Thursday, March 7, 2024

What is LSU's Legacy?

As LSU continues to bask in the media surrounding its football team’s, men’s and women's baseball teams’, women’s gymnastics team’s and now the women's basketball team's elite successes, one ranking that is sorely missing from all this excitement is LSU’s academic successes.

According to the LSU website its mission and vision statement reads as follows:

As the Flagship institution of the state, the vision of LSU is to be a leading research-extensive university, challenging undergraduate and graduate students to achieve the highest levels of intellectual and personal development. Designated as a Land, Sea and Space Grant institution, the mission of LSU is the generation, preservation, dissemination and application of knowledge and cultivation of the arts.

In implementing its mission, LSU is committed to:

  • Offering a broad array of undergraduate degree programs and extensive graduate research opportunities designed to attract and educate highly qualified undergraduate and graduate students;
  • Employing faculty who are excellent teacher-scholars, nationally competitive in research and creative activities and who contribute to a world-class knowledge base that is transferable to educational, professional, cultural and economic enterprises; and
  • Using its extensive resources to solve economic, environmental and social challenges.”

Sadly, when it comes to addressing its academic mission LSU seems to be unable to repeat it sports’ successes. In the 2024 college and university rankings published by U.S. News and World Report, LSU ranks 185 in national universities, which is a 32 point drop since 2021 where it scored 153, and a 9 point drop over last year’s ranking.  Understandably, the media glossed over this stat, reported it in the back pages of the local papers, and never did any in-depth follow up investigative reporting as to why this continual drop is occurring.

Why would you expect any different coverage since LSU is promoted as the “Flagship institution” of the state?

However, I bet if this year’s women's basketball team had suddenly started losing games, that would have been front page news, and all the sports writers would have done in-depth stories as to what was going on.

So as our new governor embarks on focusing his energy and monies on the hot topic of combating crime in our state, just maybe he ought to put as much excitement and resources into combating the educational problem in our state which has now even reached the doorsteps of the state’s premier university. But as of now, he seems to have decided to grant raises to state agency heads as yet another priority.

It’s time for LSU and the governor to decide not only what's the Flagship institution’s legacy is to be, but the state's as a whole regarding educating its youth.

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