To address prohibitive costs of attendance, the Manhattan university is piloting a scheme helping students save money by lodging in elderly peoples homes
Studying at New York University has become so prohibitively expensive that the historic Manhattan school is introducing a scheme to help students save money by lodging in elderly peoples spare bedrooms.
Andrew Hamilton, NYUs new president, has approved a pilot scheme to pair up students with low-income older people struggling to make ends meet. The scheme dubbed Grandmas spare room may sound like the premise of an intergenerational sitcom but it will begin in fall 2017, and university officials said initial demand had been so strong that it could be extended to hundreds of students and perhaps other schools in New York and other expensive cities across the country.
Hamilton, a noted British chemist and former vice-chancellor of Oxford University, has made tackling the high cost of attending NYU a key priority of his tenure.
The plain fact is that tuition at NYU places an unacceptable financial strain on too many students, he said in his inaugural address at the start of the semester. NYU is not unique in that regard by any means, but we have been among the most conspicuous [and] we cannot be content with the status quo.
The intergenerational homestay idea was generated by NYUs affordability steering committee, which Hamilton introduced as a taskforce to make a difference in the trajectory of college costs at NYU.
The full average cost [not taking into account scholarships and financial aid] of attending NYU including tuition, fees, room and board is about $66,000 per year one of the most expensive in the country. Hamilton increased tuition fees by 2.7% this year, less than a typical annual increase of 3.5%-3.9%.
Ellen Schall, the chair of the affordability steering committee, said the cost of attending NYU was higher than other Ivy League schools because of the prohibitive cost of accommodation in New York. This is a creative way of tackling that issue, she said. It occurred to us that there are lots of New York City families whose children have grown up and moved away and theyve got an extra bedroom and maybe they are struggling financially. We hope this will be a way of helping the needs of two very different populations.
Schall said she expected that students involved in the scheme would pay annual rent of about $5,000 half of the cost of a shared room in NYUs cheapest dorm. She made clear that students would not be required to work for their elderly landlords in return for cheap rent.
Youre not a nurse, youre not an aide, youre not cleaning, you might help out with some technology or something, she said. You might make a deal that you would make with any roommate If you take the trash out, Ill order us a pizza.