Top College News Subscribe to the Newsletter

Rice maintains “happiest students” status by ousting unhappy students

Published: Thursday, November 29, 2012

Updated: Thursday, November 29, 2012 21:11


 

I have been trying to write this for a long time, but after reading Angie Epifano’s article in The Amherst Student, “An Account of Sexual Assault at Amherst College,” (Oct. 17, 2012) I felt the similarities between our situations reinforced the fact that certain flaws in university administrations need to be discussed. 

I attended Rice from August 2010 to September 2011 and again from January 2012 to March 2012. From September 2010 to September 2011, I was physically, verbally and sexually abused by a boyfriend I had met during my first few days as a student at Rice. 

In September 2011, my abuse got out of hand. Traumatized, I finally began to talk to the resident associates. With their encouragement (and a little bit of force), I reported him to the Office of Student Judicial Affairs. Eventually, he was suspended from Rice University for the remainder of the academic year. 

He lost his place on his athletic team, and his teammates hated me for it. Nobody knew what was going on. He called me a liar, and I had been so isolated for the past year that people did not know me at Rice except as his girlfriend. I was lonely and broken, constantly wondering whether I had made the right choice. I felt like I had betrayed my best friend. Nothing felt fair. Other students were blissfully ignorant and enjoying college, but for me, my undergraduate experience was already the worst time of my life. Assistant Dean of Student Judicial Programs Donald Ostdiek recommended I take a medical leave of absence from Rice so I could recover. 

That fall, I went home and slowly began to heal. I filed for a protective order, was seeing a psychologist and had a steady job. I petitioned Rice for readmission for the Spring 2012 semester and was accepted due to my “successful recovery” during my time at home. 

I returned to Rice in January 2012 and began receiving harassing emails from my ex’s friends. I took the emails to the Rice University Police Department, but they said nothing could be done. 

On March 15, my ex parked his truck directly across the street from Duncan College. When I confirmed it was his truck, I called RUPD, sobbing and in shock. Two officers met me back at Duncan. They had the truck towed but told me there was nothing more they could do. 

I asked RUPD whether I would be able to press charges because he had violated my protective order by coming that close to where I live. The officer told me they could not do anything because he had not hurt me “yet.” He also said I should not have been across the street because I could only be protected while I was on campus. It made me think — could I no longer leave campus? Was I not able to go out to dinner with friends or go shopping at the mall? And even though he had hurt me for a year, would they not do anything if he came near me unless he hurt me again first? I was extremely frustrated; they were not taking me seriously. 

On March 22, I was asked to go to the Rice Counseling Center to meet a psychologist I had never seen before. She asked how I was doing, and I told her I was a little frustrated and stressed out because of my situation. She responded by saying that she thought I should be withdrawn from Rice. I was completely taken aback. The psychologist had me escorted to the Student Health Center, where I was asked to strip down to my underwear. A doctor and a nurse searched my body for any self-inflicted injuries. Every bruise was scrutinized. I told them I am just a clumsy person, but they did not seem to believe me. 

I was asked to meet with Dean of Undergraduates John Hutchinson that afternoon. My academics were not in question; my grades were all excellent. The dean simply said it was Rice’s observation that I was not healthy enough to remain on campus. There was no room for discussion. When I asked for examples, arguing that my depression was under control until the “truck incident,” he told me he could not discuss specifics. He signed the papers for my forced withdrawal and dismissed me. I walked straight out of the building and sat on the ground outside. The Duncan master came to sit next to me. Still crying, I told him it was not fair. He told me he wanted me to come back next fall. He told me I was a role model for his daughter and for other women at Rice. But he did not change anything. 

They gave me two hours notice to move all of my things out of my room. I turned in my key at the designated time, but I still had not packed everything. My roommate helped me move the rest of my stuff, but a head resident fellow saw us and threatened to call the police. I was supervised as I moved the rest of my things out. My roommate was shocked; she saw me every day and did not think I was unstable. Nobody had asked her whether I should be withdrawn from school. The rest of my friends had the same shocked reaction. 

Rice did not refund any of my tuition. 

Later that spring, I received the Duncan Edelweiss Award. It was an award for my “outstanding service to the community.” I laughed when I opened that package. 

They wanted me to return for the Fall 2012 semester, but I could not go back to Rice after how I was treated. Returning in Spring 2012 had taken a lot of hard work. They took away everything I had built up during my spring semester: my academics, my leadership positions and my friends. As a freshman, I had assumed I would go to Rice for four years and graduate. However, my life has not gone as planned. 

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

175 comments

Mikayla
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:41
Hey, Olivia. It's Mikayla, from Duncan. I just want to thank you for writing this article. I was mistreated by the administration for my mental health issues, and this is helping me to finally be able to discuss this and the problems this university has. I'm sorry for everything. Thank you.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:41
I can confirm that this is standard practice from first-hand experience (the administrative thing, not the creepy stalker thing).

Fall of my Junior year I was unhappy at Rice and decided to take a break. I went to the counseling center and told them this (as well as communicating my every intention to return to Rice the following semester). They then pressured me to take a "medical withdrawal," stating that it would be the best way to temporarily leave the university with minimal repercussion.

However, after I was officially out I was told that I wouldn't be able to re-enter the university until I had seen a psychologist and satisfied the administration that I was "fit to return." The number of hurdles and headaches I had to go through was ridiculous and unnecessary, and at no point did I feel that anyone in the counseling center (people whose *sole function as a university employee* is to aid in the general well-being of students) had any interest in helping me re-enter the school.

Even after being officially readmitted (a process that required 8 months of playing the counseling center's games and about $10,000 of my own money), there was a strong resistance from the administration (as well as MY OWN COLLEGE'S MASTERS) to keep me off-campus during my senior year.

There are so many details about this that I could rant for pages and pages.

Rice 2007 grad
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:41
Olivia, I am so sorry that you had to go through all of this. When I was at Rice, my parents had just divorced and i was having panic attacks from all the stress of family, work, extracurriculars and classes, so I went to the Rice counseling center for therapy. I thought the whole way they handled my appointment was strange. After my first appointment, they were supposed to schedule me a new appointment and leave the appointment card in my mailbox (for privacy reasons? I never understood why it wasn't like any other medical appointment) and then the appointment was never scheduled. It was a pain and ahalf to get an appointment, and then when I finally came in for counseling, the counselor did not take my experience seriously, and instead spent time counseling me against marrying my boyfriend, which I did not plan to do at the time. They offered medication, but I wanted strategies to manage my anxiety without medication. They coudn't offer any. Just plain weird. I had transferred from the Unviersity of Texas at Austin and gone to a counselor there, so thankfully I knew how a well-run university counceling center should operate. I stopped seeing the Rice counselor and ended up dealing with my anxiety by myself, which in retrospect is not what should have happened. It makes me angry that Rice's counseling center does not seem to follow best practices for counseling or psychiatry, and I really hope that Rice staff see your op-ed as a wake up call to change how their mental health services are provided. Almost every student will deal with depression or anxiety sometime during their college years -- it's just a question of whether Rice wants to promote a healthy student body or ignore an issue that is normal for every college campus. I really hope they choose to do the former.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:39
This article's conflating a very reasonable policy and some bad policies.

It makes perfect sense to send home someone who is self-injurious, suicidal, or out of control. They will likely receive better treatment there, and avoid the social and academic pressure of Rice. Also, depending on circumstances, there may be liability for Rice if a student commits suicide on their watch. I really don't think this is an evil conspiracy on Rice's part to maintain student happiness ratings.

The tuition not being at all refunded, RUPD's lack of training to prevent harassment/etc., and the bizarre two-hour time limit policies make little sense. Specific policies for dealing with sexual assault and abuse victims/perpetrators should exist separate from the normal mental health problems.

Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:29
Olivia, You are brave to tell your story. It sounds quite familiar to me, including the one psychiatrist evaluation that results in an immediate and forced withdrawal, under the last Dean. I know Dean Hutchinson personally, and hope that he will closely evaluate what is being said in this forum, for the betterment of a system that isn't working, and for future students in need. I'm sorry for your pain. I hope you know there are many paths in life, and you may have a brighter one ahead of you...work hard at finding it, as it will help you heal. I, like you, feel that Rice is not hearing the issues of mental health. I read other top school's reports on mental health and how it is handled, and only wished Rice could focus on this issue and put in place best practices. Perhaps you will be the catalyst Olivia.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:16
To those saying "we must refrain from judging the administration until we hear their side of the story," and everyone who finds it hard to believe that a student was asked to leave because of mental health problems... read the comments. This is clearly not an isolated incident, with many, many comments reporting similar experiences.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:15
Seriously, Rice alums and students, get a grip. "makes me ashamed of all the times I've stood up to fellow students and non-Rice peers about Rice as an institution"? Did Rice fail to produce students who can have objective rational discussions? And to denounce people who are critical of taking the side of one person until they get a response from the other side? ESPECIALLY, when that person's story seems really unlikely in the sense that out of nowhere and for absolutely nothing, the university forced her to withdraw? I would expect better from my fellow alumni and of current students who are supposed to be among the brightest in the nation.

Oh, and is it really unbelievable that Rice would force students who are self-injuring themselves to withdraw rather than let them continue to struggle in an intense and competitive academic environment? Shocking at how little compassion Rice has.

Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:10
Thanks for having the courage to share this. While I haven't been in your shoes exactly, I have always laughed whenever the "Happiest Students" ranking is brought up. Clearly they didn't ask me or some of my friends.

Rice has some really great positives about it, but in general, the environment here can be very superficial. What I mean is, everyone is expected to be smiling and happy. Problems are swept under the rug.

I understand that in some cases, a mental health problem might be extreme enough that someone may need time off, but just because someone is depressed or otherwise mentally unhealthy doesn't mean that they can't receive treatment while they're here at Rice. They're adults- they can go to therapy and go to class. It seems to me that in some of these cases, Rice is just washing its hands of students, instead of doing everything in its power to make sure that a mental health problem does not derail their entire future. Sending students away should be a last resort.

Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:04
I came across this article on a social website, and I have a few things to say after reading the article and the comments.

Firstly, to the person who asked why this is being addressed in an op-ed, it's because the newspaper staff chose to shed light on something they believed to be newsworthy. As someone on a college newspaper that recently got flack for an article about Adderall, this piece did exactly what it was meant to - bring up a tough issue and stimulate conversation about it. It's my impression from the article that this is a call to action against the university, not against her abuser or his friends.

Secondly, as someone who has also gone through several episodes of manic depression at college, I was never once asked to withdraw because I was emotionally unstable. Perhaps my university is different, but I could not even comprehend being asked to leave, especially after getting treatment and improving in my mental status. It's even more astounding that 50+ people have responded to the article with similar situations. I think there should definitely be an investigation into the counseling services. Your school is small, and that's quite a number of people to be complaining about the same thing.

Lastly, to those saying there are two sides to every story - the university has the means to respond. The newspaper staff also has (or should have) a faculty advisor. And if there was good reporting involved, the university should have been notified that this article was being published. It's up to the other party to write a rebuttal. I think it was very brave of Olivia to write this article and have it published. It's not always easy to confront these types of things. I hope you, Olivia, are doing much better wherever you are now.

Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 17:00
This entire situation is heartbreaking. It's heartbreaking that Olivia went through this situation, it's heartbreaking that the administration has been so silent on this issue up til now, and it's heartbreaking that some students may be dissuaded from seeking professional psychological help because of the PR issues involved.

I was a stereotypically happy Rice student for the first two years of my time here. Near the end of my sophomore year, I began experiencing very disturbing mood swings, precipitated by seemingly nothing. I'd been completely healthy up until then and had never experienced anything like that before. I went to the Counseling Center on the recommendation of my RA, who has been amazingly supportive throughout this entire process. The first psychologist I saw was nice but pretty unhelpful. I had been using some self-harming behaviors to deal with my mood swings and the psychologist focused entirely on that. I struggled through until fall of junior year and finally requested a different counselor. My new counselor has been incredible and has been so helpful. I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and put on medication. I stopped taking my medication over the summer for external reasons and upon coming back to Rice in the fall, experienced awful mood swings. There was one weekend where I didn't do any of my homework because I was positive I would kill myself before Monday. I was terrified of telling RAs or Masters because of exactly what Olivia discussed - I thought I would destroy my future by being kicked out of Rice, degree unfinished. For a long time I'd regretted that and wondered if it would've been the right choice to have been honest about my feelings. Now I'm feeling more and more that I did the right thing.

Luckily, I was able to go back on my medication and am doing much better. My counselor at the Counseling Center continues to be wonderful and we have a great relationship. My huge fear with this story is that students like me will be dissuaded from seeking help because of the fear of getting in trouble or getting kicked out of Rice. If this had happened my freshman year, I know for a fact I wouldn't have gone to the RCC. and I hate to put it this way but I might not be alive now.

This article makes me sick. To think that the administration I trust so much acted this way is reprehensible and makes me ashamed of all the times I've stood up to fellow students and non-Rice peers about Rice as an institution.

Eric Shen
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:59
Dear Olivia,
I was very saddened to read this. I went to Rice about 10 years ago and had a "normal experience", but knew a few people who took medical leaves of absence. I lost touch with most of them, and to think they went through something similar is deeply upsetting. Not knowing what else to do, a few of us alums have shared this article on Facebook, hoping to raise awareness. If you know of something more we can do, please let us know. For what it's worth, we wish you all the best and hope you don't give up hope on the dreams you had for your life. And we'll be trying to do what we can to right this wrong.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:53
It is sickening that people are at all questioning the author. I can only assume that these people have never been sexually assaulted. There is no preventive measure that is taken, only retroactive measures. Thus, students must be assaulted before help can be given. What a system.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:53
While it is awful that the student suffered such emotional trauma, we should be hesitant about making judgements on the administration without hearing their opinion. I find it hard to believe that Rice would force a student to take a withdrawal without some valid reason, and the writer brings an understandably emotional view of the situation.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:51
The same thing happened to me. I went to the health center to deal with some self injury issues that were nonfatal and did not risk anything. The schools knee jerk reaction was to place me in a Psych ward of the Methodist Hospital and misconstrued that I was suicidal which I am not. After I was released they told me that I should take a leave from rice I refused and started crying. They relented and let me stay if I got a therapist, psychologist, and had regular meetings with the retention people. They kept on threatening to kick me out if they found any more cuts. Two weeks later all the stress boiled up, as I do have many panic attacks and depression also, and they found several cuts. They packed up all my stuff and didn't let me on campus to say goodbye to my friends. I am not allowed to come back in the spring and I dont really want to return with the way they treated me. I know just as many people are dealing with issues like mine but they had the sense to not go to the counseling center. I would never suggest it to anyone and it caused so much more harm than healing.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:51
As a testament against Rice counseling, I went to them shortly after my father passed away in spring 2012. In July, I had a 30 minute phone interview to assess my needs. Within 15 minutes they tried to refer me to a psychiatrist to be put on anti-depressants. I refused, so they asked me to come in for a session. During my session, the counselor continued to try to refer me to a psychiatrist, and told me I needed longer term care than they could provide. Thus, I was forced to seek help outside of campus. Even with insurance, I could not afford sessions. Therefore, I am paying for rice health services but receiving no help because I am "too damaged." It sickens me. My advisor also suggested I take a leave of absence, but having heard stories similar to yours, I refused, knowing that it would be difficult to return.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:50
It is indeed a sad story. I am sorry for your pain and unhappiness.
However, as a few people have pointed out here, we must consider "both side of the story". This is not saying that we don't believe the author or think she is an unreliable source. It is not because she is a woman or because of the bad stigma on metal health issues; it is because to be able to judge either the administration or the author, we should know everything there is to know. The administration is not "beyond reproach" (far from it), and neither is the author. I praise the author for her courage but urge everyone to think clearly and rationally about the situation.
Former Rice Student
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:45
This story is terrible, but I feel like people are getting a bit over zealous. First of all, the title of this article is hyperbolic to the extreme and a little bit offensive to the countless number of truly happy students at Rice. If there is a problem, we should set out to fix it by identifying the problem and taking action, but to suggest that Rice is this cesspit of lies, deceit, awfulness, abuse, and incapable counselors (as some of the comments would suggest) is just too much when considering one persons account of their own terrible experience.

I feel like my comment will be unpopular with the vocal crowd, and people will suggest that this type of thinking is the cause of the problem (which is obviously is not). All I am just saying that over-reaction can be as damaging as under-reaction. So lets try to be balanced when looking at any problem, and not just jump to ridiculous stereotyping of an entire university made up of individuals...

Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:41
I can confirm from personal experience that "2 hours to leave" is the standard policy for students being forced out of Rice. I've seen it happen more than once, and the students in question had to ask friends on campus to collect their things because they were not allowed back in their rooms.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:28
I also agree with San Tauri. It's a sad situation to be sure, but there has to be more to it. I'd like to hear from the other side before condemning the counseling center or the administration.
Anonymous
Fri Nov 30 2012 16:27
Thank you for writing this. Too many people have become cheerleaders for the university, and I fear that what's not being said is being covered up. I'm a senior, and I feel personally detached from this place. I am not happy here. At times, I thought maybe I should go to the Rice Counseling Center; now I am so glad I didn't




log out