Universities Cater to Older Students
Filed in archive Campus Life by Mark on July 25, 2005

(Source: University of New Hampshire)As student populations continue to change, colleges and universities correspondingly alter how they accommodate their students' lifestyles. Case in point: a Boston
Globe article detailing how a few institutions cater to older students, most of whom commute and have parental obligations. Here's a taste:Forget famous professors, bulging course catalogs, and ivy-cloaked campuses. It's extras like on-campus child care, evening office hours, and commuter lounges that count most with a growing breed of undergraduates: the independent or "nontraditional" student.
Public universities and private ones, many of which did little for these students in the past, are scrambling to accommodate them because their numbers have become far too large to ignore. Broadly defined as financially independent, working adults, nontraditional students age 25 and up now make up 38 percent of postsecondary enrollment, compared with 28 percent in 1970, according to US Department of Education estimates. On many campuses, they have become the majority. Only about a quarter of the nation's 14.9 million undergraduates fit the "traditional" mold of enrolling right out of high school, attending full time, and relying on their parents' purse strings.As the piece suggests, it's hard to say what's "traditional" anymore.
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