The Star Malaysia

Help for Puerto Rican college students

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IT sounded like a scam. Three weeks after Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico, Brown University was offering to pick up 40 of the island’s top students in a private jet and shuttle them to the Ivy League school to study for a year. And it would all be free.

Coral Murphy was suspicious, but she applied anyway. Even after the acceptance e-mail arrived, she still had doubts. Reality set in only after she got to the airport and boarded the jet, where students were served sparkling water and sandwiches garnished with edible flowers.

“I’m still kind of in shock,” said Murphy, 20, a junior in journalism who is now in her second term at Brown. “I’m like, `Where am I?”’

Murphy is among hundreds of Puerto Ricans who have come to colleges on the United States mainland following the devastatio­n wrought by Maria, often drawn by offers of free or discounted tuition from schools hoping to help students continue their education while the island recovers.

Staying on

Most of the offers are for one or two semesters, with the expectatio­n that students will return to their home universiti­es in Puerto Rico. But some educators in the U.S. territory worry that some of the Caribbean island’s brightest students won’t come back to an already beleaguere­d public university system.

“Some of these programmes have targeted the cream of our crop, the best we have. Will they ever come back to Puerto Rico?” said Don Walicek, who teaches English and linguistic­s at the University of Puerto Rico.

Even before the hurricane, enrolment had been falling at the University of Puerto Rico, where students went on strike last year protesting deep budget cuts. When the system’s main campus at Rio Piedras reopened after Maria, more than 900 students _ roughly 6 percent of the student body _ did not return.

Those who relocated are among thousands of other Puerto Ricans leaving the island, where electricit­y is still in short supply amid a grueling recovery process.

The tuition offers from mainland universiti­es are modeled on programmes created in 2005 to help U.S. students displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

But Walicek and two other professors wrote an open letter in November noting that, unlike schools in New Orleans that closed for months, the University of Puerto Rico reopened just five weeks after Hurricane Maria. The exodus of students has reduced enrolment, forcing the cancellati­on of some courses.

Choosing to go back

Officials behind the assistance programmes say they’re only trying to help, and they’re encouragin­g students to return home after this school year.

Administra­tors at Brown add that they partnered with the University of Puerto Rico and got approval for every student in the programme.

“We want and expect them to return to their home institutio­ns to conclude their degrees,” said Marisa Quinn, chief of staff to the provost at Brown.

“We really don’t want to do anything to undermine the university’s capacity to reopen and recover with great strength.”

A total of 30 students accepted Brown’s offer and arrived on campus in October. Other schools hosting students at no charge include Cornell University, which has 58 students from Puerto Rico this term. New York University is hosting about 50. Tulane University enrolled 16. Some are offering language support to students from the Spanishspe­aking island, while others required applicants to be proficient in English.

Dozens of other schools have offered reduced tuition rates typically reserved for state residents, a move adopted by all public universiti­es in New York and Massachuse­tts. A smaller group of schools also has extended this discount to students from the U.S. Virgin Islands, which was battered by storms Irma and Maria.

For universiti­es, the act of charity can also bring a boost in publicity and a crop of talented students. While a year at Brown or NYU can top US$70,000 (RM276,500), many schools are adding students within their existing capacity, limiting the cost. In many cases, donors and foundation­s have chipped in.

Many students who came to the mainland say they feel pulled between an allegiance to Puerto Rico and the bright opportunit­ies they see here. Some vow to return home, but others say they’ll apply to other mainland schools or return for graduate studies.

The Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design in Boston brought 10 students from Puerto Rico last month, including some who see the programme as a stepping stone.

“If I see another option, I will take it,” said Tanisha Pacheco Rodriguez, a senior painting major, adding that after the hurricane hit, morale plummeted at her school, the School of Visual Arts and Design of Puerto Rico. “I appreciate this moment because it’s like being reborn.”

At Brown, sophomore biology student Andrea Rodriguez-Villafane said she wants to keep studying on the mainland, where she says internship­s are easier to find.

“Here, they give you opportunit­ies on a silver plate. At the University of Puerto Rico, you have to search for them and be extremely determined,” she said. “They won’t come to you.”

In Puerto Rico, she fears the threat of new budget cuts at school and the danger posed by future hurricanes. But she is conflicted, because it’s also her home.

“I’m pretty terrified, but at the same time I have family in Puerto Rico, and I also feel this sense of responsibi­lity that I should come back,” she said. “If everyone leaves, who will be there to help Puerto Rico?” — AP

 ??  ?? Brown University students from Puerto Rico, (from left) Estefania Perez, of Bayamon, Andres Schiavone, of Guaynabo, and Fabiola Guasp, of San Juan, stand together for a photograph on the Brown campus, in Providence, Rhode Island. — AP
Brown University students from Puerto Rico, (from left) Estefania Perez, of Bayamon, Andres Schiavone, of Guaynabo, and Fabiola Guasp, of San Juan, stand together for a photograph on the Brown campus, in Providence, Rhode Island. — AP

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