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THE FINANCIAL DIVIDE
General Studies Students at Columbia
David Hylden
n Sept. 29, 2006,
Columbia University launched The Columbia Campaign and subsequently
made history by embarking on the largest academic fund-raising
endeavor to date. Through an interactive simulcast relayed to
audiences in London, Hong Kong and New York, President Bollinger
announced that over the next five years Columbia will be seeking $4
billion in donations. This money will be allocated in a variety of
ways to enhance Columbia University’s role as a premier
academic and research institution able to benefit the world around
it. Realizing that the University’s students are Columbia’s
key assets, a large portion of this money will be allocated to the
undergrad financial aid program. This was the subject of a special
e-mail sent out to the entire Columbia community, in which President
Bollinger proudly announced that at the beginning of the next school
year, tuition would be free for those families with an annual income
of less than $50,000. The announcement was cause for celebration, as
underprivileged students will have a better chance of enjoying the
Columbia experience and fewer students will graduate overburdened
with debt.
In
addition to helping students better afford their education here, this
program allows the administration to show the rest of the world that
Columbia University cares about socioeconomic diversity. However,
this apparently benevolent offer may not be what the administration
wants its students and potential donors to believe. Unlike their Ivy
League counterparts Harvard and Princeton, Columbia has not offered
to eliminate any of the other costs students incur, such as room and
board. Considering the amount of aid that would go to families who
qualify for this program – around $35,000 – and the aid
offered by other Ivies, the offer actually isn’t that generous
at all. This aside, our real concern as students and activists
should be the troubling ramifications this offer will create. This
policy aimed at improving socioeconomic diversity on campus may in
fact perpetuate discrimination in our community by leaving out one
group of Columbia students. As students concerned with equality,
whether in relation to the Manhattanville expansion or immigrant
rights, we cannot accept policies that will hinder our efficacy as a
united student body interested in pursuing knowledge and effecting
change within our world.
Of
Columbia’s undergraduate schools, the tuition offer previously
mentioned was only extended to Columbia College (CC) and the Fu
Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS); General
Studies (GS) was excluded. GS is the undergraduate school for
non-traditional students, or those who did not follow a conventional
path to college. While they are typically older, with an average age
of 29, they take the same classes and receive the same diploma as any
other undergraduate. Unlike the small percentage of CC or SEAS
students who would qualify for this new “free tuition”
offer, a large percentage of GS would benefit. GS students were
irate upon learning that they would not reap the benefits of this
offer. Echoing his fellow GS students, Niko Cunningham claimed this
was merely further evidence that the University sees them as
“second-class citizens.”
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Why
is it, then, that GS was left out of the new program? Is the
administration really just seeking to ensure that underprivileged
students? Continue struggling to finance their own education?
Furthermore, is this simply the remainder of a history of
discriminatory policies, or the result of politics within our own
bureaucratic system? The answer seems to be a little of both. In
addition to the politics behind competing with other Ivies, as the
Dean of GS, Dean Awn says, “we are victims of our own history.”
In
response to many questions and accusations from a disgruntled GS
student body, the University provided an overarching structural
reason for GS’s exclusion. The GS financial aid structure
awards merit-based benefits, rather than the need-based benefits
awarded by CC, SEAS, Barnard, and Jewish Theological Seminary. Thus,
they claim that the stipulation for eligibility being need-based
(annual incomes less than $50,000) is incompatible with the current
GS structure. While this may sound reasonable, further exploration
implies that both political and historical aspects may actually be
the key motivations behind this decision.
Dean
Awn explains that with an average age of 29, a need-based policy
would be “intrusive.” He says our students “would
find it embarrassing if not strange to go back to their parents and
tell them to report all of their assets.” This is probably
true; however, GS students are already required to report their
financial details through the Free Application for Federal Student
Aid. According to the government, a student is considered to be
independent if he is 24 years old, and thus most GS students are
categorized as independents. GS, just like CC and SEAS, utilizes the
FAFSA to determine a student’s ability to pay the necessary
costs with the Estimated Family Contribution (EFC). While GS awards
scholarships based mostly upon merit, they do slightly factor in
need, and the EFC is also used to determine eligibility for
government grants and loans, which are allocated by Columbia. Thus,
the administration already has the information necessary to
administer the new program with ease; they simply need choose to
abide by federally determined structures which prevent 29-year-old
students from receiving the finances of their parents.
To this point, Dean
Awn argues that fighting for similar aid structures is not what
students should be striving for. Instead he says “it would be
much more to the advantage of the GS student population to argue that
the equity issue ought to be the amount of money and the percentage
of tuition available for financial aid.” In other words,
efforts for equality should be made so as to ensure that GS is able
to return the same percentage of tuition to their students in
financial aid as CC and SEAS. Dean Awn describes this disparity as
“a serious problem.”
Of
the collective tuition that CC charges its students each year, 29
percent is paid by the school in the form of financial aid. In
contrast, GS only offers 20 percent. In 2003, first-years received
an average of $27,203 in aid, including $5,975 in work study and
federal loans. Thus, these CC first-year students received an
average of $21,228 that they will not have to pay back. In contrast
to this, GS students begin with relatively small scholarships that
may increase a few thousand dollars annually based upon proven merit.
Aside from a handful of named scholarships, the largest grant award
for GS students is $18,000. Thus, the few GS students lucky to reach
this scholarship by their senior year are still receiving $3,000 less
than the average first-year CC student.
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This disparity becomes
evidently burdensome upon the GS student when one looks at student
debt upon graduation. Last year the average graduating CC debt was
$16,358. The vast majority of GS students take out more loans
annually, and the administration concedes a GS graduating debt is
likely over $50,000, with many students approaching $80,000 or
$90,000. This disparity has dire consequences upon the GS graduate.
Dean Awn wisely points out that one should also consider the parents’
debt when looking at CC students. While this is true, an important
consequence of this disparity still remains – GS students must
choose their future jobs based upon an ability to afford loan
payments, while CC students can engage in fulfilling and/or
low-paying jobs that are beneficial to the global community.
The
administration’s policy of discriminating against GS students
has negative effects upon the community outside of Columbia. The
administration explicitly states that they want Columbia to be a
model for other academic institutions around the world, creating
global citizens that can help to better our planet. What the
administration does not mention is that studies have shown students
receiving grant aid are much more likely to donate money back to
their alma mater than students who take out loans. Considering that
the new financial aid offer excludes GS and doesn’t help
low-income Columbia students as much as it claims to, the University
is most likely utilizing this offer not as a means to increase
diversity, but as a political asset with which to increase donations.
As
students who care about how Columbia affects the surrounding
community and the world at large, we must be concerned with policies
of discrimination taking place right here at Columbia. The University
constantly reminds GS students that they are equal to their CC/SEAS
counterparts; it is just that each student has been arbitrarily
allocated to a specific school, but these current policies are only
widening the gap between schools. As a united student body Columbia
could be much more effective in its endeavors to create change in the
world around us. We should not let the remnants of past prejudices
or current administrative policies create disparities between
students. As Susannah says, “the soul of this university cannot
survive” if the administration continues to treat GS as
second-class citizens. We do not have to be the “victims of
our own history.” Together there can be equality, and together
there can be growth and a hope for greater change in the future.
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