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Queens College has more than
18,000 students, many of whom are the first
in their family to attend college. | | |
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A view of the 31-hectare (77-acre)
campus of Queens College | |
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New York — In this international city, where roughly
one-third of residents are foreign-born, there is a borough
called Queens, where nearly one-half of residents are foreign-born.
In this borough is Queens College, whose tree-lined quadrangle
is filled with the chatter of students speaking Hindi, Korean,
Spanish, as well as English.
Queens College, situated on a breezy rise, offers a visitor
a picture-perfect view of mid-town Manhattan and the iconic
Empire State Building. Only a few kilometers away are two
of New York’s prestigious, private higher-education
institutions: Columbia University and New York University.
Queens College’s 19,700 students represent a mosaic
of cultural backgrounds, and one-third of them are the first
people in their families to attend college. “That’s
what is so rich about the education at a place like Queens,”
said college President James Muyskens. (See “One
New York City Neighborhood Is a World of Religious Diversity.”)
Muyskens said the student body at a renowned public university
where he formerly taught philosophy “typically had
upper-middle-class Americans who shared so many values.”
He finds the diversity at Queens invigorating.
The college has been getting recognition lately for providing
an affordable, quality education to local young people.
Its tuition is only $4,000 per year, one-tenth the cost
of some private U.S. colleges and universities.
In the first decades after the college was founded in 1937,
many of its students came from Catholic and Jewish families
that had emigrated from Europe. Today, students come from
the new immigrant communities being established in New York,
especially from families who come from Latin America, and
most recently from China, India and Russia.
Whatever conflicts their home countries may be embroiled
in, students at Queens seem to leave hostilities behind
when they come to campus.
Adnan Nawaz, a biology student born in Pakistan, is president
of the Muslim Students Association of Queens College. The
group’s two small prayer rooms in the Student Union
building — one for men, the other for women —
are across the hall from the meeting room of Hillel, the
Jewish student organization.
Sporting a full beard, black skullcap and long, collarless
Pakistani-style shirt one recent afternoon, Nawaz said members
of the Muslim Students Association use the table tennis
and billiards tables in Hillel’s spacious premises.
“They always share with us,” he said.
That attitude extends to the student government, which
in recent years has established a tradition of shared leadership
between the two biggest campus religions: If the president
is Muslim, the vice president is Jewish, and vice versa.
In its 2008 edition, the Kaplan/Newsweek How to Get Into
College guide names Queens as one of “The 25 Hottest
Schools in America.”
In the 1970s and 1980s, the college had an open admissions
policy under which anyone with a high school diploma could
enroll. The policy had “disastrous” academic
consequences, said Joseph Bertolino, the college’s
vice president for student affairs. But since then, Queens
College gradually has raised its standards. A growing number
of its students is recruited from community colleges, where
they first prove themselves by earning a two-year diploma.
Contrasting the college to the elite “Ivy League”
universities, the guide says, “The school’s
biggest claim to fame is the several generations of lawyers,
doctors and other professionals who could not afford the
Ivies and say Queens changed their lives.”
Professional success, however, requires much determination
from Queens College students. The modest background of some
Queens College graduates is undoubtedly a reason for their
professional success. Their work lives begin early: Many
of the students have a job alongside their studies. “Many
contribute to their extended family household,” Bertolino
said.
According to Bertolino, some students are living in the
United States illegally. (Generally, colleges in America
are not required to check students’ immigration status.)
Bertolino said there is proposed legislation — the
Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act,
known as the “Dream Act” — that would
enable undocumented people who graduate from college to
eventually get citizenship.
Supporters say the bill, which has been introduced but
did not make it out of committee for several years, is likely
to be included in a comprehensive reform of immigration
laws expected in the next few years.
Jonathan Vazcones, whose parents emigrated legally from
Ecuador, said he turned down two other institutions to come
to Queens. “It’s much more personal here,”
he said. “Professors know your name. Queens College
is a hidden gem.”
For more information see Study
in the U.S on America.gov.