May 21, 2013

Stuff Temple students do not like.

I feel like there is probably a better subheading to put this under, but this is where it’s going right now. To be amended later, probably; stay tuned.

Temple students do not like feeling like their safety has been compromised.

To go to Temple, you either have to be or you have to learn to be remarkably street-savvy. North Philadelphia is by no stretch of the imagination a “college town”. It is a living, breathing, underprivileged and under-protected neighborhood. There are no fences surrounding campus, no barrier to keep the rest of the world out of our bubble. Temple is the city is Temple is the city.

And yet… because campus is a campus, and takes up several contiguous blocks, it often feels like the rest of the city can’t get to us. And we do not like to be reminded that this isn’t true.

This evening a person who was not a Temple student shot themselves on campus, within a block or two of most of the freshman dorms. And, to be blunt, everyone freaked the fuck out. We understand, as people who live in one of the country’s more dangerous cities, that crime is a constant possibility. But there are boundaries that should not be crossed, and one of those has to be the boundary between Temple and the rest of Philly. I am not trying to be insensitive, and I feel for that person and whatever they went through that caused them to take their own life, but they did it at the expense of others’ safety, and that is not fair. To take your own life is one thing, but to deliberately fire a gun into your own head within view of thirty people in a public space at dinnertime on Thursday is another thing entirely.

I realize that this could– and probably has– happen anywhere, but, you know. Admissions will tell you that Temple has some of the best safety precautions possible in place, and we do. Just know that, here, the danger is always clearer and more present than it might be somewhere else.

-JX

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What’s your school’s stereotype? Do you fit into it?

One of the best things about Temple is that it is gigantic, and it is extremely difficult to paste a stereotype onto 26,000 students and have them all fit into it. That said, Temple is a state-related (essentially public) school, and compared to UPenn, which has great academics, and Penn State, which has great football, Temple gets the short end of the stick a lot. I think Temple gets stereotyped only in the way that most people applying here think of it as a second-choice, and second-rate to boot. Which is, just, you know. Almost entirely untrue.

It is true that Temple accepts a greater percentage of its applicants than most private universities, and therefore people with lower test scores than most private schools are looking for. It is true that our football team has not beaten Penn State’s since before World War II. It is true that our only alumnus of any note to the world-at-large is Bill Cosby (ok, and Bob Saget). It is true that our main campus is located in an area of the city which I will lovingly refer to as “infested with crime”. But I do not think that I am in any way receiving a sub-par education because I am paying less for it than I would at a private school. Ultimately, education is the reason I am in college, and I would have transferred long ago if I’d felt at all shortchanged.

There are obviously stereotypes within the student body, though, and rightly so. There are potheads and theater kids and skateboarders and basketball jocks (and we are way better than Penn State at basketball, thankyouverymuch) and some extraordinarily smart people and some extremely stupid ones, and people who’ll fit into any other group besides. You’ll find the same kinds of people at any large, urban, non-specialized university. I myself tend toward the nerdy side of average (hence, blogging). Last I checked Temple was the second most-diverse school in the country, though, and that’s something I love about it– for every person just like me here, there are a thousand people totally different.

-JX

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