January 24, 2001:
Features
Slowly,
the distance between graduate and undergraduate colleges is shrinking
By Maria LoBiondo
The scene: Late 1950s.
On a whim, John M. Schnorrenberg *64 auditions for Theatre Intime
and wins the part of the Sheriff in The Rainmaker. This achievement,
rubbing shoulders in Marquand Library, and meetings through the
Episcopal Campus Ministry, are the sum of his interactions with
undergraduates on campus. I think I was more of an observer
of the undergraduate community than one involved in it, remembers
the University of Alabama professor of art history.
Flash forward to 2000:
Asli Bali *96, earning her doctorate in politics, manages membership
in three campus organizations with a mixed graduate-undergraduate
membership: the Turkish Society, the Arab Society, and the Muslim
Students Association. She has taken Arab language classes with undergraduates
and informally tutored them in math and writing. If you make
an effort, theres an opportunity to get to know undergraduates,
she says.
Woodrow
Wilson was right. In the 100 years since Princetons 13th president,
a member of the undergraduate class of 1879, lost his fight over
the location of the Graduate College, demographics and social change
have made him look prescient.
Wilsons turn-of-the-century
opponent, the Graduate Schools first dean, Andrew Fleming
West 1874, envisioned graduate scholars in contemplative study far
from the bustle of undergraduate life, and so pushed for a separate
campus, capped with a tower, located high above the golf course.
Wilson, in contrast, saw graduate students as vital members of the
immediate Princeton family, engaged regularly in academic and social
discourse with undergraduates. He strongly felt that the Graduate
College should be set in the very center of the existing Princeton
campus.
West, however, managed
to find a number of donors, including one who left his entire estate
-- first valued at $3 million, though later found to be worth
much less -- to support Wests cause. That bequest was
the final blow to Wilson and his dream for an academically integrated
community, and, battered by an earlier defeat over the eating clubs
and the national press attention his feud with West was attracting,
Wilson resigned from Princeton in 1910. Construction on Wests
College -- high above the golf course -- began the following
year.
For much of the Graduate Schools history, the divide between
the graduate and undergraduate worlds, underscored by the Colleges
locale, has remained as West envisioned. In recent years, however,
Princeton has been quietly and deliberately moving toward Wilsons
original notion of community. But theres still a long way
to go.
The remnants of the Wilson/West
controversy and Princeton's ambivalence toward graduate education
- its peer institutions jumped into the game much earlier and built
professional schools to fortify their positions - remain to this
day. Stereotypes of each other - of hard-drinking undergraduates
and nerdy grad students - linger. In a 1998 Daily Princetonian column,
then-graduate student Molly Robinson *00 told of a chance encounter
with a freshman who seemed surprised to learn that there were graduate
students at Princeton at all. That same year the conservative student
newspaper, the Spectator, blamed increased graduate
student teaching for
Princeton's one-rung slip in the college rankings. And some undergraduates,
when they think of graduate students at all, see them as competitors
for professors' time and energy.
But more damaging, say
graduate alumni and current graduate students, is the sense of second-class
citizenship many graduate students experience while on campus. "Princeton
continues to be a place where the community is focused on undergraduates,
rather than one that embraces all constituencies. Getting an advanced
degree is a tough process to begin with - you get beaten up intellectually
and emotionally. The perception of graduate students as any less
vital than undergraduates to Princeton, its reputation, and its
future does not help matters," says Todd J. Mitty *93, current
Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni (APGA) president. "Part
of what attracts faculty to Princeton is the caliber of graduate
students. Princeton wouldn't be the same without its undergraduates
- or its graduate students."
MaryMargaret Halsey,
director of Graduate Alumni Relations and Development, says that
graduate students make Princeton Princeton - a college that also
happens to be a world-class research institution. But still, she
says, "The graduate students know they're important to the
faculty, but the way the graduate students feel, the separateness,
is like the maleness of the place. It's in the woodwork. But it
is getting better." She adds, "If we weren't so successful
in our dealings with undergraduates, the contrast with how graduates
feel wouldn't seem so striking."
Reminders that graduate
students are treated like distant relatives rather than immediate
family members begin with where the graduate students live. Of the
1,766 graduate students on campus for the 2000--01 academic year,
516 are at the Graduate College complex, and 806 are in university
apartments, leaving 444 to find housing elsewhere. This is a point
of contention between graduate students and the university administration,
one that has included picketing by the graduate students and consideration
by the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC).
"So much of Princeton's
social life is residential," says P. J. Kim '01, past president
of the Undergraduate Student Government. "It's difficult to
have a spontaneous moment or build connections when the graduate
students live so far away."
Subtle things, some social,
some institutional, also create barriers: Graduate students must
pay to attend athletic and many cultural events (undergraduates'
activities' fees cover their costs; this year, in celebration of
the Centennial, football games were free for grad students, and
grads were included in the Passport for the Arts cultural plan,
a free ticket program for perform-ances at McCarter Theatre and
Richardson Auditorium). The APGA first organized Reunions activities
in 1976; including graduate students in the campus telephone directory
didn't begin until the early 1990s. Jimmy Stewart '32 and James
Baker III '52 are household names; Nobel laureates John Bardeen
*36 and Richard P. Feynman *42 are not. While a young undergraduate
alumnus is elected to serve as a trustee annually, only one member
of the entire board is required to be from the graduate alumni body.
And then there is the
asterisk after graduate alumni names. "To too many it is a
visible symbol that graduate students are considered second class
or less than essential," says Barry Munitz *68, who is beginning
a four-year tenure as a term trustee of the university. "It's
like Roger Maris's asterisk for his home run. The implication is
that you're not really a Princetonian."
For many, that asterisk
received after graduation has been symbolic of their lives while
students. It was a life almost wholly separate from the undergraduate
experience.
"There was a presumption
that much of campus and most campus facilities were for undergraduates,"
remembers Richard Heitman *61. "It wasn't until my last year
on campus that I found out about Chancellor Green [Student Center]."
"Undergrads played
organized intramurals; grad students tended to organize their own,
less structured games. In philosophy, we had touch football, basketball,
and softball games. But with the exception of an occasional game
against the philosophy faculty or history grad students, it was
a strictly philosophy grad game," adds Richard Grandy *67.
Even as recently as 10
years ago, interaction with undergraduates - if indeed a graduate
student had any time for it - was minimal. "Graduate students
were like phantoms sneaking around the edges of campus. We knew
they were doing stuff that was more sophisticated, but we didn't
know what that was," reflects Nicoletta LaMarca-Sacco '90,
who was introduced to her husband, a graduate alumnus from the music
department, after graduation by undergraduate friends in New York
City.
Her husband, Steven Sacco
*91, had a somewhat different experience. "Most of my friends
were undergraduates because I came straight from Juilliard, and
a lot of the graduate students in my department were older and married,"
he explains. Still, he recalls a party at which his wife was introduced
as being a Princetonian, but he was not.
Interaction between graduate
students and undergraduates
isn't the only problem.
Graduate students have long had limited social options even among
themselves. West's idea of a secluded graduate life may have been
appropriate 100 years ago, when Princeton was all male, when all
advanced degree scholars were housed in the Gothic splendor of the
Graduate College, and when the pursuit of a life in academia - which
all graduate students sought - resembled a higher, monk-like calling.
But times are changing.
The numbers of graduate students have grown, from the intimate corps
of 113 who all dined wearing black robes in Procter Hall in 1921
to the diverse group of 1,884 of today. Not only did Princeton finally
open its doors to women - and did so first with graduate education;
Sabra Follett Meservey received her doctorate in philosophy in 1966
- but it has also increasingly drawn married students (Meservey
was a mother of three) and students from other countries (42 percent
of the graduate community is international, versus 9 percent for
undergraduates). In addition, nearly half of Princeton's graduate
students go on to careers outside academia. These changes have steadily
eroded West's ivory tower view of graduate life.
"When I was looking
at graduate schools, one Princeton graduate alumnus said to me that
Princeton was academically great but socially a bit of a monastery.
Its only saving grace was that New York City was an hour away,"
says Adrian Banner, chair of the Graduate College house committee.
"But ever since I've been here I've noticed it's gotten better."
That, in large part,
has been through a concerted administrative effort to sponsor graduate
students' social activities, rather than try to mix graduate and
undergraduate social interests. The Graduate College house committee
hosts a dizzying number of events, including three annual dances,
discussion tables, and bus trips to New York City. The subscription
to the e-mail event list is open, and some undergraduates do subscribe,
says Ulrich Struve *91, the Graduate College's residence life coordinator,
but few are active participants.
"We're putting a
lot more focus on creating opportunities for people to meet each
other and to introduce students to the various campus resources.
There's a lot more awareness and consciousness in the institution
that we have to make these opportunities more visible for the grad
students," says F. Joy Montero, associate dean of the graduate
school.
But interaction between
graduate students and their undergraduate counterparts is moving
more slowly. In part, that's because the two groups of students
are usually at different points in their lives. Graduate students
are older; they may be married; their schedules may more closely
resemble a typical work week. Some may not have much desire to get
to know undergraduates socially.
"I had already been
married for five years when I arrived at Princeton in 1976,"
recalls Gary Larsen *79. "My life revolved pretty much around
that and around the graduate students I knew from the history department
and life in Butler apartments."
"In a lot of ways,
graduate students have their own community. I'm not involved with
clubs, and most undergraduates I've met are from the lab or in classes
I've taught. When I have free time, mostly I want to relax,"
says Cynthia Tobery *96, who is pursuing a molecular biology doctorate.
While Princeton does
not employ large numbers of teaching or research assistants from
its graduate school ranks, there are those who fill those roles,
and they find that this can bring either an added barrier, or a
new opportunity, for interaction with undergraduates. "There's
a natural antagonism with your grader," admits Banner. "Some
have bridged the gap, say if an assistant in instruction (AI) has
a discussion group. Then he or she may bond with undergraduate students."
"I had very little
social interaction with undergraduates, but precepting was one of
the best experiences I had at Princeton," agrees David W. Paul
*73. "It increased my respect for undergraduates and helped
me get to know many more than I would otherwise have known."
Having graduate students
as assistant masters in the residential colleges - two in each of
the five colleges, a practice that began systematically in 1985
- also has helped ease the divide. Molly Robinson, who was an assistant
master in Butler College, says, "In many ways, graduate students
are in an ideal position to serve as role models and mentors for
undergraduates: We are usually pretty close to them in age, but
have a few more years of experience. Working as an assistant master
helped me to learn how Princeton really works, and to feel that
I was a part of the life of the university."
But the small breakthroughs
in the invisible social barrier between undergraduate and graduate
students have come from intangibles: rubbing shoulders in extracurricular
activities, especially in groups united over cultural, religious,
or political beliefs; graduate student columnists writing regularly
in the Daily Princetonian and increased coverage of graduate issues
there; and the opening of the Frist Campus Center as a place where
all university members can meet and socialize.
"Frist is a great
space, where there aren't any divisions. We share rooms with the
undergraduates. A conscious effort was made to encourage interaction,"
says Lauren Hale, chair of the Graduate Student Government.
Things won't change by
waving a wand, says Graduate School Dean John F. Wilson, but he
and others affiliated with the school hope that momentum is moving
in its favor, especially with the celebration of the Graduate School
Centennial. With the Centennial, administrators, current graduate
students, and graduate alumni are trying to make even greater progress
toward making graduate students and alumni not an afterthought,
but truly part of the campus community. "This is a defining
moment for all Princetonians to reinforce their commitment to the
Graduate School and to improving the important role of graduate
students and graduate alumni," APGA president Mitty says. "Princeton
creates an attachment that you want to respond to."
That's a notion Woodrow
Wilson understood all too well 100 years ago.
Maria LoBiondo is a freelance
writer in Princeton and frequent contributor to PAW.
|