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CHANGING PLACES: Transfer students
Mabaye, Chiang, Gentry and Hartley.
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scott hartley likes to
point out the wooden bench in the Quad where his life
changed. Sitting there on a warm June afternoon nearly
two years ago, the Palo Alto native had a revelation.
He had just finished his second year of college, but
the University of Virginia wasn’t meeting his
expectations. Hartley felt at odds with classmates focused
on landing plum business jobs and he wanted more than
a Greek-centric social scene. Stanford, he realized,
encouraged a broad liberal arts education and was a
short Caltrain ride from culture-packed San Francisco.
“That’s when it hit me,” he remembers.
“I should be at Stanford.”
Come June, the political science major will graduate
with the Class of 2005, but he won’t be able to
reminisce with freshman dormmates, complain about IHUM
or swap stories about Sophomore College. He is one of
the 80 to 100 students who transfer to Stanford each
year to complete their undergraduate careers. From Colby
College in Waterville, Maine, and the University of
Victoria in British Columbia, from Penn and Princeton
and from two-year community colleges, they are newcomers
in a strange land, veterans of collegiate life but unfamiliar
with the local language and culture.
Late to join their classmates, transfer students arrive
willing to face isolation and embrace uncertainty in
the hope of finding better academics, more diversity,
a new social scene. Some have to sacrifice previous
course credits, or prove themselves as athletes all
over again.
As much as the transfers look to Stanford to meet their
needs, the University looks to them to add another dimension
to campus life. “We believe that undergraduates
who have attended another college bring an important
perspective to the university,” the 2005 Application
for Transfer Admission reads. “Stanford has, since
its founding, reserved some places for transfer students,
who normally comprise some eight percent of the student
body.”
About 35 percent of U.S. college students in two- and
four-year institutions transfer at some point during
their postsecondary careers. (Officials in the registrar’s
office say Stanford doesn’t record the numbers
or destinations of students transferring from
the Farm.) The University receives about 1,300 transfer
applications annually and admits roughly 7 percent,
compared to the 12.6 percent acceptance rate for freshmen
last year. In 1999, an unusually high number of freshman
applicants accepted their admission offers, so only
29 of 1,302 transfer applicants got in. (Transfer deadlines
are later.) “That was a safety valve in some sense,”
says Anna Marie Porras, director of admission and financial
aid. “It worked for us, but it wasn’t ideal.”
Not ideal because transfers bring a special element
to the classrooms and residence halls, says Porras,
’89, MA ’89. Besides having experienced
academic life and culture at other colleges, “they
know why they are coming to Stanford in a very different
way than freshmen can. They’re moving here either
from a four-year institution that isn’t quite
suiting their needs or from a two-year institution that,
almost by definition, doesn’t have the resources
a place like Stanford has. So they’re coming here
with a different kind of hunger and drive, and that’s
a valuable thing.”
LIKE SCOTT HARTLEY, junior
Katie Swanson from Hillsborough, Calif., first chose
an Eastern university. She grew up attending youth soccer
camps and football games at Stanford, so the Farm seemed
too close to home. “I wanted that ideal Ivy League,
East Coast feeling,” she says. “I’m
kind of preppy, so Princeton seemed like the perfect
place.” Swanson visited the campus, liked the
students she met and applied early decision. Once accepted,
she ditched her unfinished Stanford application—but
only temporarily. After 21⁄2 years at Princeton,
she realized something wasn’t right.
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GILLIAN GENTRY: Gentry welcomed
transfer orientation. 'At times you feel like
you're this little group lost in a huge sea.'
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“I was really loving my classes and professors,
but with the social atmosphere, there wasn’t a
lot of diversity,” she says. “Even if there
were kids from different races, everyone thought the
same, everyone had similar attitudes and values. I was
in a sorority and a good eating club, and that was what
defined me: my title and my status. I was used to California
where you can be friends with everyone and you can have
different interests. I just felt like I was missing
part of my education.”
Swanson thought Stanford’s friendly atmosphere
and reputation for open-mindedness would be a better
fit, so she began the transfer process midway through
her junior year. The application is similar to the freshman
version—but it also wants to know why applicants
wish to leave their current institution and why they
find Stanford attractive.
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CAROLYN CHIANG: 'It's hard
to leave the life you know. What if you get there
and it's not better?'
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For some, the choice is pragmatic. Gillian Gentry worked
20-hour weeks to pay her way through two years at Foothill
College in Los Altos Hills, earning an associate degree
and a 4.0 grade point average. UCLA, UC-Berkeley and
Stanford offered her transfer admission. Gentry considered
the financial aid packages: Cal’s tuition was
cheaper, but the state deducted a “parental contribution”
from her aid entitlement even though she’d be
putting herself through school. Stanford’s grants
and loans negated the difference, so she chose the Farm.
The University recognizes that transfer students have
different needs than freshmen, and plans accordingly.
“With all of our programming, we balance their
desire to become part of their class with their need
to have some extra attention at the outset,” says
Krista Zizzo, director of outreach and assessment in
the freshman dean’s office.
For Swanson, the first step was to meet with Phil Spitz,
a specialist in the registrar’s office who deals
with transfer credit. Students can transfer no more
than 90 units, or two years’ worth of classes,
so Spitz spent several hours examining her previous
courses, outlining an academic plan and introducing
her to various administrators. “I almost wanted
to give him a hug,” Swanson says of the unexpected
attention.
Such pre-arrival treatment is routine. Sally Mentzer,
coordinator of transfer advising, encourages students
to see her during the summer to discuss their academic
interests. In early August, “Transfer Visit Day”
provides a chance to mingle and explore campus resources.
Transfers also can participate in the Stanford Pre-Orientation
Trip, a five-day backpacking excursion into the Sierra
Nevada. Each 10-member SPOT group hikes between four
and seven miles per day, and after setting up camp each
evening, they share stories, play games and ask current
students (their trip leaders) what Stanford is really
like. The program was created in 2003 to foster community
among transfers before they’re immersed in the
frenetic pace of Orientation.
Transfer students appreciate the special attention when
they arrive on campus, suddenly sharing the spotlight
with more than 1,600 eager freshmen. “At times
you feel like you’re this little group lost in
a huge sea shouting ‘Go Branner’ and all
of that,” says Gentry, who will graduate this
year. She welcomed Stanford’s practice of pairing
transfers as roommates and assigning groups of them
to a handful of neighboring dorms.
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SCOTT HARTLEY: After two years
on the East Coast, Hartley realized, 'I should
be at Stanford.'
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“It was really helpful to have that community
in place, to be in Kimball [Hall] and have transfers
around,” Gentry says. “When you’re
a transfer, you feel inexperienced about Stanford but
you don’t feel inexperienced about college itself.
And that’s what was helpful about having transfer-specific
orientation activities. [Otherwise] you’d show
up to one of the freshman ones and go, ‘I feel
old. I don’t need to hear about dating and sex
in college. I’ve been there.’”
WHEN THE EUPHORIA OF SEPTEMBER
dissipates into the midterms and problem sets of October,
many transfers are anxious to prove they belong. Gentry,
who still works long hours at a Coldwell Banker branch
to finance her education, worried whether her community
college background had prepared her to succeed in classes
with Stanford peers who knew the ropes. Getting back
her first assignment was a defining moment.
“I was pretty scared because I didn’t know
if my past experience prepared me for the kind of paper
a Stanford professor would expect,” Gentry says.
When she got back her research paper on King Alfred
for a class called History of the English Language,
“I got an A! I was really overjoyed. I was like,
‘Yes, I can do this. I can work as hard as I worked
at Foothill and I’m smart enough to get A’s
at Stanford.’”
Some transfers from four-year universities are eager
to dispel any misconceptions. People often wonder why
Swanson, a sociology major, left Princeton for a school
of similar stature, but she doesn’t let their
imaginations fill in the blanks.
“I do feel like there’s a mentality that
we’re all escaping something, that we didn’t
have any friends at our old school so we came here to
try and find friends,” Swanson says. “None
of the transfers I’ve met are like that at all.
No one was running from something, but I feel like I
have to explain myself to people.”
“I don’t think of the transfers as students
who are escaping something,” admission director
Porras says. “We’re looking for the students
who are drawn to Stanford because of what we offer.”
For Tapiwa Mabaye, the Farm offered plenty. A native
of Harare, Zimbabwe, he had visited the United States
during high school and wanted to come back. Financial
aid was a top priority, and Mabaye learned that Colby
College was highly ranked for granting aid to international
students. In a winter scene in its viewbook, “You’d
see students on skis as if they’re going to class,
and I was like, ‘Wow, that seems cool!’”
He was also drawn to Colby’s finance and economics
courses.
But Colby was not what he expected. Mabaye longed for
a more challenging academic atmosphere and diverse student
body. As for skiing to class? “Trust me, I never
saw anyone do that at Colby,” he says. Mabaye
applied to Stanford, Harvard, Yale and Wharton. Harvard
and Yale admitted him, but Stanford matched the financial
aid he was receiving at Colby, so he chose the Farm.
As soon as he left for the Sierra on a SPOT excursion,
he knew he had made the right decision.
“We joked that after seeing people at their grimiest,
dirtiest, with no sleep and in their worst state, there’s
nothing else to know about each other,” he says.
“It was really great. The kids who went on the
SPOT trip are definitely much tighter.” Mabaye
is thousands of miles from home, but in his transfer
friends he’s found a support network. And he’s
finally comfortable with his campus identity: “At
Colby, I was the international kid. At Stanford I feel
more like a normal kid.”
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TAPIWA MABAYE: 'It was really
great. The kids who went on the SPOT trip are
definitely much tighter.'
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It was the transition from Colby’s semester system
to Stanford’s quarters that proved difficult for
Mabaye. Other transfers grapple with Farm lingo. When
Swanson tells friends she’s on her way to a discussion
section, “I’m going to precepts” usually
rolls off her tongue. She also calls her Stanford ID
her “proximity card.” For Gentry, shopping
for classes was a new phenomenon; she was so used to
preregistering for classes at Foothill, she spent the
first two weeks of fall quarter wondering, “What
deadline have I missed?” Adam Kreek, from the
University of Victoria, refers to his fall quarter as
a “pretty intense first quad.” Coming from
a comparatively staid campus, he was startled to stumble
upon a Big Game pep rally and marveled at the prevalence
of a cappella groups.
Indeed, it’s the lighter side of Stanford that
strikes some newcomers. Michael LeBeau, who spent two
years at the University of Chicago, transferred to Stanford
to major in symbolic systems. LeBeau, a senior, says
his former classmates took pride in T-shirts reading,
“The University of Chicago: Where Fun Comes to
Die”; at Stanford, he was thrilled not to be the
only person in his dorm with a television. Chris Holt,
a junior who spent a year at Middlebury, says transferring
was the best decision he ever made and calls his first
year at Stanford his “freshman year.” Holt
was so enthralled with the Band’s unruly orientation
rally—he likened it to a soccer riot—he
joined their ranks days later. He also writes a Daily
column.
Transfers find their footing in a variety of ways. Kreek
was on Canada’s Olympic crew team in Athens and
joined the Stanford crew. Besnik Hyseni, an ethnic Albanian
from Kosovo who had spent time in a refugee camp, transferred
from the College of Marin and was one of the first to
join a new ethnomusicology club.
Even after settling in, some transfers miss certain
aspects of their former schools. Hartley says his friends
at Virginia were more spontaneous; at Stanford, hanging
out with friends requires a long look at everyone’s
busy schedules. Carey Myslewski, a sophomore physics
major and rugby player, came to the Farm after a year
at Wesleyan in Middletown, Conn. Although the rigorous
academic work is a perfect fit, she says, at the smaller
school she was able to play varsity volleyball. Chris
Holt says he’d like to donate the proceeds of
his first novel to Stanford, but he sometimes misses
the frigid days at Middlebury when classmates dropped
everything to go skiing.
FOR ALL THEIR DIFFERENCES,
most transfers use the same word to describe one other:
courageous. Leaving the comfort of close friends and
familiar locations for something new, with no assurance
it will fulfill their needs, is a brave undertaking.
Just ask Carolyn Chiang. A senior from Greencastle,
Ind., Chiang was a pianist who had performed at the
White House and Carnegie Hall. After three years in
the Peabody Conservatory at Johns Hopkins, she began
experiencing chronic pain in her left hand and wrist.
Doctors recommended she stop playing piano. With her
career derailed, Chiang thought transferring might help
her refocus on academics. NYU offered admission first,
but when she called Stanford to get a decision, former
dean of admission Robin Mamlet immediately asked how
her hand was doing, then offered her a place. Mamlet’s
concern helped alleviate Chiang’s misgivings about
crossing the country.
“It’s hard to leave the life that you know,”
says the political science major. “It would have
been much easier to stay at Hopkins. I knew Baltimore,
I had friends there, I had my life there. You need to
be okay with uncertainty because it’s a big decision
to leave where you are. And what if you get there and
it’s not better?”
For athletes, the decision can be even more wrenching.
Brooke Smith was a star basketball player at Marin Catholic
High School before choosing Duke over Stanford in what
she calls an “overwhelming recruiting process.”
After a disappointing freshman year in which she saw
little playing time, Smith wanted to transfer even though
NCAA rules meant she’d have to sit out a year.
“If basketball’s not going well,”
she says, “that affects just about everything
else I’m doing.”
Stanford was the only school Smith considered, and while
she liked the fact it was closer to home, there were
no guarantees about basketball. “I was like, ‘If
basketball is worse than it is at Duke, if basketball
just doesn’t translate as I’m hoping it
will, is it still a valid switch for me to make?’”
Smith says. “I decided that it was definitely
worth it for me. I love being in the Bay Area and the
academics here are top in the country. So regardless
of how basketball turned out, I knew this was going
to be a better fit for me overall.”
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KATIE SWANSON: 'I feel like
the transfers are all kids who believe they can
have more—and better—if they know
where to look for it.'
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Leaving her Duke teammates—a close-knit group
she still counts as friends—was difficult, but
they encouraged her to do what made her happy. Currently
Stanford’s starting center, Smith thinks last
year’s stint on the sidelines was responsible
for her breakout success this season. “I got a
year to adjust to my new situation, get some more skills,
play with the team and get to know everyone prior to
being out on the court,” she says.
Swanson uses an offbeat example to describe what she
thinks sets transfers apart. “A lot of the transfers
I’ve met are take-charge people,” she says.
“In the dining hall, when the chocolate syrup
runs out and everyone is just standing there, it’s
always the transfer who goes, ‘Let’s go
see if there’s more, let’s go ask for more.’
If they don’t get it, they don’t get it,
but they think the possibilities are out there for something
better. I feel like the transfers are all kids who believe
they can have more—and better—if they know
where to look for it.”
As Porras puts it, “Transfers are just not willing
to compromise their education, and I think that’s
a really positive thing.”
ONCE THEY GRADUATE, is
the alumni experience any different for transfer students
than for four-years? Jerold Pearson, director of market
research for the Alumni Association, surveyed 605 alumni
in November 2002 and found no difference in their feelings
about Stanford. “Transfers, however, are much
less likely to have a close affinity with their graduating
class, and are a bit less likely to feel part of the
greater Stanford community,” he says. Pearson
admits the transfer sample size was too small to make
reliable statistical inferences but offers one example
as proof: himself.
Pearson, ’75, transferred from Amherst. “I
was fleeing from my ex-girlfriend” who attended
nearby Smith College, he recalls, only half joking.
“I’ve learned how to deal with misfortune
and sadness in a more mature way, but in those days,
the best way was to flee.”
Looking back, Pearson sees the Farm as much more than
a refuge for the lovelorn. “It gave me a huge
sense of self-confidence that I don’t think I
had before,” he says. “Whether that self-confidence
came from having the courage as an 18-year-old to make
a change after only a year and a half, or just being
accepted at Stanford and being able to thrive, I’m
not sure. But I’ve always been very appreciative
of Stanford, and I feel, whether it was intentional
or not, that Stanford really made a difference in my
life.”
Back on his bench, Scott Hartley is months away from
graduation. Rather than a small ceremony under Virginia’s
famed rotunda, he looks forward to a raucous Wacky Walk
and reflects on the path he has chosen.
“Your first two years of college, you really learn
about yourself, and the second two years you learn things
from school,” he says. “I got to know myself
at the University of Virginia, but I’m so glad
I got to know Stanford.” |