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College responds to strains felt by its students, staff and facultyIncreased enrollment has strained campus services, class rooms and parking lots this semester, but Washtenaw Community College officials are finally working to alleviate the burden on faculty, staff and students). Parking — or the lack of it — is a problem for everyone on campus. For paying students who need to get to class on time, it’s a major pain. But administrators are finally discussing feasible, concrete options rather than assuming enrollment will go down — and parking won’t be a problem — once the economy improves slightly. The college Board of Trustees and administration has insisted on viable alternatives to take place as soon as Winter 2010: paying students to park at Eastern Michigan University’s Rynearson Stadium and shuttle to WCC, building a parking garage, or pouring more surface lots, though the last two options would provide parking spaces further out. There are other changes for Winter 2010 that administrators hope will improve parking, and overall chaos, during the first few weeks of the semester: new or earlier deadlines for application, financial aid, orientation and assessment; and a drastically reduced limit on course waitlists. By initiating or moving up deadlines, students will need to finalize details on campus before the semester starts. And those who don’t work ahead of time won’t register, leaving more spaces and services for students who prepared. The waitlist-capacity reduction from 99 to five will also reduce the number of unregistered individuals pointlessly parking on campus in the attempt to squeeze into a full class. These finalized changes and ongoing discussions respond to voiced and unvoiced concerns from students, staff and faculty. The college administration should continue to keep its ears and eyes open to recognize and solve campus problems.‘Last minute’ will be much earlierCollege enacts deadlines and limits for Winter 2010 to check hectic first weeksEditor ashrodes@wccnet.edu
Application deadline initiatedThe college has only had a recommended application deadline, and many applicants start the process the first week of classes. But in Winter 2010, there will be an exact application deadline: Jan. 4 at 6 p.m., a week before classes start on Jan. 11. The college will enforce the deadline by taking the Web application down until Jan. 19. Applicants must also complete orientation and assessment before they can register for classes, so those deadlines are moved up. The deadline for orientation moved from Jan. 7 to Jan. 6, and the COMPASS test start deadline moved up a few hours from 4 p.m. to 12 p.m. on Jan. 7 — to ensure students don’t rush through the test to register for classes by the 6 p.m. deadline.Financial aid deadline to ensure fundingWCC will also implement a Dec. 11 deadline by which it needs to receive federally processed FAFSA applications for students to receive aid by the Winter payment deadline. It previously had no deadline. That doesn’t mean students can submit a FAFSA on Dec. 11, because the government first processes the application before sending it to WCC. However, eligible students can receive Pell Grant money for Winter 2010 through June 30 of next year. But if the application isn’t received by Dec. 11, the money won’t be there for the payment deadline, so students will need to make other payment arrangements, Blakey said.Waitlist shortened from 99 to fiveWCC will essentially max out the course schedule from the start in Winter, so in most time slots, the college couldn’t add more sections, which they have done if a waitlist goes to 15 or 20. However, the college may still add sections at less-crowded times if there is visible demand, said Roger Palay, vice president of Instruction. But since most time slots will be maxed out, it doesn’t make sense for courses to have waitlists beyond five. “Student’s might feel like they’re going to get in because they’re on the waitlist, but that’s giving them a false sense because the faculty can’t take that many people,” Blakey said. After the first payment deadline Dec. 10, the waitlist will shorten to three. The college hopes the shorter waitlists will reduce the number of students pressuring faculty to let them in a course. It will be easier for students to determine which classes have available seats or spots on the waitlist, however. This semester, online course catalog viewers had to click the “status” button to see how many seats and waitlist spots were left, and after the registration deadline, the waitlist went to zero because the lists were archived. In Winter, the waitlist numbers will show past the registration deadline, and the catalog will be color-coded so students get an idea of how many seats are left at a glance.Looking aheadThe December break makes it difficult to move deadlines back further, so “this is still kind of crunched,” Blakey said. Deadlines might be even earlier for the Spring/Summer 2010 or Fall 2010 Semesters. |
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