Disenrollers
Disenrollers refers to individuals or entities actively engaged in the process of removing or withdrawing others from a system, program, or organization. This action often entails terminating memberships, canceling subscriptions, or otherwise severing affiliations. The motivations behind disenrolling can vary significantly, ranging from dissatisfaction and economic reasons to ethical concerns or programmatic shifts. The term highlights the active agency in separating individuals or groups from a previously established association. They take an active role in pulling those who are already enrolled. Often associated with actions taken by a larger organization on the members.
Disenrollers meaning with examples
- The telecommunications company, facing financial losses, began acting as disenrollers by actively contacting subscribers to cancel their unused services, increasing their revenue by shedding low-paying customers. They wanted more money and did not value the clients. The impact was felt by numerous families in poverty. The goal was to save the company.
- Following the scandal, the university faced a wave of students becoming disenrollers. Many withdrew from the program, disgusted by the administration's handling of the situation and the erosion of trust, and sought alternative academic pathways, leading to an existential crisis for the university.
- As the social media platform tightened its content moderation policies, it simultaneously became a disenroller for many, as users moved to more open platforms, leading to a decline in active users as censorship increased and those that stayed had less freedom, it showed the control had gone too far.
- The government, due to the falling birth rate, acted as a disenroller by discontinuing enrollment for school funding that was related to a previous period of higher population. This decision streamlined spending but negatively affected schools with smaller populations and less funding.