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Calling for a need-blind Senior Week

By Adam Fried

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Published: Monday, April 27, 2009

Updated: Monday, April 27, 2009

For seniors, the end is very much in sight. Classes are winding down, finals are looming, and Senior Week is right around the corner.

Ah, yes, Senior Week. A time when the Class of 2009 can just relax and spend time with their friends while enjoying a Duck Tour, a Red Sox game, Senior Gala and a myriad of other activities — if they can afford it.

Events during Senior Week are far from cheap. Interested in learning about Boston on a Duck Tour? That’ll be $30. Watching Big Papi at Fenway? Forty big ones. And Gala? Well, that’ll set you back a whole $50.

And that doesn’t even cover the cost of renting a tuxedo (another $100 if you use a service that Tufts cut a deal with).

And then there’s senior barbecue. One would think that this event would be free. One would be wrong. The school is charging $15 a head for some grub, drinks and conversation. While alcohol will be provided, it is unclear as to whether or not it’s included in the cost of the ticket. If it isn’t, then those ribs had better be amazing. If it is, then it seems unfair to charge the same amount to students who are underage (or, similarly, to those who don’t drink).

Yes, Senior Week events cost an arm and a leg. And what’s worse, it’s not so much that Tufts is hosting events for the seniors … They’re simply organizing them.

I say “organizing” because the majority of the events during Senior Week are being offered to the students at a cost (plus transportation fees). For example, the Senior Class Council is subsidizing the trip to Foxwoods by a meager $2.35 a person. This means that there’s no real financial benefit to seniors to go on the official trip, as opposed to organizing a trip themselves.

Furthermore, organizing these activities themselves gives seniors the added convenience of not having to run on Tufts’ schedule. Want to do some gambling at Foxwoods, but know that there’s no way your initial stake will last you anywhere near five hours (the amount of time the Senior Week trip will be there for)? If you and your friends drive yourself there, you can leave whenever you’d like. And it’ll certainly cost less than the $10 a person Tufts is charging to get there (true, you won’t get those lovely Keno coupons, but who plays Keno anyway?).

However, the bigger issue at hand is that Tufts is doing little, if anything, to help absorb the cost to its students of attending these events.

This is especially interesting given all of the programming that was done this year to raise awareness about class issues. Furthermore, the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate recently passed an initiative that would eliminate the cost of tickets for events put on by certain TCU funded groups.

While I support that initiative wholeheartedly, it seems somewhat peculiar that Tufts would try to support students financially by preventing them from having to pay $4 to see the end-of-semester Tufts Dance Collective show, yet they don’t feel the need to help seniors have a good time on their way out the door.

These actions seem somewhat contradictory. Clearly Tufts is trying to make events open for all students, no matter what their financial situations happen to be. Yet a blind eye is being turned toward the most expensive of these events — ones that the entire senior class is strongly encouraged to attend as a final act of bonding.

The question that Tufts needs to ask itself is this: Do we want to make Senior Week events fiscally accessible to all outgoing students, or do we want to make sure we maintain a pretty bottom line?

The class divide at Tufts is something that already is garnering attention from the Senate. With the economy in the shape that it’s in, it’s likely that this divide is only going to grow wider in the coming years.

I’m not asking that Tufts foot the bill entirely for these events, but is it so much to ask that they at least subsidize them by 50 percent? Going back to that Duck Tour, the total cost for the event is $3,240 (108 tickets at $30 apiece). If Tufts were to cover half of that, we’re talking about a hit of a little over $1,600. Surely the school could swallow that in order to provide some final lasting memories for seniors who have paid much more during their time on the Hill.

I realize that the cost of Senior Week events at Tufts is comparable to Senior Week events at other Boston area schools, but that doesn’t mean that Tufts can’t buck the trend and throw us a financial bone.

I also realize that it’s far too late for anything to change for this year. However, if Tufts truly wishes to address the issues of class disparity facing the student body, it needs to act soon, perhaps by using some of the recovered funds to set up a Senior Week endowment.

I thought that after I dropped $200,000 on my education over the past four years, Tufts would at least be willing to entertain my peers and me by helping pay for tickets to a Sox game, a tour of Boston and some barbecue.

Apparently I was wrong.

--

Adam Fried is a senior majoring in architectural studies.

 

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19 comments

Your name
Wed May 27 2009 00:23
wah wah wah somebody call the wahmbulance!!!!
David
Sun May 3 2009 14:17
Why don't we have a sliding scale, where the wealthier students have to pay $25/beer, while the less advantaged students pay nothing? Better yet, we should redistribute the beers that wealthy students buy. They pour 50% of every beer into pitchers, and the poorer students can drink that beer for free.

Seriously, you people need to grow up. Getting drunk on senior week isn't a right, and in fact it is probably one of the worst things the university could possibly spend its money on. The university is in a financial crisis, just like everybody else. You'll never get ahead in life whining about what you don't have and what you can't afford. Get out there and earn some money if you want to attend senior week. I'm sure you spoiled brats waste way more than $750/year on Starbucks and Anna's anyway. So you aren't going to give money? Well that's probably not a big problem for Tufts, since with your self-entitled attitudes you are unlikely to have any to give anyway.

Your name
Fri May 1 2009 10:06
I completely agree with this article. I don't understand why senate would give so much to a lodge and really nothing to senior week when we are in a financial crisis. Just because the senators who supported the lodge aren't senior doesn't mean that they shouldn't at least think about them.
Gouged
Fri May 1 2009 08:06
Wait until you guys get into these senior week events and pay 8-12 dollars per drink. I loved every minute of senior week, but I think the entire week set me back about 750 bucks. I had saved up all year and was anticipating the cost, but many of my friends were not in the same boat.
Alum
Thu Apr 30 2009 23:23
for what it's worth: when I went to Tufts I first heard about Senior Week when I was a Freshman. If I had had the foresight to think "gee, i'd like to do some of those events" i could have started a senior week fund and watched it grow over 4 years. I didn't and i chose not to go to a majority of senior week events, opting instead to hang out with friends and had a blast. no regrets. also, all this talk about "recovered funds" well, that's my money too. i'm not expecting tufts to write checks to everyone who had their student activitiy fees stolen, but i'd be pretty pissed if it went to something as ridiculous as reduced fees for senior week tickets. c'mon, future alums, let's think about more than just your current class. maybe it could go towards young alumni events that everyone who was affected by this could benefit from or maybe set up a scholarship of sorts. just throwing this idea out there.
Your name
Thu Apr 30 2009 12:18
Thanks for writing this, Adam. Tufts doesn't make the economic disparities any less biting during the last week as an undergrad. I agree with the poster who writes that "students with financial limitations have been making many little sacrifices over the past 4 years." The sheer unaffordability is sort of a last, final slap in the face rather than a good send-off by Tufts. I don't think I plan on giving a dime to Tufts after I leave--the institution has the resources and the people to choose whether to invest a small amount every year for senior activities as a gesture of goodwill, as well as larger funds that will support students who can't afford to take unpaid internships (things along those lines). But Tufts chooses to run itself as a business and sink its money in big building projects (like the Loj), building projects for other department buildings, the campus center, etc., instead of trying to invest in its people. The students here, not bricks and mortar, are what's integral to Tufts, and everyone who is deciding how the money is spent is neglecting to recognize that.
'09 Grad
Wed Apr 29 2009 17:41
To "parent,"
I have no idea what planet you live on, but I am certainly not going home to live with my parents. I have a job and an apartment lined up, and am hoping to pay back my loans in a few years. The story is similar for everyone I know.
your name
Tue Apr 28 2009 15:29
The Senior Class Council gets something like $50,000 from the student activities fee, more than almost any other club. It seems silly to be complaining that Tufts is not chipping in enough of the costs, and it makes perfect sense that the school would rather spend money on financial aid then making sure you can go on a duck tour.

It's true that SCC could decide to put all that money into one event and make it free for everyone, but I think most people would agree that they would rather have more events than fewer. Therefore they have to charge money, and not everyone can go to every event. That's just a fact of life. The point of having so many events is not so you can go to all of them, but so that you can choose a few that appeal to you. There are still free events to go to.

Graduating '09
Tue Apr 28 2009 10:16
Things like this are why Tufts has such a low alumni giving rate -- indeed, Tufts' is one of the lowest in the country. Just a tip: want us to donate in the future? Then work a bit harder to make us fondly remember this place instead of just remembering "Fucking Tufts."
parent
Tue Apr 28 2009 09:48
For those who want the university to pay...where are you going? Back home to live with your parents.
You can bet there are no free lunches...especially after 8 years of W.
One lesson you learned from a $200K education. At this time the school is done with you.
They are more concerned about the incoming class then the outgoing students.
But don't worry your mobile phones will be ringing in 30 days asking for donations.
Good luck in your futures. I have full confidence your generation will work things out.
Senior
Tue Apr 28 2009 00:19
I agree completely. I looked at the costs and realized that even if I'm lucky enough to get a good number, I'll barely be able to afford two tickets to gala, which I'm already planning on attending.

There has to be something fun that's free that everyone can attend. Or maybe even more than one thing.

Maybe we could use that Loj money to help us out.

junior
Mon Apr 27 2009 22:18
yeah i agree, not looking forward to my senior week since ive heard its so expensive..
Your name
Mon Apr 27 2009 18:57
Socialist hell hole is a bit much. The problem with this argument is that it doesn't call for using the recovered money to subsidize the events this year. Instead, a good chunk of the money stolen from us over the past four years and reimbursed to the Senate will go toward the Loj, a facility that, in all practicality, will be used by probably only 100-200 people from the student body per year and will not be available to the seniors graduating this year who essentially paid for it.
Your name
Mon Apr 27 2009 18:37
Thanks for writing this. I have another question: is it too much to ask for a cap and gown rent/loan that doesn't set us back $50?

And yes, it is true that not everyone can do everything they want (to the post below) but students with financial limitations have been making many little sacrifices over the past 4 years. Whether it is working 20 hrs a week and sacrificing weekends or clubs, or not going on spring break, or not eating out, or not being able to take summer classes to stay competitive, or not being able to take that unpaid summer internship... Senior week is just another reminder that even after 4 years of hard work you are not in the same playing field as some of your peers. Yes, it is a fact of life, but that doesn't make it any easier.

Senior
Mon Apr 27 2009 15:21
Dear god I can not wait to get away from this socialist hell hole, wake up people, in life you have to make sacrifices, there will always be people who can afford to do more than others, just because we all pay tuition does not automatically entitle us to be able to do everything that Tufts has to offer. Tuition doesn't even come close to covering the full cost of educating a student so for all of you who want something for nothing, part of your education was subsidized. Like it or not, colleges and universities are businesses and are not in business to lose money, and funding senior week doesn't exactly fit into the educational mission of the school.
Larry B.
Mon Apr 27 2009 14:21
Agreed with all sentiments. Tufts should absolutely subsidize these events in order to make them more accessible to everyone, regardless of their economic situation. Who wants to be that senior sitting at home on the night of the gala because they can't afford the $150 to attend and rent a tux? Epic fail, Tufts. It's too late for me the rest of my senior class, but I hope that next year the Tufts administration will open their eyes.
Your name
Mon Apr 27 2009 14:07
Also, can we please have just one event that allows the entire class to come together? A good percentage of the class couldn't even get in the door for the 100 days celebration.
Laura
Mon Apr 27 2009 14:06
Amen. Additionally, though it was some of our money that was lost in the embezzlement case, we will not see the fruits of the insurance returns. Instead, the money is going towards future, unaffected students who will not have to pay for events.

Does anyone else see a problem with this?

Your name
Mon Apr 27 2009 14:06
I agree with everything written here. Senior week events are absurdly expensive. $50 for the Gala? $35 for a cruise. It's pretty unfair and really ruins the vibe of togetherness that senior week is intended to promote.

Another reason why I can't wait to get out of this place.







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