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Oakland Center Group. Amanda , Chris , Dominique , Sydney. Are students willing to pay a tuition increase for the e xpansion o f the Oakland Center ?. Interviews. Two people were interviewed and asked:. How often do you use the Oakland Center?.
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Oakland Center Group Amanda,Chris,Dominique,Sydney
Are students willing to pay a tuition increase for the expansion of the Oakland Center?
Interviews Two people were interviewed and asked: • How often do you use the Oakland Center? • What are your thoughts on the proposed Oakland Center expansion, which could be funded by an increase in tuition?
Interview Answers Yes • Larger Dining Area • Additional Lounge Areas • Bowling Alley/ Movie Theater No • Commuters don’t use OC • Everyone is paying for services, but only used by the minority 2-6 hrs/week 0 hrs/week
Bookstore Very few people; • Chilly • Fairly Isolated • Usually Quiet • Mostly a resting space
Cafe O’Bears • Usually Crowded • Mixture of Socialization and Studying • Extremely Busy in Spurts
Cafeteria Extremely crowded during lunch hours No one could find places to sit (either alone or with friends) Very loud Everyone seemed to be in a good mood Some will do homework and eat lunch, some socialize with friends Students were promoting clubs and organizations
Technology Center Low Traffic Quiet Isolated Individual Projects
First Question: Have you taken the official expansion survey? • Second Question: Are you aware that Oakland wishes to expand the Oakland Center?
In each year the number of people with knowledge of Oakland’s intention to expand was higher, despite the number of people having taken the official survey being smaller. • Freshman had the highest percent of people taking the original survey at 56%. (Sophomore: 40% Junior: 40% Senior: 25%) • Seniors had the highest knowledge of Oaklands intention to expand at 100%. (Freshman: 78% Sophomore: 60% Junior: 80%) Awareness
People in all years had ‘Food’ selected as their greatest like. • There is no first in the dislike category with answers being varied in no clear pattern. • No Sophomores selected ‘Food’ as a dislike, no Junior selected ‘Education’, and no Seniors selected ‘Technology’ or ‘Other’ • Everyone choose to answer the ‘like’ question, yet many did not select an answer for the ‘dislike’ question. Likes/Dislikes
Who’s willing to support a tuition increase to curb the crowding problem?
The percentage of people who did not support tuition increase was higher in all years. • No Sophomore nor Senior supported a tuition increase. • Only 6 Freshman and 1 Junior said they would support a tuition increase. Tuition
Most don’t want any kind of increase. • .5-10% range is the second highest. What are people willing to pay? ** These are outliers
Interesting Observations • We had two outliers; one who said they would support a 50% tuition increase and another saying they would support a 75% increase. • Some checked the same option for ‘things they wanted’ as well as ‘things they didn’t want’.
Interesting Observations: Continued • 11 hadn’t taken the original survey but still knew of the plan to expand. • People generally knew what they wanted, but were less sure of what they didn’t want. (Many leaving that question blank.)
An Interesting Graph It seems that the importance of of food choice and education are opposites for Seniors and Freshmen. Freshmen know what they want but don’t know what they don’t want as they chose not to answer to question.* *Not answering was valid and subjects were told beforehand.
Final Thoughts • While most do not want an increase in tuition, they’d be willing to pay instead of switching universities. • Based on the people we polled, Freshman used the Oakland Center the most and wanted more than their older counterparts, yet still did not want an increase in tuition.
After Thoughts • More planning time would have been nice • Doing additional surveys at different hours • Better communication