017 & 2018 to completely recover from the Glasser debacle - https://www.pjstar.com/story/news/ed...g/20063277007/
Roberts retired in early 2020, the bad decisions during Covid were not his. They were Liberty & Standiford.
Also check an old thread on this forum titled “Bradley freshman enrollment”
Especially this --> LINK ... and again in 2017- LINK .... and again in 2018 - LINKThinking is the hardest work, that is why so few people do it. -Henry Ford
Yeah...I've been in college for a while now and I'm pretty sure that awesomest is not a word. -Andrew E.
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Both my wife and I attended BU in the 1980's. Peoria was no great shakes then, but it has gone downhill exponentially since then. Every time I go back, it looks more sad and depressing. When our daughter was looking at schools, I didn't even recommend it to her. It didn't help that even with both of us as alumni, there was very little financial aid coming from that.
Throw on top of that the miserable weather from late October into April (which is when students are there), the run-down areas and crime immediately off campus, and there is very little to recommend the place anymore. Oh, and it is in Illinois, which the grand governor of has just signed legislation to let illegal aliens apply to become police officers. If that alone doesn't speak volumes, I don't know what does.
And Sully's closed in 2013 and the last time I was there, it was still closed. Looking in the windows is like looking into a times capsule from the 1980's. Just saying.
It pains me to say this, but Bradley may be going to way of a number of small private universities in nowhere towns - bankruptcy and closing.
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Originally posted by battlebasset View PostBoth my wife and I attended BU in the 1980's. Peoria was no great shakes then, but it has gone downhill exponentially since then. Every time I go back, it looks more sad and depressing. When our daughter was looking at schools, I didn't even recommend it to her. It didn't help that even with both of us as alumni, there was very little financial aid coming from that.
Throw on top of that the miserable weather from late October into April (which is when students are there), the run-down areas and crime immediately off campus, and there is very little to recommend the place anymore. Oh, and it is in Illinois, which the grand governor of has just signed legislation to let illegal aliens apply to become police officers. If that alone doesn't speak volumes, I don't know what does.
And Sully's closed in 2013 and the last time I was there, it was still closed. Looking in the windows is like looking into a times capsule from the 1980's. Just saying.
It pains me to say this, but Bradley may be going to way of a number of small private universities in nowhere towns - bankruptcy and closing.Thinking is the hardest work, that is why so few people do it. -Henry Ford
Yeah...I've been in college for a while now and I'm pretty sure that awesomest is not a word. -Andrew E.
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Originally posted by battlebasset View PostBoth my wife and I attended BU in the 1980's. Peoria was no great shakes then, but it has gone downhill exponentially since then. Every time I go back, it looks more sad and depressing. When our daughter was looking at schools, I didn't even recommend it to her. It didn't help that even with both of us as alumni, there was very little financial aid coming from that.
Throw on top of that the miserable weather from late October into April (which is when students are there), the run-down areas and crime immediately off campus, and there is very little to recommend the place anymore. Oh, and it is in Illinois, which the grand governor of has just signed legislation to let illegal aliens apply to become police officers. If that alone doesn't speak volumes, I don't know what does.
And Sully's closed in 2013 and the last time I was there, it was still closed. Looking in the windows is like looking into a times capsule from the 1980's. Just saying.
It pains me to say this, but Bradley may be going to way of a number of small private universities in nowhere towns - bankruptcy and closing.
This all gave me a good chuckle. Get serious. On all of this hogwash.
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Originally posted by battlebasset View PostBoth my wife and I attended BU in the 1980's. Peoria was no great shakes then, but it has gone downhill exponentially since then. Every time I go back, it looks more sad and depressing. When our daughter was looking at schools, I didn't even recommend it to her. It didn't help that even with both of us as alumni, there was very little financial aid coming from that.
Throw on top of that the miserable weather from late October into April (which is when students are there), the run-down areas and crime immediately off campus, and there is very little to recommend the place anymore. Oh, and it is in Illinois, which the grand governor of has just signed legislation to let illegal aliens apply to become police officers. If that alone doesn't speak volumes, I don't know what does.
And Sully's closed in 2013 and the last time I was there, it was still closed. Looking in the windows is like looking into a times capsule from the 1980's. Just saying.
It pains me to say this, but Bradley may be going to way of a number of small private universities in nowhere towns - bankruptcy and closing.
But completely failing on two of the last three hirings for leadership has been very costly, then doubling down and giving those horrible, failed leaders long term, bloated contracts and allowing them to make such horrid moves apparently without oversight. The single biggest key to the success Roberts had was to expand the Nursing degree program and promote it better to prospective enrollees. The increase in nursing students in 2016-2018 almost single handedly corrected the disaster in enrollment caused by Glasser. Then when Roberts left they slashed funding for the programs, made work conditions unbearable for the best faculty members, turned a blind eye towards further developments and improvements in the department, then axed the right people & brought in the wrong ones causing many of the remaining best people to look elsewhere.
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Or put some people on the board who care and aren’t just there to pad their resumes.
I have spoken to Board members who don’t know or care what’s really going on and just to get the meetings over quick by rubber stamping things. That led to massive disaster under JKG.
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If while you’re looking into Sully’s you turn around you’ll see a sparkling OSF headquarters fresh off a $150 million renovation. Sully’s itself and the adjacent property is slated to be replaced by a $57 million hotel/apartment building.BRADLEY BASKETBALL
-2 NCAA Title Games
-3 NCAA Elite Eights
-4 NCAA Sweet 16s
-4 NIT Championships
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Originally posted by Mikovio View PostIf while you’re looking into Sully’s you turn around you’ll see a sparkling OSF headquarters fresh off a $150 million renovation. Sully’s itself and the adjacent property is slated to be replaced by a $57 million hotel/apartment building.
Here is an article with more info-
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Originally posted by JMM28 View Post
This all gave me a good chuckle. Get serious. On all of this hogwash.
Don't misunderstand. I hope I'm wrong. But also just got this on August 1, perhaps some on this board did as well from the "Bradley Connect" email about the current budget shortfall:
These challenges have compounded to create a budget shortfall of $13 million for fiscal year 2023, which is nearly 10% of Bradley University’s overall operating budget. That 10% budget deficit is projected to continue into future years if no measures are taken.
Sounds like they are taking it fairly serious, and cuts are coming. If it's hogwash, please open your checkbook and let them know they have nothing to worry about. Because obviously not enough people have.Last edited by battlebasset; 08-05-2023, 11:41 AM.
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I don’t know the ratio of administrators to students at Bradley and teaching faculty, but most schools and government institutions are overloaded with administrative staffing. Look at Stanford University. They have 16,000 administers to 17,000 students and 2300 faculty. That’s according to Wall Street Journal.
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Originally posted by molar50 View PostI don’t know the ratio of administrators to students at Bradley and teaching faculty, but most schools and government institutions are overloaded with administrative staffing. Look at Stanford University. They have 16,000 administers to 17,000 students and 2300 faculty. That’s according to Wall Street Journal.
did you know that Joanne Glasser had someone on her staff whose job & responsibility it was to dig for, scour & read message board posts daily (even hourly), to identify those that were considered hostile or negative towards her administration or her actions, then to try to identify the poster responsible and confront them - even threaten them. I am pretty sure even the administrators of this message board were called into their executive offices and scolded & threatened - am I right? I am pretty sure that's a lousy use of Bradley's well-paid personnel. I was even present at a Bradley event once when I heard AD Mike Cross ask Dave Reynolds if he knew the identity of a certain message board poster.
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