Tuesday, November 30, 2010

NYC College Life: Backpacks Among the Briefcases

Ace! NewsFlash 

Backpacks Among the Briefcases: NYC College Life




ROOM TO SPREAD OUT? NOT HERE The New School “campus” blends into the office and apartment buildings around it. Even New Yorkers aren’t sure exactly where it is.

HANNAH WOLFE traveled to school by air last year. It required precise timing, a skill she honed when she and her friends moved to what they called Rosy — a sprawling apartment complex on Roosevelt Island that doubles as a dorm. All her classes at Marymount Manhattan College were on the Upper East Side, and to get there, she took two buses and a tram that glides 250 feet above the East River and offers postcard views of Midtown Manhattan.

“It still feels like an exciting event,” Ms. Wolfe, a sophomore, said during a rush-hour ride to class. “The problem is it takes so much effort. To do anything in the city, you have to figure out how to get there and when to leave and what to wear — because everyone else in the city is so ‘put together’ you don’t want to stick out — and at the end of the day, you’re just exhausted.”
The austere, marble lobby of Ms. Wolfe’s apartment building, populated by United Nations workers and young families, gives no indication that students live inside. As a college student in New York, Ms. Wolfe said, “you definitely skip a step and move into this weird adult stage of life.”
Over the next month, more than 64,000 incoming freshmen will descend on New York City’s campuses. Nearly 44,000 of them will come from beyond the five boroughs, with dreamy expectations of what their lives will be like — four years of clubbing with celebrities, sashaying around art galleries. While acclimating to the culture of any campus is trying, the transition to New York City poses particularly daunting challenges. In exchange for culture and independence, students give up the comfort of a built-in, clearly defined community, which can leave them feeling isolated and lost amidst more than eight million strangers. On weekends, Ms. Wolfe can easily go the day without encountering people she knows, so she makes a point of talking to the bus driver each morning. “It’s so anonymous,” she said, “that it just feels good to reach out to someone.”
Lacking the traditional accoutrements — the gates, quads and row of fraternity and sorority houses — residential colleges and universities like Marymount Manhattan, New York University, Cooper Union and the New School are nested within the city. Even New Yorkers don’t know exactly where the New School is; its sleek, boxy buildings fit neatly into the downtown office and apartment buildings surrounding them. (Paul Piekarz, who describes himself as one of the few New School students who doesn’t enjoy being “ironic with my health,” can pick out the school buildings by the smokers outside of them.)
Marymount Manhattan
UPTOWN Marymount Manhattan, on the Upper East Side.

DOWNTOWN New School students hang out where they can, including the courtyard of its liberal arts college, top. Construction of a student center is under way, one of several major projects that would expand the city’s campuses.

THE QUAD New York University students have made Washington Square Park their own, much to the chagrin of townies.
“When you are dealing with a nontraditional campus where the campus is a collection of buildings,” said Tracy Robin, assistant vice president for student health and support at the New School, “it can be hard to figure out who to connect with, and where. Going to school here is one of many identities students take on, but being in the city is often the first.”
To Taylor Horak, who left her home state of Virginia for the first time when she came to N.Y.U. last fall, passing as a New Yorker quickly became a point of pride. I spoke with Ms. Horak and her roommate, Caroline Ballard, who is also from Virginia, several times throughout the school year as they adjusted to living in the city. They began by dressing differently — more layers, darker colors and whimsical accessories. Inspired by professors who Ms. Horak describes as “all crazy and eccentric and obsessed with whatever they teach,” they went to museums and art galleries and began watching morbid independent films. By second semester they were accustomed to the anonymity of the streets and no longer felt compelled to stare when a man waltzed by with a cat on his head. Even so, Ms. Horak says she feels like a “glorified tourist.”
Ms. Ballard worries that New Yorkers think she and other students are “infiltrating.” Recently, she watched as a “townie” erupted at a campus tour guide who was loudly recounting the charms of the neighborhood. “You don’t really live here,” the woman yelled. “You’re just visiting for four years!”
THE term “college town” appears ill-fitting for a metropolis like New York, but in fact higher education exerts a huge force on the city. According to the Center for an Urban Future, which studies New York’s economic development, the city gained 17,000 jobs in higher education over the last decade, and its colleges and universities employ more people than in the entire Boston-Cambridge-Quincy area, typically thought of as the country’s center of higher education. Half a million students attend a postsecondary program in New York City. A recent study by the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership found that there are more students in downtown Brooklyn than in all of Cambridge, Mass. And according to the latest Princeton Review student survey, New York City is home to three of the top five colleges ranked for being in “great college towns.” (The other two “towns” were San Francisco and Washington.)
To meet increased student demand, urban universities keep stretching beyond the perimeters of their campuses. Columbia University plans to turn about 17 acres in West Harlem now peppered with meat packing plants, storage warehouses and car repair shops into an extension of its campus, which stands at a slight remove from the rest of the city. It hopes to see 16 new buildings for science, business and the arts rise over several decades. The New School is beginning construction next month on a 16-story, bronze-and-glass dormitory and student center. And N.Y.U. recently unveiled plans to expand its footprint by more than 40 percent over the next two decades.
N.Y.U. is the city’s largest private university, and one of the most desired in the country. Since the early 1990s, the applicant pool has nearly quadrupled, and the acceptance rate has more than halved. But the university’s steady expansion has rankled longtime residents. Andrew Berman, executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, worries that “more and more, the Village is coming to feel like a company town.”
The blocks surrounding Washington Square Park, once the most glamorous place to be poetic and poor, now have a homogenous flavor, and many restaurants, stores and bars have been established with students in mind. These so-called N.Y.U. superblocks are full of ethnic restaurants that are cheap, cute, quick and loud. The waiters serve sugary, alcoholic drinks, and they tend not to object that the ID’s handed to them are a little too colorful or flimsy.
Most N.Y.U. dorms are clustered near Washington Square Park and Union Square, and the introductions to the buildings on the university Web site can read like a Craigslistposting: “swanky address on Fifth Avenue,” “amazing views of the Empire State Building,” proximity to “trendy SoHo neighborhoods.” Such surroundings can make traditional campus life seem irrelevant. The university has no football team, and the Greek scene, which is oriented around downtown bars and clubs, is slight; many students don’t realize it even exists.
Halfway through freshman year, Adriana Candelas, now entering her senior year and president of Theta Phi Beta sorority, says she thought of transferring because she felt so dislocated.
On weekends, she and a few other freshmen on her floor would go to dinner on the superblocks, or to a movie or play, and then come back and hang out in their hallway. But she couldn’t find a way to expand her relationships beyond the floor of her dorm. Because the university is embedded in the city, she rarely encountered familiar faces between classes.
Joining a sorority helped relieve the loneliness, she says, but being a sorority president does not carry much cachet. “When we ask freshmen if they’re interested in Greek life,” she said, “they make a crazy face and run away.” She says she feels a much stronger connection to her sorority than to the university as a whole, whose scattered buildings and thorny bureaucracy can make it hard to get things done. “I feel like the one common connection between students is that we kind of ‘hate on’ N.Y.U. together,” she said.
Most fraternity and sorority houses are on the top three floors of a residence hall in Chinatown, next to an enormous nail salon and a homeless shelter, and the only sign that they occupy these rooms are Greek letters on their closed doors. Like many things in New York, the setup is transient. Because the societies don’t own their own houses, the sisters must adhere to the rules of Residential Life and switch rooms just like any group of students. At the end of each year, Ms. Candelas and her sorority sisters pack up their photographs (a diverse group of women laughing, dancing, hugging, pointing fingers at one another) and the motivational sayings ( “Unconditional,” “Genuine,” “Too Legit to Quit”) pasted all over their walls. Come fall, they will set up the sorority house all over again.
IN 2006, N.Y.U. commissioned Elizabeth Swados of the Tisch School of Arts to turn the sermons of freshman orientation into something more palatable, and she came up with “The Reality Show: N.Y.U.,” a piece of musical theater with topical skits often written by students: among them, the Crystal Meth Song, the Gay Ho-Down, the Condom Song and the Confidence Dirge. This year, all 4,500 or so freshmen must attend at Radio City Music Hall. (Last year, the event was held in Madison Square Garden.) Ms. Swados is versed in the art of listening; she wrote the Tony Award-nominated musical “Runaways,” which she also directed, using real-life narratives gleaned from workshops with children who lived on the streets.
Each summer Ms. Swados talks with provosts, mental-health counselors and her cast — students from Tisch — to identify topics that should be updated for the revue. The skits offer bits of urban wisdom: don’t walk barefoot in Washington Square Park; keep your wallet hidden; be skeptical of men on Broadway selling what appear to be remarkably cheap show tickets.
Staci Ripkey, director for orientation and transition programs at N.Y.U.’s College of Arts and Science, urges freshmen to strive toward balance. “Students can be overwhelmed by having too many options,” she said. “On smaller campuses, on the weekend, you go to the local restaurant. But here there’s so much, they don’t know where to start.” Some hole up in their rooms. Others become distracted by their surroundings and never go to class.
At many urban universities, a swift education in city living is built into the curriculum. Marymount Manhattan gives freshmen one academic credit for, essentially, learning to function as a student in New York. The mandatory semester-long course requires that students learn the subway system, give oral presentations on a Manhattan neighborhood, and develop their résumés — to take advantage of internship opportunities in the city.
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation recently awarded Marymount a $60,000 grant to incorporate the city into courses — say, a tour of the Tenement Museum in a sociology class or a visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art for a painting class.
The New School’s small, discussion-based classes also directly engage with the city and require numerous field trips to cultural events in the five boroughs. Recent course offerings include “Punk and Noise,” “Chinese Art in N.Y.C.” and “Personal Map-Making in New York.”
FOUNDED in 1919 by intellectuals who wanted a progressive alternative to the traditional university, the New School has recently become more widely known — 74 percent of its students come from outside New York State, and the applicant pool has increased by 41 percent since 2004. Around that time, the New School embarked on a rebranding campaign, dropping the “university” from its name and adopting a logo that looks like it was written in spray paint. Under the presidency of Bob Kerrey, the former Nebraska governor and senator, there have been protests and building takeovers by students who considered his priorities out of tune with the university’s founding ideals.
The New School is still in a state of transition. For many years it was primarily a commuter school for adults who weren’t necessarily interested in a college community. But the disperse nature of the university seems to push some students away: about 20 percent of freshmen don’t return for a second year (38 percent leave Marymount Manhattan after their first year, though less than 10 percent leave Columbia or N.Y.U.). Two years ago, the student union at the New School’s liberal arts college, Eugene Lang, proposed a solution. They decided that a warm and fuzzy mascot — a panda — could instill a sense of community and school spirit. One of the authors of the ill-fated proposal explained the choice to the school newspaper: “I believe that New York City, one of the most heavily populated places in the world, can also be one of the loneliest.”
Mr. Piekarz, a junior from suburban Chicago who transferred to the New School last year from Marymount Manhattan, on East 71st Street, says he has only a few friends at college but prefers it that way. “I love talking to strangers,” he said. “I don’t need to be tethered to a big group of friends like I would at a state school.”
Marymount Manhattan and the New School, he said, reflect the ethos of the neighborhood surrounding the campus. “As I see it, the Marymount crowd saw ‘Sex and the City’ and wanted to be part of it,” he said. “And the New School students saw images of the downtown art scene in the ’80s.”
One recent Friday night, he and his friend Shane Lessa, a junior and avid skateboarder, spent a typical evening wandering the city. They got Cuban sandwiches at Casa Havana, walked down Eighth Avenue past a row of expensive gay bars, and then made their way to Gramercy Park, where a trio of designer-purse-size dogs yapped at each other. “The streets are pure entertainment,” said Mr. Lessa, as he walked by a man angrily pounding the hood of a cab.
Lang’s equivalent of a quad, the campus hangout, is a courtyard between two buildings about the size of a large swimming pool. Mr. Piekarz avoids it because “people stand around in their hipster clothes looking cool and checking everyone out.”
It is true that the students at Eugene Lang dress unusually well. On a sunny afternoon the women wore leather boots and patterned skirts, skinny jeans and fitted Army jackets, and they all had uniformly lovely hair — long, wavy, artfully messy. Although a few people had their laptops out, the place was better situated for casual encounters and eavesdropping. The concrete was covered with cigarette butts.
Suzanne Exposito, a junior from Jacksonville, Fla., who describes herself as a feminist and anticapitalist, says she can’t understand why some people fail to throw away their trash. “There’s this binary here between the people who have a cause and those who don’t,” she said. “Some people only came here to be in the city, and they just don’t care. I think they’re the ones who dump their cigarettes on the ground.”
Ms. Exposito likes that being in Manhattan allows her to get internships and jobs relevant to her career — she wants to be a graphic novelist and pursue antiviolence advocacy work. She also appreciates that it allows her to interact with people of all ages and economic classes, not just well-to-do 20-year-olds. Even Columbia is too claustrophobic for her, she says: “I feel like I would be in the midst of an arrested development if I were in one of those alternate universes known as a college campus.”
The party scene unfolds in isolated pockets in Bushwick, Bedford-Stuyvesant and Sunset Park. “Picture a bunch of punks and anarchists and hipsters,” Ms. Exposito said, “and maybe once in a while some debutante characters will show up, but they usually feel out of place.”
The typical college campus often obscures socioeconomic differences: everyone lives in the same dorms, eats the same cafeteria food and shops for clothes at the same local stores. A member of the Low Income Student Alliance, Ms. Exposito says that as soon as she arrived in the city she realized that the amount of money she could spend — on transportation, drinks or restaurants — would be the “defining factor in whether or not I could hang out with a particular group of friends.”
The high cost of living is an obstacle for N.Y.U. students as well, who tend to spend their evenings in Manhattan rather than Brooklyn. The price of eating and drinking ($12 is a fairly typical price for a cocktail) can be a deterrent to socializing.
At the end of her freshman year, after a pained period of calculating her savings, Taylor Horak decided that she could no longer afford to go to school in New York, despite having grown increasingly fond of the university. In March, when she received her financial aid package for sophomore year, it covered much less of the approximate $52,000 for tuition, books, and room and board than she had expected. After computing that she would be more than $100,000 in debt by graduation, she withdrew from N.Y.U.
This fall she is going to a state school in Virginia where tuition will be less than $10,000. But she worries that she’s been tainted by her year in the city.
“I’m stuck in this strange in-between space,” she said. “You come up here and you’re the Southerner, and you go back home and you’re suddenly the snotty, cultured girl from New York.”
NYT 23 July 2010
Rachel Aviv is a Rosalynn Carter fellow for mental-health journalist.

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French Brain Drain Heading to U.S.

Ace! NewsFlash 

French Professors Find Life in U.S. Hard to Resist



Olivier Blanchard, one of France’s best-known economists, teaches in the United States at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


PARIS — Academics are increasingly leaving France for the United States, which carries the risk of a “brain drain” in France, according to a report this month by an independent study group.

The report, by the Institut Montaigne, a leading independent research group in Paris, found that academics constitute a much larger percentage of French émigrés to the United States today than 30 years ago. According to the report, between 1971 and 1980, academics represented just 8 percent of the departing population; between 1996 and 2006, they represented 27 percent of the departing population.
“The acceleration of French scientific emigration to the United States is recent and worrisome,” said the report, called “Gone for good? The expatriates of French higher education in the United States.”
Of the 2,745 French citizens who obtained a doctorate in the United States from 1985 to 2008, 70 percent settled there, the study found.
The number of French scientists who leave France for the United States remains limited, but the exodus of the country’s most talented scientists could hurt the economy, the report suggested.
“Those who leave France are the best, the most prolific and the best integrated on an international scale,” said the report, which surveyed about a hundred French researchers and professors who studied in France’s top universities and elite schools like the École Normale Supérieure and the École Polytechnique.
Many of France’s best biologists and economists can now be found in the United States. According to a study in 2007 by the École des Mines that looked at the 100 best economists in the world, according to the amount of their work published from 1990 and 2000, four of the six top French researchers in economics had left France for the United States.
“Biology and economics are poorly recognized in France,” said Thomas Philippon, a French economist who began teaching finance at New York University Stern School of Business in 2003. “But the problem also comes from the fact that the French labor market doesn’t value Ph.D. theses.”
The Institut Montaigne study concluded that, for the most talented French economics students, studies in the United States are an “obligatory step” toward a doctorate.
Two of France’s best-known economists teach in the United States at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and obtained their doctorates there. One of them, Olivier Blanchard, is also the chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. The other economist, Esther Duflo, received the John Bates Clark Medal in 2010, which is one of most prestigious awards in economics. Dr. Duflo was granted tenure at 29 years old, making her one of the youngest professors to receive tenure at the university.
The emigrant trend is more recent among French biologists, but their numbers have grown significantly. “Biology is an extremely competitive field,” said Gérard Karsenty, a professor of genetics and and development at Columbia University in New York.
“The notion of competition, the acceptance of competition is more in harmony with the American culture than the French and Latin one,” he added.
The brain drain in French academia has been observed in other arenas, as well. The field of musical composition, for example has been hurt by the trend, and composers are few, training offers scarce and jobs rare. “We are in the process of killing contemporary music in France,” said an unidentified composer cited in the report.
Today, many French academics working in the United States say their choice to leave their country was largely motivated by an American system “where universities are larger, richer and more flexible than in France,” said Dr. Philippon, the professor at New York University.
Mr. Karsenty, the biologist, said: “Scientific education in the U.S. embraces the philosophy of science, which is a solitary and competitive field.”
The French lifestyle, which puts a higher value on quality of living and less emphasis on competition and getting ahead, is no longer sufficient to keep talented researchers in France, many scientists said. In a country where science is often viewed as cut off from society, French universities do little to glorify their researchers, they said, and offer working conditions that are often mediocre.
“The freedom that academics garner in France is invaluable,” said Rava da Silveira, a physicist who teaches neuroscience at the École Normale Supérieure and collaborates with researchers at Princeton, Harvard, and Stanford, “but with it comes a deplorable waste of talent. People interact much less through informal discussions, and there is little team spirit or consultation, in particular between faculty and students.”
Upon moving to France after nine years in the United States, Dr. da Silveira said, his salary was cut by about two-thirds.
Like many other researchers, he agreed that the rigidity of the French higher education system and a lack of financing, infrastructure and administrative help have prevented France’s scientific talents from reaching their full potential in France.
For Pierre-André Chiappori, a professor of economics at Columbia who is mentioned in the report, the American model is unique, and U.S. universities are havens of knowledge, the likes of which cannot be found in France.
“If the United States attracts some of the best researchers in France, it is also true that a lot of them become better in the United States,” Dr. Chiappori was quoted as saying. “My only regret, in that matter, is that I should have come earlier.”
NYT 21 November 2010

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'Tis the Season: Bracing Students, and Parents, to Hear ‘No’

Ace! NewsFlash 

Bracing Students, and Parents, to Hear ‘No’


Today’s parents have raised their children to value self-esteem, a far cry from my own Depression-era parents, who raised me with equal parts fear and love.  Self-awareness, self-worth and self-affirmation are all traits we strive to develop in children – both in school and at home. There’s a whole lot of “yes” in the lives of college-bound students. Which has me worrying: how will these students handle a “no” at the hands of a competitive admissions  office?
How do we introduce rejection into a world where self-acceptance is the norm?
If you’re the parent of a senior who is putting the finishing touches on all of his college applications, or the parent of a junior who’s just beginning to put her college list together, I think you need to ask: How does my child handle rejection?  Some students are quite resilient when they meet resistance or failure, while others need time to regroup from a tough call. Still others really falter when their best isn’t good enough.
Applying to college forces students to put themselves on the line, surrendering control over their futures to, in effect, the total strangers in an admission office. It’s scary.  
I often worry about the student who compiles a long list of colleges where admission is iffy for every single school except for the one they have deemed their “safety school.” And I also worry that this same student knows every statistic about those hypercompetitive schools, but nearly nothing about that “safety,” which could very well be home for the next four years.  Truly amazing students get rejected from equally amazing colleges every single year through no fault of their own. For some of these young people, it’s the first time they’ve been denied, and that can unearth their stability.
All that self-esteem can come crumbling down in April.
Yes, I know all about the importance of risk in a well-lived life. I know that you have to be willing to fail in order to succeed. My entire career has been an interesting balance of trial and error, risk and reward. And I privately worry that all this focus on self-esteem can lead to self-absorption.  But adults deal with failure quite differently than adolescents. Over time, we learn how to pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off. But teenagers who apply to a long list of Holy Grail schools can come undone. Rejection stings, every single time.
It’s of little comfort that Nirvana U rejects more valedictorians than it admits every year; when you’re the one being rejected, it’s impossible not to take it personally. And when you’re 18, the sting is very powerful indeed. 
Getting into college isn’t all about statistics and strategies for success; admissions isn’t a battlefield where the strong are victorious and the weak lose out. The college search should be a positive process of self-discovery.  So, as your child makes a college list, please take more than a moment to gauge his or her reaction to setbacks and the ability to absorb a “No” in the land of “Yes.” And, parents, while you’re at it, maybe take a moment to gauge your reaction to setbacks as well.
Remember, the prize isn’t winning the admissions game; rather, the prize is watching your child go off to college, self-esteem intact.
NYT  15 November 2010
Ms. Biemeret is a post-secondary counselor at Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Lincolnshire, Ill., and executive director of The Academy for College Admission Counseling, a nonprofit organization that provides graduate-level education on college counseling for counselors.

 
*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, AP, IB, TOEIC, IELTS etc ***