GS Welcomes the Fall 2015 Entering Class

On Monday, August 31, 2015, the School of General Studies welcomed 471 new undergraduates at New Student Orientation held on Low Plaza.

September 08, 2015

Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger was invited to the podium to give the opening address.

“GS is a unique institution within a great university,” President Bollinger said, and then added, “We are all with you. We all want to be GS students."

    University President Lee C. Bollinger

    He went on to highlight GS’s larger context within Columbia University, and pointed out that the University is one of the most international in the Ivy League, a status that GS students greatly contribute to.

    Following the President's speech, Dean Peter J. Awn spoke about the value nontraditional students add to Columbia's classrooms.

    “Time and again it’s been proven that age and experience are not contagious diseases,” he joked. Instead, the nontraditional characteristics of GS students keep Columbia undergraduate classrooms unique among similar institutions.

    We all want to be GS students.

    Lee C. Bollinger, President of Columbia University

    Dean Awn welcomed not only GS students who have had a break in their education, but also those who are enrolled in the Joint Program with List College of the Jewish Theological Seminary, the Dual BA Program Between Columbia University and Sciences Po, and the Joint Bachelor’s Degree Program between City University of Hong Kong and Columbia University.

      Dean Peter J. Awn

      “The core value of a great university is that it should be a marketplace of great ideas, bringing different backgrounds in conversation. One way to do this is to engage with the greater university. Open yourself to ideas and worldviews different from your own, as that will help you better articulate your position,” Awn said.

      He encouraged incoming students to use the resources at their disposal, including Columbia faculty, GS staff, and fellow students.

        GS staff stand at the front of the tent

        The welcome ceremony ended with an introduction to the GS staff that will be supporting the new students.

        After the welcome ceremony, new students attended Orientation Week events both on and off campus, including sessions about educational financing and academic support services led by faculty and staff. They also participated in student and alumni meet and greets, city-wide tours, and a speed-meeting party.

        Overview of the Fall 2015 Entering Class

        Summary

        The School of General Studies continues to be one of the most diverse undergraduate colleges in the Ivy League. The presence of GS students in the Columbia classroom enables the University, already one of the most ethnically and economically diverse undergraduate communities in the Ivy League, to define diversity on much broader terms—a truly global diversity of socio-economic background, age, life and career experience, and perspective.

        • 22% are international students
        • 24% are first-generation college students
        • 33% are Pell Grant-eligible
        • 27% are U.S. military veterans

        Enrollment

        • 471 total new undergraduate students
        • 32 GS-JTS Joint Program students
        • 58 new students are enrolling at GS for their third year in the Dual BA Program Between Columbia University and Sciences Po
        • 7 students are entering as part of the Joint Bachelor’s Degree Program between City University of Hong Kong and Columbia University

        Demographics

        • Age range: 15 to 63 years old
        • Women: 41%
        • Men: 59%
        • Marital status: 9% of new students are married
        • Dependents: 3% of new students have children
        • U.S. residents hail from 27 states

        Citizenship

        • 22% of incoming students are international students
        • 30 foreign countries are represented
        • New international students come from as close as Canada and as far away as Japan, New Zealand, Peru, Turkmenistan, and Nigeria

        Educational Path

        • Enrolling at GS to earn a second B.A. degree: 5%
        • First-generation college students: 24%
        • Educational break: At least one student has a 37-year break in their educational path
        • Entering Columbia with transfer credits: 89%

        Occupations

        This year’s class includes: veterans, professional actors, dancers, musicians, small business owners, fashion models, filmmakers, a fundraiser, a nanny, an EMT, a film festival organizer, tutors, library workers, a chef, a professional tattoo artist, a priest, a barista, and crypto-linguists.

        We are also pleased to welcome 102 new students who have served in the armed forces in either the U.S. or their home countries.

        • U.S. Military: 71 (30—Marine Corps; 17—Army; 11—Navy; 11—Air Force; 2—Coast Guard), and 68 new students are expected to be supported by the Yellow Ribbon Program
        • Foreign Armed Forces: 31 (14—Israeli Defense Forces; 10—Republic of Korea Armed Forces; 7—Singapore Armed Forces)