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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
24, No. 6, Sept. 16, 2004

Class
of 2008
Freshman class sets enrollment
record
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Record-breaker
Quad Day 2004 on Sept. 24 drew throngs of students
to the UI Quad behind the Illini Union for free entertainment
and opportunities to hobnob with representatives of
campus and community organizations. This year’s
freshman class numbered more than 7,200 students,
436 more than last year’s record-setting class,
according to preliminary enrollment reports. |
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While the farmers
in downstate Illinois are preparing for this fall’s harvest, on
the UI’s Urbana campus there is already a bumper crop –
of freshmen, that is. According to preliminary enrollment reports, there
are approximately 7,258 freshmen on campus this fall, a record high
for the campus and an increase of more than 436 over last year’s
freshman class. Total undergraduate enrollment for fall 2004 is 29,246,
up slightly from 28,589 in fall 2003.
Many, but not all, universities around the country are experiencing
record-high freshman enrollment, attributable in part to the increased
population of people in the 18-22 age group, and in Illinois, to record
numbers of high school graduates as well.
“We’re hitting the ‘baby boomlet,’ ” said
Carol Livingstone, associate provost and director of the Division of
Management Information, who added that the academic standing of incoming
freshmen remains high as well. Members of the incoming freshmen class
have mean composite scores of 27.7 on the ACT and rank in the 87th percentile
of their high schools.
“We have a growing population of high school grads in Illinois
through 2010,” said Ruth Watkins, associate provost. “We
have a very competitive pool of applicants from which to choose and
really more students from which to choose than ever.”
This year, the campus accepted 64.7 percent of the 22,882 applications
received from potential freshmen.
Ann Mester, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
said that LAS had an influx of more than 300 freshmen and increased
the number of course sections by about 5 percent to 10 percent in subjects
such as mathematics and biology to accommodate them.
In addition, LAS also added more seats this semester with the launching
of its Global Studies Initiative, a series of seven 100-level courses
with an aggregate enrollment of about 1,400 students. The courses count
as general studies credits. This semester’s offerings include
classes in anthropology, economics, geography, history, political science
and sociology. The classes will meet communally in Foellinger Auditorium
on several occasions during the semester to hear guest speakers who
will discuss themes common to the various subjects.
“Some of these courses were on the books before, but some are
new and some are newly formulated to be dedicated to freshmen this year,”
Mester said. “Last year, because we had a huge freshman class,
we had changed course delivery in some courses,” dropping discussion
sections from some courses and adding large, faculty-taught lectures
where appropriate.
Last year, those large lectures were filled only to about 75-80 percent
of capacity, spaces that LAS utilized this year to accommodate the flood
of freshmen.
By offering additional course sections in high-demand areas, launching
the global studies series and increasing enrollment in the large lectures,
the college increased its capacity by about 700 seats this semester,
Mester said.
Teaching assistants also were added in some departments, but another
lean budget year meant that some departments only maintained their number
of TAs – even so they were happy not to lose any, Mester said.
In anticipation of a larger freshman class this fall, LAS expanded its
summer 2004 enrollment by about one-third, particularly in high-demand
areas such as biology, for which capacity is contingent upon the availability
of lab space. The additional summer courses were especially advantageous
to upperclassmen who would have been competing against freshmen for
seats in those courses in the fall and would have been excluded from
sections designated for freshmen only.
Likewise, the Housing Division began preparing for this semester’s
influx of freshmen more than a year ago, by shortening the time returning
residents were able to make room reassignments on the Web for fall 2004.
“It usually goes about a month into (the spring semester), and
this year, with plenty of notice, we ended before winter break,”
said Kirsten Ruby, assistant director of marketing for Housing. “We
tried to limit our returning numbers that way. Anybody who wanted to
reassign was welcome to reassign, but we didn’t leave it open
for everybody to mull it over and then decide. That got us just enough
of the wiggle room that we needed.”
This semester, about 227 students wound up in temporary housing, staying
in extra rooms in the dorms that are equipped the same as regular rooms
– with locking doors, closets, phone lines and Internet connections
– but are generally used for lounge areas when not accommodating
residents. Students in temporary housing are being reassigned to permanent
rooms as spaces are freed up by students who drop out. Consistent with
prior years, Housing staff expect attrition to free up approximately
200 permanent spaces this semester.
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