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Michael Ross vs. students, Ver 2.0

The Globe reports city Councilor Mike Ross wants the BRA to force Northeastern to stop enrolling quite so many students. Seems the school had promised to try to curb enrollment, but it actually now has 585 more students than it promised to have.

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This is probably going to get me intro trouble, but I'm hoping maybe of the people who fly off the handle at me one of them might have a real answer, because I'm honestly curious.

I think the fact that this is an issue at all is crazy. Why enroll more students than you have room for? I'll admit, my undergraduate experience was unique - I was at a very small school and no more were admitted than there was available housing for. I never spent a summer scrambling for a room or trying to figure out a lease. I don't have those experiences from which to speak so it makes it that much more difficult for me to understand why it's necessary to try to squeeze students into overcrowded housing and classrooms. More money? It sounds like more students probably cost more money. More prestige? I don't recall "huge classrooms filled with hundreds of people" being a selling point in most college literature. I thought it was a good thing if a school was tough to get into. So... what gives?

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They might be preferentially enrolling students who live in the nearby areas and live at home. Why shouldn't they not count people living with mom and dad?

I know several people with kids at Tufts who just have them live at home and save enormous amounts of money doing so. These kids can walk, bike, or take a short bus ride to get to campus ... or just ask for a ride. None has had any issues participating in campus life, as they all live closer than many apartment-dwelling students.

As the costs of dorm living have gotten way out of control, more people around Boston are doing this. It doesn't add to the student "burden" one bit. A university the size of Northeastern is bound to have several hundred "commuter" students who live at home.

Not that Mike Ross has ever displayed any sense, reason, or grasp of statistics or privacy laws ...

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Like Planes…

Frequently Colleges over enroll because they know that some students will come, while others will go to their first, second, or other choices.

Schools want to keep their classes as full as possible, because they too have to worry about finances and budgets; so under cutting their revenue stream seen as bad just like anywhere else.

Problem is, sometimes what they expected and who decided to come isn’t the same. It’s more of an art, then a science; but unlike airlines they can’t just offer students who already made life changing plans concessions and a ticket for next time.

You tend to see many more students accepting when the economy is bad, which is probably the reason for the over enrollment. During normal times, they might defer, choose another college, decide they don’t want to go, ect.

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@Jenny - NU has plenty of academic space; they intentionally shrank down from being one of the largest private schools in the world to a smaller, better, school.

As to why folks would want to go to a large urban school, how about why would anyone want to go to some cow-college full of no-name faculty, limited resources, and nothing to do off-campus? (I'm not trashing any school or preference, just reversing the question. Everyone reading this is perfectly aware there are excellent arguments on both sides, innumerable problems with my foolish over-generalization, and it's gonna boil down to personal taste.)

The issue is really one of neighborhoods - folks who moved into cheap housing near NU resenting the number of students in 'their' neighborhood and the poor behavior of some of those students. No argument that some of those students are terrible neighbors, on the other hand the school & it's population well predates any of the neighbors so I personally find their protestations overly self-serving. The truth is were the students suddenly removed most of the complainers couldn't have afforded their suddenly-more-desirable housing.

And, NU is busily building dorms and continuing their evolution from a commuter-school to a residential one, as per agreements with the city. They've added some large dorms in the past few years, and I assume intend to build more. This is partially out of appeasement to the neighbors and partially self-interest: Students (& their parents) now shop schools partially on the basis of the housing & grotty old dorms/student slums just aren't what you want to show off on the campus tour.

So no, it's not about NU being overcrowded, it is about their neighborhood being crowded with an uneasy mix of students & non-students.

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Unfortunately, many of the Town vs Gown arguments boil down to the line used by Maggard: "the school & it's population well predates any of the neighbors." Some how that allows landlords to charge outrageous rents to a pack of suburbanite teenagers who are hell bent on recreating the College life they dreamed about by watching poor rip offs of Animal House.

My neighborhood predates many of the educational institutions in the City. My house was built long before Northeastern started handing out the used toilet paper that its undergraduates call diplomas--what the hell difference does that make.

The issue is that when an institution grows out of control and starts to eat into residential neighborhoods, it starts to effect the quality of life for those who live in the City. If Northeastern entered into an agreement with the City to keep its undergraduate population within a certain level, it should stick to it.

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Doesn't sounds like it to me -- it's staying within its boundaries, and some of its students like the adjoining neighborhoods well enough that they decide to settle in them. Why is this a problem?

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"Why enroll more students than you have room for?"

There is a complicated process used by many Colleges and Universities to decide how many students to accept each year. Normally they accept X more than they have space for, to allow for some students to choose not to attend. As a school gains in prestige and reputation, more accepted students decide to attend. So whereas maybe they anticipate 35% of accepted students not attending, but only 17% go somewhere else, they now have more students than they know what to do with.

As for why schools do this and not use the wait-list more, you'll need to ask the admissions department.

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Part of it could be NU hasn't made the transition entirely to a non-commuter school. It used to be they took in a lot of local kids who rode the T in and out of campus. Now they're attracting more kids from around the country - probably from around the world, judging from the voices on Huntington Ave these days - but dorm building hasn't caught up with that.

Having said that, old "Mission Kill" seems like a better place these days. I wouldn't want students partying hearty outside my window at 4 AM for damn sure - how many times does "Duuuuuuuuuuuude!" sound clever? - but loud college parties usually don't end in gunfire. It isn't my first choice of neighborhood, which is why I didn't choose to live there. There are cheaper neighborhoods for families in Boston, probably even in the close-in suburbs, but they can come with safety or transportation concerns, so everyone's making some kind of trade-off.

Still, I can't believe that if NU and other students all move out of Mission Hill the landlords will, out of the goodness of their hearts, turn the chopped-up three-deckers into affordable family housing rather than, say. It is painful to me to sound like a Republican talking point, but that's the thinking of people who never worked in private business. Like most City officials, I guess.

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"rather than, say, condos."
Ugh.

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To make it as simple as possible, colleges accept more students than they actually hope to have. People don't always show up (finances, last minute acceptance at another school, etc.)

So, NEU is within 4% of their target goal of 15,000. Probably not as close as they'd like to be, but with the economy, most colleges are admitting slightly higher numbers to balance a higher percentage who may not show ...

If it sounds like an inexact science, it is. If it sounds like Mike Ross has no fucking clue how it actually works, that's true too.

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In addition to how many students accepted will actually enroll (as several posters have mentioned) there is the number of students already enrolled that stay. Northeastern has to figure out how many students will continue to be enrolled when it figures out how many it can accept to the incoming class. I'm guessing the current economy is causing an increase in retention. In the past, a greater percentage students may have left school for an in-hand job offer (possibly even from a co-op assignment). Also, their may be fewer students leaving to start new businesses since there is less capital and market share to go around. In a crummy job market, it is more important than ever to have a degree to even get your foot in the door.

Nearly impossible for NU to have predicted the change in retention. And really impractical to throw out existing students or defer ones you've already accepted.

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The Globe has what I view as a pretty good explanation, if you'd read the article
In 2006, graduation rate was 64%. Now its 75%.
Assuming that means for each of the 4 years, 3% less students are dropping out, that means they would have about 3% more students returning than planned. They're about 3.9% above 15,000. Add in some percentage points for being an up and coming popular school with more students accepting and coming rather than accepting elsewhere (the admissions arguments used by others) and its very easy to overshoot your total student population.

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Mike Ross can go to hell and stop pandering to Neighborhood NIMBY-ism.

The school was there long before many of the residents, and it’ll be there long after. He should do something constructive and find some real solutions on both sides, rather then putting the blame on colleges and appeasing neighborhood associations that would love to close down the colleges all together.

How about letting the colleges build some new dorms on campus? Oh right, that would involve tall, dense high rises which residents are vehemently against. Ross should take the time to explain to them that the school, as long as it’s financially sound, will be increasing enrollment and providing additional education as it see’s fit. That means that they either build new housing and keep students on campus, or the residents students in apartments problem is only going to get worse. Residents can’t have it both ways, and Ross seems like a schmuck trying to pander to their unreasonable demands.

Time to pander to their reasonable ones. Either that, or hopefully a recent grad or current student can mount a campaign to unseat him and bring some pragmatism to the problem.

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Not as easy as you think. Right now they're not building new dorms for the same reason Harvard has left a stagnant mess in Allston: the economy is dead. The article linked already points out that there is a plan for a new dorm to help put bodies back on campus, but it can't go forward because of cost prohibition in the current economy.

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I do realize that, but my comment still stands as it's been an issue for a while.

Ross is either shamelessly pander again, or is pandering while having no clue how admissions at colleges work. He's also looking for political solutions that won't acctualy help his constituents, but will get him votes. It's no better then running on identity politics.

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He's more of the problem than the solution when it comes to student-community relationships and the city council. I just wanted to make it clear that it's not as if Northeastern is ignoring the demand to put students on campus...and why would they? For every student they can get/force to move into a dorm, they collect room & board and even a potential food plan which in turn drives in more captive revenue for them.

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I wholeheartedly concur. I'm sick of Ross and Company whining about too many students living off-campus, but when schools want to build more on-campus housing, they whine about that as well. Can't have it both ways, people.

For what it's worth, I'm a recent NU alum and a resident of the city. I work, I pay my rent, my taxes, my bills. How the hell does that make me any less worthy to live in an apartment in Boston than anyone else...just because I went to school here as well?

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Unless your family has lived in Boston for at least 70 years (maybe longer) you are just an interloper. ;~{

(I run into this attitude even in Roslindale -- albeit thankfully rarely)

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You can't expect the same person who failed econ 101 when giving us the "4 student limit" rule has any understanding at all over the admissions process.

Mind you, theres an easy solution to this problem. The schools need to encourage their students to register locally to vote so they can vote out mr ross.

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Wow, thanks for all the insights! This was actually really helpful information - I live in Brighton and face a lot of the same neighborhood concerns that it sounds like Mike Ross is trying to combat in Mission Hill. Unfortunately, from what I've seen in my own neighborhood, and when I lived in Allston a few years ago, was that it wasn't always students. A lot of the bad neighbors were people living on their own for the first time, with just enough money from the new job's paycheck to buy WAY too much beer and totally lose it until the wee hours of the morning.

There are some real jerks living in a lot of these neighborhoods and landlords who look the other way. I don't know that cracking down on students in their entirety is the answer. I do think that working with the schools to manage off-campus housing is a good idea. Keeping it limited to ensure there are homes to rent or buy for a diverse audience, helping the schools to identify landlords to work with who take good care of their properties, and making sure the students who live in that housing are held to the same good neighbor standards as the folks around them... these are a couple of ways to use relationships with the schools to maintain a good quality of life in a neighborhood and keep the jerk face population, no matter who they are, to a minimum. Or so I think anyway. :)

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In my University there are 75% that pass the enrollment exam so it´s pretty easy to get in but only 25% ever graduate at all. So since schools also get paid by people who actually get out they usually try to "book" more like the airlines.

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Mike Ross is addressing a valid neighborhood concern. I don't think the goal is to eradicate student off-campus housing. But there are real issues when large numbers of students are crammed into small buildings in small neighborhoods. Disruptive behavior and noise is one issue, but so is the safety and health of students, and so is the cost to graduates and young professionals who want to stay in Boston, but are now forced to look to more affordable cities. It is alarming how many of the students that come out of Boston's great colleges and universities are choosing to leave.

As for trying to have it both ways, I think most neighborhood associations support dormitory construction and it seems that Mike Ross does also:

"I continue to work with colleges and universities to develop on-campus dormitories for undergraduates."

The knee-jerk reaction may be to portray Mr. Ross and those of us who are concerned about over-crowded off-campus housing as anti-student. But the goal here is (a) affordable housing for graduates and other young people, (b) diverse, safe communities, and (c) strong institutions that co-exist in a mutually beneficial relationship with their neighbors. Taking universities to task for breaching agreements they have made with the city is not an attack on students, it is a way to hold them accountable and give them the proper incentive to provide sufficient, quality housing for their populations.

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about improving the neighborhood and living conditions therein. However, one can't help noticing that "health and safety" and "affordable housing" concerns are always focused on A, students, who are transients, and B, universities, who are big, fat targets, but not C, the actual property owners who rake in the dough, create the conditions, heavily market the housing to students, but D - again, one can't help noticing - donate to political campaigns in significant amounts.

Kinda like tackling the drug problem by arresting a bunch of kids lighting up on the streets; who's looking at the cartels?

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