Overhaul Orientation

Contributing Writer
Last Updated Monday, 30 August 2010 11:16
the jist

The college experience is one every first-year is looking forward to, a time to mingle and meet new people throughout campus and to do what you want in your free time.


The college experience is one every first-year is looking forward to, a time to mingle and meet new people throughout campus and to do what you want in your free time.

The only problem with this image of a perfect college day is that there is no free time and you are forced to talk only to the people in your hall. 

Orientation is set up to help you meet new people and to get to know the campus, but the way they go about it is highly flawed. The whole method of telling you what to do and when to do it for the entire day is more appropriate for a middle school camp than for a college orientation. 

Most first-years want time to do what they want and meet people for themselves. However, this seems to be frowned upon by orientation. Any free time that you do get normally has to go to preparing for yet another event in the long series of annoying events that a majority of first-years have no desire to attend. 

Also, orientation seems to drag on for all eternity. One day after another of regimented, completely blocked scheduling seems more reminiscent of what you might find at a boot camp as opposed to a liberal arts college. There is barely any time set aside between events to allow you to get from one event to the other. So first-years can often be spotted scurrying frantically all around campus trying to make sure they do not miss anything on their four-page long schedule.

Some of the activities in orientation are necessary, but many are not. It seems like the orientation set out with the mission to make sure that first-years had no time to set off and explore for themselves. One day of icebreakers is understandable and in fact expected, but five days is far beyond the realms of logical or tolerable. 

You would think that after living with the same people for five days there would be some possibility that icebreakers were no longer necessary, but up to the final hour of the last day of orientation there are icebreakers followed by icebreakers followed by icebreakers. Many first-years are getting sick of the awkward forced conversations when they have already met people they mesh well with.  

The main purpose of orientation is to get first-years assimilated with the campus, but it seems that this orientation has set out to isolate them from the rest of the College. There are around five hundred currently on campus; yet many first-years know only the people in their hall. This could be because they’re anti-social, but it seems far more likely due to the fact that orientation only allows you to see the people on your floor. Every hour of every day of the program is spent with the people on your floor and there are very few opportunities to escape.

While orientation is a necessary part of the college transition, there is no reason that it should become more like a prison sentence then a college campus.


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