MIT to stop admitting freshmen beginning in 2001
Associated Press, 10/05/98 12:22
By Bradley Rhodes
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.(AP) -- In light of continued incidents involving
underage drinking at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the
school has announced that starting in 2001 it will no longer admit
freshmen to its undergraduate program.
``If we could completely control the actions of our students we
would, but at this time the elimination of freshman year is the only way
to completely protect our charges,'' announced Charles Vest, President
of MIT, to an astonished faculty on Monday. ``Recent events have made
it clear that no university system can control the actions of its
students, on or off campus. We must start thinking about protecting our
students in terms of not having them.''
The school would continue to accept transfer students in their
sophomore year. However, students under the age of 21 would be housed
in foster homes in the greater Boston area. Vest said the foster home
system is an excellent model for the future of MIT housing. ``Foster
homes provide a nurturing environment while still maintaining control
and strict discipline for our underage students,'' said Vest.
MIT's action comes after a series of highly publicized alcohol
related incidents, the most recent involving the hospitalization of a
20-year-old Simmons College student after excessive drinking at an MIT
dorm party last Saturday. The MIT administration has also been under
harsh criticism for their lack of responsibility for students' actions
since the death of Scott S. Krueger, a freshman member of Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity who drank himself to death during a pledge party.
After the death the administration moved to house all freshmen on
campus, but recent incidents in dormitories have shown that the housing
move did not go far enough.
President Vest downplayed faculty concerns that it would be harder to
draw transfer students away from other universities once they have been
integrated into student life elsewhere. ``At this point, I want to
reiterate that students are and will be important elements of our campus
life,'' said Vest. ``We do not expect all the departments to go through
this transition without some help, financial and otherwise, from the
Institute. This is not a guarantee that every department will survive
as it currently exists, but it is not at all clear that they would if we
continued with the current system unchanged.''
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