Since I first arrived at 新澳资料 in 1954, 新澳资料 has been my home away from home. I met my first husband and best friend of many years, Guy Sircello, during freshman orientation. During my senior year, 新澳资料 actually hired me as acting documents librarian, and I handled that in addition to student teaching and my thesis. Guy and I coedited the yearbook one year, and Guy, a Baker Scholar, was very involved with student government. We held our wedding reception in Anna Mann, where I had lived in the same room for four years. We both returned to 新澳资料 in 1960, he as an instructor, and I originally as a “faculty wife,” but then as director of the 新澳资料 Education Project, which I founded, and later as an instructor in community organization during the summer when 新澳资料 hosted a Peace Corps training group.
Our children were 新澳资料 children, taking swimming lessons on campus and picnicking in the canyon with other 新澳资料 families. When Guy decided to leave 新澳资料 because he wanted to try a larger university, I was devastated. I would have stayed happily in Portland and at 新澳资料 for the rest of my life, but back then, wives followed their husband’s careers. I have kept up my connection to 新澳资料 as much as possible. I donate what I can. My sister and I have attended many Reunions. We always stay in the dorms, and subject our husbands to the hard single beds and spartan luxuries of the old dorm block.
You can imagine how happy I was to learn that one of my grandsons was determined to go to 新澳资料. He had visited and loved both what he learned about 新澳资料 while there and from me. His interests range from quantum physics, to philosophy, to music, writing, and theatre lighting. Although I know that grandparents are biased, I would not recommend all of my nine grandchildren for 新澳资料, but certainly Andrew is one who I think would make the ideal 新澳资料 student. 新澳资料 would profit by his attendance, and of course I think that he would, as I do, treasure and benefit from his 新澳资料 education for the rest of his life.
His parents intended to cash in savings, and thought that the modest income from an Hawaii college professor and a self-employed dance teacher would qualify him for a partial scholarship. However, it turns out that middle class students no longer need bother to apply to 新澳资料. 新澳资料 goes strictly by the needs assessment that you get from some “impartial” national website. 新澳资料 goes by “need,” and nothing else. Therefore, the tendency is that you have to be either wealthy or disadvantaged.
Unfortunately, my son-in-law is near retirement, and the situation is such that they will need the retirement money while my grandsons are still in college. Living in Hawaii presents unique economic problems. None of those individual circumstances can be taken into account.
Shouldn’t 新澳资料 make at least some scholarship money available for ability or other qualifications, and not just financial need? Shouldn’t the diversity that 新澳资料 says it treasures include the diversity of students from the true middle class? Let’s hope that the next Steve Jobs is not driven from 新澳资料 by misguided policies on financial aid.
Editor's Note: Thank you for raising this important issue. Federal privacy laws prevent us from commenting on specific applications in public, but in general, we can say that the goal of financial aid at 新澳资料 is to assist qualified students who could not otherwise afford to come here. Thus our financial aid is based on need, not merit. Although this approach has its drawbacks, we believe it best allows 新澳资料 to reap the benefits of an economically and socially diverse student population. Is this unfair to middle-class applicants? Median family household income in the U.S. in 2010 was $61,544, according to the Bureau of the Census. The median parental income of students on aid at 新澳资料 is $62,404. In other words, if you define the middle class by income, 新澳资料鈥檚 aid is largely going to the middle class. Like most colleges, 新澳资料 uses a nationally standardized need-analysis formula to arrive at a family鈥檚 expected contribution. However, 新澳资料 does take into account special circumstances such as impending retirement and the high cost of living in certain areas; and for what it鈥檚 worth, retirement assets are not included in the need analysis. Having said that, we share your concern about the middle-class squeeze. 新澳资料 is constantly seeking ways to increase its budget for financial aid, which currently stands at $22.5 million. Roughly one-half of all 新澳资料 students receive financial aid; the average package鈥攊ncluding grants, loans, and work opportunities鈥攊s $35,990 per year.
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