Quantcast The Rice Thresher
College Media Network

the Rice Thresher

The Student Newspaper of Rice University since 1916

College course budgets face cuts

Colleges to absorb fiscal burden to fund courses

Josh Rutenberg

Issue date: 2/5/10 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
Media Credit: David Rosales

Student-taught courses may soon want to include a lecture on thriftiness, because the pocketbooks of Rice University are rapidly shrinking.

As the latest victim of the 5 percent university-wide budget cuts, college courses will have to work with a yearly budget of no more than $250 per college next semester, down from the initial $5,000 per college allotted in spring of 2008. After determining that most colleges did not use up their college course budget, the Dean's Office reduced funding for college courses to $3,000 for the current academic year. The subsequent reductions will go into effect next year.

Concurrently, the number of student-taught courses offered has risen from seven courses with 105 students enrolled in spring 2008, to 46 courses with 730 students enrolled in spring 2010. When student-teachers and academic committee chairs are included, roughly 25 percent of students have some level of involvement with the college courses.

Dean of Undergraduates Robin Forman said the responsibility of maintaining the college courses will ultimately rest with the individual colleges.

"Expenses beyond the budget will have to be supported by student budgets in the colleges," Forman said. "Students will have more responsibility to pick up the slack, and colleges may have to contribute to the [college course] budget."

Rice's only introductory law course, LOVE 237: Introduction to Law I, is among the courses that will have to find new sources of funding. The course, which originally used all $5,000 of its budget to pay a practicing professor to teach the course, will be unable to continue paying the same amount without additional resources.

BROW 114: Easy French Cooking with Sous Chef Thierry applied for and received a budget of $400 for the current semester from Brown's college course budget, but course instructor Thierry Rignol said the budget cuts will have a definite impact on the future of the class.

"If we want to offer the same class with the same quality, budget cuts will be a problem," Rignol, a Brown College sophomore, said. "I won't have the support from Brown academics I need."

Wiess College Master Michael Gustin, who helped start the college courses in 2007, said he believes the fate of the courses will rest with student interest.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools


Comments from unregistered users are subject to editor approval. Log in or register now to post a comment immediately. Alternatively, you may now even post a comment anonymously.

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 2

alum

posted 2/04/10 @ 8:48 PM CST

i want to read the article, but im distracted by that terrible graphic

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Comments will never be removed or edited because of the commenter's ideology or viewpoint. However, comments with excessive profanity, that steer too far off topic, that are libelous or that resort to personal attacks are subject to removal. Comments made on the Thresher Web site may be republished in the Thresher's print edition, and may be edited for brevity or clarity.

Advertisement

Poll

What do you think of the new Rice EMS information sharing policy?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement