December 19, 2001: President's Page Conversations with Students This year I have enjoyed spending
time with My continuing education begins
with office hours, a tradition that Harold Shapiro wisely advised me to
continue. Once a week students are invited to come to One Nassau Hall
on a first come, first served basis to talk to me. There is only one ground
rule: students cannot use their time to ask for money! I decided to disperse
the discretionary Presidents Fund for students and student
activities to the Dean of the Graduate School, the Vice President for
Campus Life and the Dean of Undergraduate Students. Because these senior
administrators can put all requests into perspective, they are better
able to distribute funds fairly for such worthy causes as senior thesis
research, student performances, and medical emergencies. Now that the
presidents office hours are no longer viewed as a venue for soliciting
funds, the conversations between me and the students are more wide-ranging
(and more interesting). What do we talk about? Students
in organizations visit office hours to do some self-promoting: they want
the President to know their group exists. The Katzenjammers went so far
as to offer me a chance to learn about their organization first-hand by
participating in a performance. Others want to ensure that I am aware
of their good work on behalf of others. The campus Princeton Environmental
Action group reviewed with me an audit they conducted about how the University
can be a more environmentally responsible institution, and the Workers
Rights Organizing Committee came to discuss the well-being of the lowest
paid workers in the university. Graduate students in the Woodrow Wilson
School offered their perspectives on education in public policy and their
aspirations for the next dean of the School. Occasionally the topics are
personal: students came in large numbers after the September 11 attacks
to talk about their personal response to the events and to suggest ways
that students could help, from giving blood to reaching out to New York
City youngsters who lost parents in the attacks. Students come to talk about
the future. We talk about whether they should take a year off and, increasingly
lately, about how they will find employment after Princeton, especially
in an uncertain economy. Although I cant fix many of their concerns,
my sense is that they are incredibly grateful that the President of Princeton
is accessible and willing to listen, and I believe that these conversations
contribute to making Princeton a caring community that values highly each
individual student. Occasionally these conversations
leave me with my own concerns. At meetings in less structured settings,
especially over mealsbreakfast at Lowrie House, coffee at Café
Vivian in the Frist Campus Center, or dinners at eating clubs and residential
collegesstudents talk freely about how they spend their time at
Princeton, and it does not take long before the topic of alcohol and alcohol
abuse on campus comes up. First-year undergraduate students often express
their shock at the role of alcohol in social life on campus. For older
students, the shock has worn off, and while they often express concern,
especially about binge drinkers, the question of how to change the culture
and what responsibility students themselves have to effect change remains
a tough one. This is a complex, multi-faceted problem that exists on campuses
throughout the nation. Princeton has taken positive steps through the
Trustee alcohol initiative to create alternative social activities such
as a concert under the stars by the Wind Ensemble over house
parties weekend or the UFO (Undergraduate Film Organization), which sponsors
late-night showings of recent movies at the Frist Campus Center. But it
is obvious that there is work that still needs to be done to improve the
campus climate with respect to alcohol abuse. I often ask students about
what they do to relax; occasionally I feel as if I have to explain this
verb to students who have been high-energy achievers their entire lives.
My lead question is usually, What books have you read lately?
I have yet to find a student who claims to have read a book during term
that is not assigned reading. One student told me she does not read without
a highlighter in her hand! It is not that students are spending free time
in other waysplaying video games or picking up a musical instrument
to play for pleasure. They just dont have much free, unstructured
time. And what discretionary time they do have they tend to
spend in structured activity such as working out at the Stephens Fitness
Center, or participating in student organizations or student government.
There is a positive aspect to this high level of productive activity,
but a part of me regrets that we dont yet know how to bend time
and space to allow for reading for pleasure, for long and meaningful conversations
with friends, and for the serendipitous encounters that lead to new ideas
and friendships. On the other hand, my question What would make Princeton better? is often met with furrowed brows, followed by suggestions such as Make it a five-year universitiy, which makes me think that students generally know that they are having the experience of a lifetime. I know that I am, as I get to know these extraordinary students.
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