NEW YORK — Tania Tetlow has earned a reputation as a trailblazer. She became the first woman and first layperson to serve as president of two Jesuit schools — first at Loyola University New Orleans and now at Fordham University in New York City.
Fordham had previously been led by Catholic priests — all male, of course — since its founding in 1841.
Tetlow has thrived in these barrier-breaking roles — even becoming the first Fordham president to sing the national anthem at Yankee Stadium. But she is acutely aware of the challenges facing her — and other college presidents — as they grapple with tight budgets, political attacks on higher education, and divisions within their student bodies arising from the Israel-Hamas war.
What's the toughest challenge, as she heads into her third academic year at Fordham?
''How much there is to juggle,'' she replied in an interview.
''These are enormously complicated institutions with so many different constituencies,'' she said. ''How do you navigate the latest controversy while still moving the university forward?"
Already, she has weathered criticism from some students for increasing the cost of tuition by more than 10% over the past two years. Tuition, plus fees, will cost nearly $63,000 for full-time undergraduates for 2024-25; room and board could add roughly $18,000 to $26,000 more.
''Bridging the gap between what they can afford to pay and the excellence they deserve is getting harder and harder,'' Tetlow said. ''It's important to understand those goals are in tension with each other.''