Top College News Subscribe to the Newsletter

Orientation packets accidentally sent to Freshman Connection students

Official declines to comment on cost of unnecessarily mailing about 600 packets

Published: Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Updated: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 01:10

About 600 Freshman Connection students were surprised and confused to receive spring orientation booklets last month in what orientation officials are calling a processing error.

Freshman Connection students, who were admitted for the Spring 2010 semester but take special on-campus classes during the fall, already completed a required orientation this summer. The New Student Orientation Office intended to send the information about required placement tests and orientation dates only to spring-admitted and transfer students.

"Freshmen Connection students should not have received this booklet because they register through a parallel process and not through the Orientation Office like non-Freshmen Connection admitted students," Dian Squire, Assistant Director of Orientation, said.

He declined to comment on the cost of the error.

The Office of Extended Studies, which houses the Freshman Connection program, received notification of the mistake when several confused students inquired about why they had to go to another orientation.

Freshman Connections student and letters and sciences major Anna Yuwen e-mailed the Office of Extended Studies when she read that she would have to take the Math Placement

Exam again, which all Freshman Connection students were required to complete before the fall semester.

"I e-mailed them because I already took it," she said. "I was upset and overwhelmed."

Upon discovering the error, the Office of Extended studies sent out an e-mail to all Freshman Connection students, explaining what had happened and that students did not need to attend. Officials also posted a note on the Orientation Office's website to clarify the situation and sent out a letter of apology.

Because Freshman Connection students do not receive on-campus housing, many commute from home or live at nearby off-campus dwellings. For those who do not live at home, parents were befuddled to receive the information.

"It threw my mom for a loop," freshman communications major Lauren Holstein said. Holstein, who lives at the University Towers, said she received a frantic call from her mom in New Jersey. "She was really confused. I was like, ‘Chill out mom, I already did it.'"

Many students were similarly upset because the accidental mailing added another hassle to already demanding college schedules.

"It was a big mistake and a waste," freshman communication major Larissa Knoblett said. "It added unnecessary stress to a list of things already on my mind."

redding at umdbk dot com

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

14 comments Log in to Comment

regina
Sun Nov 15 2009 17:48
I loved it.
who cares
Wed Oct 21 2009 23:58
how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
Senior
Wed Oct 21 2009 21:42
Since the Orientation Office does not receive ANY money from the University, any cost associated with this mistake only affects the office's self-raised and managed budget and NOT the rest of the University.
Jonesy
Wed Oct 21 2009 13:30
The only thing interesting about this, is that some person objects to this article SO MUCH that they left like 8 comments pretending to be different people. Who really cares?
Front page, really?
Wed Oct 21 2009 12:10
I cannot believe this article graced the front page much less even make it into print. Was it a slow news day guys? Who cares about the Orientation Office's honest mistakes, I sure don't. Find better stories and better writers, because this article was just awful. Ridiculously one-sided. I'm not surprised though, the Diamondback rarely focuses on anything but the negative. All this paper does is complain, point fingers, and neglect its research.
So far the paper's been really, really poor this year, I guess the new editors just aren't cut out for it.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 12:06
no the diamondback is not better than this...and if receiving a packet OVERWHELMS you then maybe you aren't ready for college. There are many things that money is wasted on but the packets are coming out of orientations budget...of the 5,000 sent out each year...what is 600 packets? This mistake is not worth mentioning, and the Orientation office has proven their competency for many years now...find something else to write about
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 11:17
I agree with the other comments that this is NOT news-worthy!! Did anyone think to ask about the wasted money spent to print this non-informative article?? Honestly this happened over a month ago and the situation has since been rectified so what is the point of even publishing this article? Thank you for pointing out an honest mistake in a one-sided way. Next time do your research better.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 11:01
These are not the same people. I know who posted and they were all different.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 10:53
Wow, way to go, commenter(s) below. You posted the same thing 5 times, pretending to be different people. No, it's not news. We get it.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 10:18
This is not a story. Especially since it leaves me wondering where the facts are. This article seems very one-sided, and it doesn't look at the whole story or the bigger picture. All I see is an exaggeration based on "upset," "frantic," and "befuddled" emotions. Save that for the Opinion section please.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 10:10
The Diamondback is not better than this. This is not the bastion of journalistic integrity anyone claims it is, which is why our Journalism students stay as far away from it as possible.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 09:43
This is not a story. The Diamondback should be more responsible about a) what stories they print b) how accurate and well researched those stories are, and c) whether or not it is actually relevant. Im with the last person that commented.... The Diamonback is better than this, or at least it should be.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 09:37
This is not a story especially since it is not well researched. It was misleading in many ways starting from the very first sentence. It probably would have been good journalism to interview a Freshmen Connection official to corroborate the statements of the orientation "official" and hear it from both sides (you probably would have had a more complex story to print). Asking the right questions is a big part of being a good journalist. It doesn't seem like you asked the right questions.
Your name
Wed Oct 21 2009 08:57
This is not a story. Especially since it happened a month ago.
The Diamondback is better than this.

You must be logged in to comment on an article. Not already a member? Register now

Log In