Sometimes I take my age for granted. If I would have been born a year later, I would have probably been facing the reality that I might not have ever come to FAU. In case you live on Mars and have absolutely no idea of what is going on, in the last couple months, the state of Florida has cut the budgets of schools like FAU. That means all incoming freshmen for the class of 2012 might be getting rejected from FAU.
A lot of my high school friends are in this situation right now. It’s almost summer and a lot of them still don’t know whether or not they’re coming to FAU because of our recent lack of money.
By the looks of it all, incoming freshmen for the class of 2012 will be fewer and fewer because FAU is sending out more rejection letters to hopeful students due to the state budget cuts. In fact FAU is possibly rejecting something close to
2,000 qualified students because of this problem.
Not only that, but the atmosphere of FAU wouldn’t be the same.
I’ve often complained about FAU not being the “typical” college campus. FAU is a quiet campus compared to other big universities such as
UF or
UCF but with budget cuts, FAU could become what Harly Sushil, a student participating in the
Save our Summer Classes rally, calls a “ghost town.”
“You think the campus is quiet on the weekends now?” says Sushil. “It’s going to be a ghost town.”
Incoming freshmen are not going to have the same college experience that I had. Even though this campus is not the traditional campus, there are some signs of human activity during the weekends. But with this immense lack of money, school will be emptier, less classes to choose from, and the entire atmosphere of a college campus will be ruined.
But for some reason, even with budget cuts
looming and students rallying against
them, I still didn’t pay attention.
Not only did I not care that much, but didn’t quite understand why it was such a big deal that summer classes were going to get cut (or that the budget was being cut for that matter) - after all, do people actually study during the summer?
Well, I was wrong. Now I am considering taking classes during the summer to speed up my education and I’ve realized what reducing the budget actually means for me. Some students might not be able to graduate on time because of fewer summer classes and some might not even get accepted to FAU for the very same reason.
In fact, according to this article from the
Sun Sentinel , FAU's budget was cut by $6.3 million last fall and $3.3 million this spring.
Everyone is affected by this and I can’t believe I never realized how important and how much of a big deal this is. As a freshman, I’m affected by this because I still have three more years until I finish my education at FAU, three more years I have to face with the consequences of budget cuts, three more years with less summer classes, and maybe not even graduating on time because of FAU’s lack of money.
“This affects all of us,” said freshman Nadia Ismael. “Florida’s state budget cuts are changing the entire atmosphere of what school used to be. I’m just happy I’m transferring - I don’t think I can learn like this.”