There are too many people going ashore for graduate school entrance examinations, and there are not

Mondo Education Updated on 2024-01-29

There is a call that living in a dormitory, students will be disciplined like children. In addition, most of the dormitories are six-person and eight-person rooms, leaving almost no privacy space for adults. But for most students who are sensitive, in the face of economic issues, privacy, personal boundary freedom, etc., can all be put aside.

Housing anxiety, early to college.

In recent years, more and more graduate students have found themselves facing the "era of no dormitory". finally went ashore for graduate school entrance examinations, but the school did not allocate dormitories to graduate students.

According to the graduate admissions guidelines of many schools, part-time students, post-graduate students, and local students who are not allocated dormitories are generally allotted, which means that some students must rent their own apartments.

The first thing I did when I went ashore was to rent a house. (Picture Insect Creativity).

Most of these universities that do not provide dormitories are 985 universities, which are located in first- and second-tier cities across the country. In terms of market rental**, the extra cost of students has increased sharply.

Why don't universities offer dormitories anymore?This is obviously related to the continuous expansion of colleges and universities and the rapid increase in the number of students. In the context of large-scale enrollment expansion, why can't the school's logistics management keep up?When schools can no longer provide dormitories, are there more humane measures emerging?

This class of graduate students has an extra rent expense

In the early morning of July 26, 2022, five or six thousand new master's and doctoral students logged in at the same time on the welcome website of Southwest Jiaotong University, in order to "grab the dormitory".

Three months after receiving the admission letter, the group of students found in the freshman admission handbook that not everyone could be assigned to the dormitory, and the dormitory places needed to be "grabbed". On the same day, due to too many people logging in to the welcome network at the same time, ** was stuck for a while.

Studying for 3 years in graduate school means a lot of money. (Picture Insect Creativity).

As early as 2018, Peking University attracted social attention because of the dormitory problem. At that time, the school was about to start school, and the school temporarily informed that due to the shortage of dormitory resources, it was necessary to rely on a lottery to decide who could live in Wanliu student apartment, and about 45% of the new students needed to solve the accommodation problem by themselves.

For this reason, several junior college freshmen wrote an article titled "In order to stay at Peking University, I may have to spend 200,000 yuan", which formed a trend of swiping on the Internet. Under the turbulent situation, Peking University changed its practice and helped students in need of accommodation to solve the accommodation problem by adjusting the original accommodation arrangements for teachers and visiting scholars on the Yuanmingyuan campus.

Although the problem of student accommodation was solved at that time, the trend of universities no longer providing dormitories for some graduate students seems to have become an unstoppable wave.

The New Weekly reporter checked the 2024 master's enrollment regulations announced by major universities and found that schools including Nankai University, Tsinghua University, Peking University, Beijing Institute of Technology, Xiamen University, Tongji University, ** Drama Academy, Nanjing University, Southeast University and other schools do not provide dormitories for part-time master's students or orientation students.

Dense student apartments with not enough beds. (Picture Insect Creativity).

Among them, there are also universities that continue to apply for accommodation. Students who require accommodation apply in advance and the school will arrange it at its discretion.

Around the discussion of "no dormitories for graduate students", there is a call that living in a group dormitory will not only have housekeeping requirements, but also access control requirements, and students will be disciplined by the school like children. In addition, most of the dormitories are six-person and eight-person rooms, leaving almost no privacy space for adults.

But for most students who are sensitive, in the face of economic issues, privacy, personal boundary freedom, etc., can all be put aside.

Without public welfare school dormitories, the cost of graduate school has risen sharply. According to the data of previous years, the accommodation fee of China's public universities has not risen for almost 20 years**, and the cost is basically between 1,000 yuan and 2,000 yuan for the academic year, with 1,200 yuan for the majority of the academic year. If you rent an apartment off-campus, with the land price in first- and second-tier cities, one month's rent is almost enough for the dormitory fee for one academic year.

Traditional university dormitories are cramped and have little privacy. (Pictured: The short drama "3 Yuan Women's Dormitory").

Xiaonuo was admitted to Peking University as a graduate student in 2022. After learning that the school would not allocate a dormitory, she rented a two-person room at the south gate of Peking University for 2,300 yuan a month. The advantage is that it is closer to the school, and it is more convenient to go to school and participate in school activities every dayThe downside is obvious, it's expensive.

She came from a rural family, and she couldn't ask her parents for so much money. The tuition fee for 3 years of graduate school plus accommodation costs nearly 300,000 yuan. Soon after enrolling, she began a variety of intensive part-time jobs.

I was woken up by a life without money again", she posted her daily full schedule on social **.

In addition to the 600 yuan per month graduate student subsidy, she also earns income by working part-time Xi jobs in the school office, taking on various activities from time to time, and helping people as translators, so that she can get about 3,000 yuan per month. But this also means that she has to take on the work in a timely manner, and reasonably arrange the time for part-time work and Xi study.

In the context of enrollment expansion, dormitories will be insufficient sooner or later

The tube building is a popular form of dormitory in the last century. After the 1950s, inspired by the Soviet Union's collective dormitories, Chinese universities built dormitories in the shape of silos. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, inspired by the Soviet Union's collective dormitory building, China's first universities also built dormitories in the shape of a building.

The rooms in the tube building are closely arranged on both sides of the stairway, and there are public toilets on each floor to save space to the greatest extent. After the adjustment of the faculties of Chinese universities in 1952, dormitories were basically built in the form of tube buildings.

Shanghai's famous tube building - Longchang Apartment. (Picture Insect Creativity).

The large dormitory can bring students and teachers together, which is not only convenient for management, but also ensures the basic life of students to the greatest extent. Since 1998, the renovation of school infrastructure has been prevalent, and there have even been calls for "never bringing the tube building of the university into the 21st century", and then such dormitories have gradually disappeared.

The reason for this move is that on the one hand, the school buildings are becoming more and more dilapidated, and on the other hand, it is also related to the large-scale expansion of university enrollment across the country that began in 1999. In November 1998, economist Tang Min submitted a proposal to ** in his personal name - "On the Effective Way to Start China's Economy - Doubling the Enrollment Volume", suggesting that ** expand the number of students. This suggestion was adopted.

The college dormitories in "To Our Dying Youth" may be too spacious. ("To Our Dying Youth").

In 1999, the number of students enrolled in the country increased by 51320,000 people, with a total enrollment of 159680,000 people, with a growth rate of 474%, by 2003, the number of undergraduate and junior college students in China's ordinary colleges and universities exceeded 10 million.

At that time, the continuous expansion of enrollment led to a serious shortage of school infrastructure. The famous Wanliu Apartment of Peking University was built in 2002 in order to alleviate the tension of student accommodation on campus. Wanliu Apartment was built by an external contractor, which was the product of the socialization of logistics explored by colleges and universities at that time. In 2003, Peking University Resources Group spent 53.5 billion yuan purchased the property rights and use rights of Wanliu Apartment.

Not only are undergraduate students expanding, but graduate students are also expanding. In 1999, the number of graduate students admitted nationwide was 730,000 people;In 2017, that figure reached 8050,000 people, with a total of 263 graduate students90,000 people.

Enrollment expansion is a fundamental megatrend, and this trend is here to stay for some time. On May 13, 2021, the Ministry of Education announced at a press briefing that the enrollment of graduate students will be expanded again. According to the data analysis of the China Statistical Yearbook, the enrollment expansion rate will stabilize at about 10% in 2023 and continue to grow in 5-7 years.

Enrollment expansion is the big background for the future. (Picture Insect Creativity).

It is debatable whether such a scale of graduate students can match the carrying capacity of higher education resources. What's more, in recent years, in order to alleviate the pressure of employment, some colleges and universities have also adjusted the postgraduate study period from 2 years to 3 years, and the doctoral study period from 3 years to 4 years.

In addition, the phenomenon of postponement of doctoral completion is also increasing. According to the data of the Ministry of Education, the postponement rate of doctoral students in 2003 was 465%, this data exceeded 60% in 2012, and has reached 64% in 2018, and more than 60% of doctoral students cannot graduate normally.

Due to various factors, the number of students on campus is increasing year by year, resulting in an increasing shortage of dormitories in some universities.

Why don't you build more dormitories?

Since there are not enough dormitories, and the expansion of enrollment in the next 5-7 years is still a general trend, why not build more dormitories?

From 1999 to 2010, in order to meet the Ministry of Education's requirement of "one land per student", many colleges and universities began to expand or relocate new campuses. In that year, the Ministry of Education issued the Notice on the Opinions on the Issue of "Bank-School Cooperation" in Colleges and Universities under the Ministry of Education, encouraging schools to borrow funds from banks to build school buildings. In other words, the construction of campus infrastructure depends to a large extent on the school's own funding.

In 2022, the current situation and existing problems of financial risk management in colleges and universities mentioned that some researchers investigated the financial situation of key universities in a province in China and found that only about 50% of the university's budget came from financial allocations.

Many colleges and universities have published tenders for dormitory construction projects, showing that all of them are funded by the government. In most cases, there are three types of funds: self-raising by enterprises, partial appropriations, partial self-raising, and public welfare donations.

For example, in 2021, Fuzhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine will build a new dormitory on the Qishan campus, and the more than 40 million yuan of the project bidding will be self-raised.

(Screenshot of the official website of the people of Fuzhou City).

Or, look to alumni who are competitive and willing to spend money. On November 29, 2023, Lei Jun, the founder of Xiaomi and an alumnus of Wuhan University, donated a huge sum of 1.3 billion yuan to his alma mater for the construction of campus hardware and software. Thanks to this, Wuhan University has always seemed to have deep pockets, and in 2020 it built four dormitory buildings to ensure the enrollment of new students in September 2021.

The ** also pointed out that in the process of borrowing and construction, many schools have excessive loan scale, overdue debts, and excessive interest burdens. Due to financial pressure, universities have not dared to build infrastructure in recent years.

It takes a lot of money to build a school. (Picture unsplash).

In the West, under the influence of the elite education model, people have formed a consensus that "the dormitory conditions are good, so it is expensive". As can be seen in the American non-fiction work "The Tragedy of a Countryman", many students from modest families need to apply for scholarships to afford to go to a good university, let alone live in an expensive school dormitory. Therefore, the accommodation model of Western universities is of little reference significance for China.

In fact, in Taiwan, the shortage of beds in college dormitories is becoming more and more significant. According to the statistics of the Higher Education Union, there is a shortage of more than 260,000 beds in dormitories at National Taiwan University, and nearly half of the students have no dormitories to live in. The situation is even more dire for universities located in large cities.

In 2019, Taiwan's education authorities proposed a "dormitory improvement plan", which is expected to spend NT$5 billion to promote reform over five years. In addition to the construction of dormitories, there are also measures to strengthen rent subsidies for disadvantaged students on campus and build off-campus social housing.

The so-called "off-campus social housing" means that the school charters and serves as the "second landlord", and gives a certain amount of subsidies, giving priority to renting to students. At present, there are indeed a lot of accommodations around colleges and universities in China that are specifically designed for the college student market, but they are generally relatively high, the tenants are mixed, and the house type is not specially designed and adjusted for students. If these resources can be integrated, it can not only alleviate the pressure on college dormitory beds, but also ease the financial pressure of students.

But in fact, the development of ** requires a certain degree of professional ability, but also needs supporting resources. Universities are not good at this. From this point of view, it is also a kind of helplessness to type a few big words "do not provide dormitories" on the enrollment brochure.

Compared with the construction of dormitories, subsidizing the rent of disadvantaged students on campus seems to be the softest and easiest to operate.

(Screenshot of the Administrative Measures for the Issuance of Transportation Subsidies for Professional Degree and Master's Degree Students of Fudan University (Trial)).

For example, since 2019, Fudan University has given a monthly transportation subsidy of 800 yuan to day and master's students. Master's students from the School of Education of Peking University can receive a monthly subsidy of 500 yuan if they do not live in the dormitory.

(Screenshot of Baoyan Voice***).

After a detailed examination of the accommodation needs of students, they are divided according to family conditions; Give students a certain amount of rental subsidy; Or according to the student's financial conditions, courses, and class hours, decide whether the student can apply for a dormitory...It's all about humanized internal adjustment.

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