Summer swan song
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Deirdre Newman
It might not have been for a share of $120 million, but Orange
Coast College student Emilie Saleh was reveling in her lottery
victory nonetheless Monday.
On the community college’s first day of school, Saleh was randomly
selected in a lottery after she and about 19 other students
petitioned to get into a closed section of astronomy.
Saleh, 18, of Costa Mesa was among many students who waited until
the last minute to add or drop classes -- a feat made monumentally
easier by the enhancement of the school’s touch-tone registration
system in the spring.
The first day of school was expectedly busy as OCC’s fall
enrollment is up by almost 4% compared with last year, said Nancy
Kidder, administrative dean of Admissions and Records.
Many of the 2,500 sections remain open, noted Kidder, who looked
unflappable despite the first day’s hustle and bustle.
For most of the morning and early afternoon hours, a long line
snaked out of the admissions office, around the corner and, luckily
for the procrastinators, into a covered hallway so they could get
some refuge from a sun that was more conducive to a day at the beach
than the first day of school.
And the schedule was even pushed back two weeks from the usual
semester start date in recognition of August as a perennially popular
vacation month. The spring semester will also start later, at the
beginning of February instead of the end of January, to give the
school enough time to complete its intersession classes.
While many students on Monday were doing the traditional add-drop
dance, others, like Saleh, who wanted to get into closed sections,
had to get permission from the instructors first.
“The discretion is with the instructor,” Kidder said. “In some
classes, it’s impossible. In other cases, there’s some latitude.”
After getting an instructor’s permission, students could then use
the touch-tone phones in the admissions office to add the class.
A whopping 94% of students used the touch-tone registration system
to register for their classes for the fall, up 2% from last year,
Kidder said.
The system earns high marks from students, such as Kristen
Behrens, 21, of Garden Grove, who was in the admissions office Monday
afternoon to drop a class that wasn’t quite to her liking.
“My first class was microeconomics -- I thought it was something
different,” Behrens said. “So I’m trying to add something like
anthropology or history, just not math.”
Many students shuddered when they saw the long line outside the
admissions office, including Victor Delligatti, 37, of Santa Ana.
“I haven’t seen this long a line since the last time I tried to
get concert tickets,” Delligatti said. “I was going to go home and
wait a few hours, but thought if the line is this long now, it would
be just as long later.”
Delligatti said he came to campus to add a class he couldn’t find
in the course catalog.
The school is expected to enroll about 29,000 students by the end
of the semester, Kidder said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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