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No More Idle Hands

Regarded by some students as the latest crackdown from the fun police, Michigan State University is poised to curtail a week-long orientation that’s historically been known as much for partying as preparation for college learning.

Michigan State administrators are pushing to shorten “Fall Welcome” next year, trimming the orientation from six days to three. That’s in part because so much of what students once did during orientation – registering for classes and buying books – is now done online before they ever arrive on campus. It’s also become clear to university officials that when students aren’t enrolled in classes and hitting the books, they’re often hitting the sauce instead.

“Having a full weekend before classes start with no responsibilities just has not been productive for students,” said June Youatt, senior associate provost at Michigan State.

Mike Uberroth, a junior at Michigan State, describes Fall Welcome as a cherished tradition that’s being ruined.

“It’s this among tons of other things that the school is cracking down on that’s killing the spirit the school used to have,” he said. “It’s like they’re trying to squash excitement … I’d be surprised if we don’t start wearing uniforms.”

If the new schedule were to garner faculty approval, it would mean students would move into dorms on the Sunday before Labor Day, instead of the prior Wednesday. In addition to shortening the time without classes, the schedule would make moving day more “family friendly,” Youatt said.

“Why did we pick Wednesday? I don’t know. Sunday is actually a rational decision,” she said.

While some have expressed concern about students having time to acclimate to the university, the proposal would still include a summer orientation session for first-time students in addition to the abbreviated Fall Welcome, Youatt said.

Orientation Week Not New to Critics

Michigan State isn’t the first to propose shortening orientation in part because a week without classes is seen as a recipe for trouble. Universities in Britain, for instance, have been under pressure to end “fresher’s week,” an orientation period for students that’s become synonymous with binge drinking.

Changing orientation traditions, however, isn’t easy. At Western Ontario University, then-President George Pederson unsuccessfully proposed curtailing orientation in 1991 because the “harmful sex and drinking” had become a source of concern, the student newspaper reported.

The sordid history of “O-Week” included an organized striptease in the 1970s, and parties that left cars overturned and fires blazing. The tradition of revelry stretched into the early 1990s, when students stripped half naked, coated themselves with honey and were summarily attacked by a swarm of bees, The [Western Ontario] Gazette reported. One student actually went to the hospital covered in bee stings, according to the paper.

Susan Grindrod, associate vice president of housing and ancillary services at Western Ontario, concedes that O-Week “got to be a bit of a party.” The events are all dry now, according to university officials, but O-Week’s transformation didn’t happen overnight.

“It was hard, yeah,” Grindrod said. “There was a lot of underground stuff, and we had a lot of tense meetings. But we persevered.”

Students who organize O-Week, many of whom meet Canada’s legal drinking age of 19, are now required to sign a pledge that they won’t drink at all during orientation. Stephen Lecce, president of the university students’ council, said the program’s live music, games and activities give students plenty of sober alternatives.

“This is one week of your life that really sets the tone for your future,” Lecce said. “We want them to be encouraged to have a week that is dry, that is filled with opportunities to give back through charities …get involved with leadership and particularly have a good educational experience.”

Students at Brown University have embraced recent changes to orientation, according to university officials who cite student surveys. The orientation was shortened from six days to three last year, in part to avoid the lag time between the arrival of students and the start of classes.

“There was kind of a lull in activity that we think had been seen as having value, but we began to see that students come with a lot of energy and are rearing to go,” said Katherine Bergeron, dean of the college at Brown.

The change in schedule also moves the start of classes to the Wednesday after Labor Day, instead of starting classes on Tuesday. That change was designed to insure faculty, who were often on vacation over the weekend, were back in time to teach and advise students.

“Let’s put it this way: It was one of the reasons why we felt this was a useful shift in the calendar,” Bergeron said.

No Clear Trend

While some universities are shortening orientation periods, others are actually lengthening the time students have before classes begin. As Business Week recently reported, some MBA programs have stretched orientation to two weeks or even a full month.

At Indiana University Purdue-University Indianapolis, a two-week “bridge program” was recently added for undergraduates. The university, which is largely a commuter campus, has a significant population of first generation students who benefit from the extended transition period, according to Scott Evenbeck, dean of the university college.

When students arrive on campus, they frequently don’t know their classmates and “you can hear a pin drop” during the first orientation session, Evenbeck said. That changes, however, by the end of the bridge program.

“By the last day they’ve made up cheers and they have T-shirts and they are over the top enthusiastic,” he said.

Jennifer Keup, director of the National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in Transition at the University of South Carolina, said there’s no clear data showing whether orientation periods are trending in one direction or another. What is clear, however, is that orientations aren’t what they used to be.

Orientations today are “a lot less about social activities and bureaucratic logistics,” and more often devoted to academic pursuits, Keup said. Many universities have adopted common reading programs in recent years, for instance, where all incoming students read the same book and discuss it during orientation or even throughout the year.

“Rather than seeing the welcome week go away,” she said, “we see the types of activities changing.”

Jack Stripling

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Comments

O week at UWO

When I was one of the paid staff at the student radio station there in the 1987-91 period,we could count on nearly a full work week as returning students were few and far between for on air duties for the first two weeks. In part this was due to still needing to stand in line for sign up, but mostly it was John Barleycorn’s fault. When I returned for an encore in 1995 O week had been shortened by a day and was mostly booze free.(It was either the last,or next to last year before the events went dry.)Also registration was partly computerized (from on campus terminals only)Full on line registration was a year or two away. Students were able to put on something resembling our regular program day by the second day of classes with staffers reverting to their normal fill in roles and a token on air shift here or there for an hour because someone had to go stand in line. Now a days I’m told they’re up and running a normal schedule by mid day the first day. It seems even the first year students only need an extra couple of days of special events before they are ready for class. The concept of O-week isn’t totally outdated. Shortening it to an event that starts on the Friday afternoon prior to Labor Day and runs through Tuesday seems to work for everyone.(move in starts Saturday) Some programs are even daring to run regular lectures for returning students that day.

tim, at 8:30 am EDT on August 20, 2008

Killing the Spirit of Students — Academics as Administrators

What you have here is another classic case of out of touch academics that are playing administrators making decisions that impact students in multiple ways, with out taking the students best interest into consideration.

Will ending welcome week stop underage drinking and partying on campus? It obviously will during those few days students are not allowed on campus, but once on campus they will still engage in those activities they choose to engage in. Why not keep welcome week as is and give students more entertaining and fun options that do not involve alcohol? How about footing the bill for a big music concert or a short two or three day sport tournament showcasing the various intramural sport options to students with prizes awarded to the winners?

By shortening welcome week all you are doing is lessening the amount of time incoming freshman and returning students have to become acclimated or re-acclimate themselves to campus. In short, administrators are lessening the time students have to take care of financial aid, registrar and other academic issues/paperwork, and creating an environment for greater binge drinking those two days before classes start.

Unfortunately, I do not see shortening welcome week as a solution to much of anything the administration say they are worried about. It seems to me to be another knee jerk reaction to an issue that is not as much of an issue as academics and administrators would like everyone to believe.

It is my hope that the students at places like MSU and other schools realize the power they have and speak out in protest of these decisions. However, the apathy our society as a whole has bread and beat into them will likely keep them sitting on their hands, not realizing the voice they have on their campuses.

Kevin Leonard, Michigan State University, at 8:45 am EDT on August 20, 2008

oops

Should have read the web link before the previous post. They’ve gone back to something thats closer to the time line for events in my day.I guess they still like their fun as much as they ever did, its just dry now.

tim, at 8:50 am EDT on August 20, 2008

Spirit doesn’t equal drunken debauchery

School spirit isn’t synonymous with a week-long drunken bender which is exactly what MSU’s Welcome Week is now. As a former administrator there, my first weekend on campus coincided with Welcome Week and the ambulance and police sirens blared throughout the night. The wide majority of MSU students are fantastic,hard-working young men and women—and MSU does not deserve the rap it gets for most sports-related shenanigans; it’s mostly non-MSU young adults coming to party—but couple 10,000 first-year students with no parental supervision for the first time with nothing to do but party for almost a week, and it’s a recipe for disaster. Good for you, MSU, for curbing the madness.

DTL, formerly of MSU, at 11:35 am EDT on August 20, 2008

Boozing it up in college

Great timing with this article. Here’s a headline from today: ” The president of Butler University, joined by college presidents nationwide, is calling for lawmakers to consider lowering the legal drinking age from 21 to 18 as a way to discourage binge drinking on campus.

Groups dedicated to fighting drunken driving said that they were strongly opposed to the idea and that lowering the drinking age would lead to more fatal car crashes.”

I was 18 once. I remember that they did legalize booze at 18 in Jersey. It was an unmitigated disaster! We had kids dying all over the place from drunk driving, alcohol poisoning, etc. From what I seen the past forty years, it would be even worse today if they did legalize booze at 18.

feudi pandola, at 2:55 pm EDT on August 20, 2008

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