Santa Clara Welcomes Groups of First-Year Move-Ins For Spring Quarter
āA good change of sceneryā for new Broncos
When Kate Cocales ā24, sister Claire ā22, and mom Dana Cocales pulled up in front of Graham Hall this weekend, the first-year Bronco practically bounded out of their rental car.
Who could blame her?
After a year of pandemic sheltering in place at home in Seattle, the opportunity to move onto campusāthough her classes will remain online for the spring quarter that starts this weekāwas worth it.
āThe teachers have done a very good job, honestly,ā said the accounting major of her ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ remote courses over the fall and winter. āBut itās time to open a new chapter, and I wanted to meet new people. Itās a good change of scenery.ā
Like the approximately 450 other first-year move-ins who arrived between March 24-28āhailing from North Carolina to Hawaii, and plenty of points in betweenāCocales is living in a two-person room that, for COVID-19 safety reasons, she will have all to herself.
More instructions awaited the Washington native: After unpacking, students (who must wear face coverings and maintain six feet of social distancing) were required to head over to Benson Memorial Center for the first of two COVID-19 tests they will take over the next seven days of quarantine.
Outside Graham, Dave Machado welcomed and assisted several members of the 2021 class as they pushed and pulled huge canvas carts stuffed with their belongings.
Ethan Evans, '24, stands next to the door of his room inside Graham Hall, with mom Sarah, center, and dad Jonathan Evans, right. Photo by Jim Gensheimer.
But the director of ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ Housing, Building Operations and Conference Services said he is already planning and looking forward to September, when heāll be involved in coordinating campus housing for many students starting at or returning to Santa Clara.
āIf everything goes well until then,ā Machado said, āthese first-years will have a great sophomore move-in experience.ā
For Ethan Evans ā24, relocating to Santa Clara for the spring quarter was the right decision.
āI think being here will help me get my bearings, and also help me get to know other students,ā said the bioengineering major who drove up from Long Beach with his parents, Sarah and Jonathan.
Evans recently broke his right wrist snowboarding in Aspen, so his parents werenāt just providing emotional support; they helped him unpack and organize his second floor room in Graham.
While the wrist pain has mostly subsided, the inconvenienceāas his father wisely notedāmight even turn out to be a good āconversation-starterā with other students.
The son thinks his PlayStation console, an essential item he brought with him to ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½, will probably come in just as handy.
For fellow Graham Hall resident and gamer Max Keller ā24, the mention of a console in the building was excellent news.
Keller, who arrived from Thousand Oaks accompanied by his parents Hayley and Mark, brought his own āmust-havesā from home, including his acoustic guitar and his āitās so comfortable!ā blue fleece robe.
Though pleased to be on campus, he acknowledged that spring quarter wonāt be the same experience without all the other first-years.
Isabel Andaya '24 holds a favorite blanket inside her room at Graham Hall.
āIām fortunate to be here,ā said the economics major who has managed his own E-Trade account since high school. āBut I can understand how people would want to hold off this quarter because of finances.ā
First-year Isabel Andaya, who had driven down Friday with her mother from their Sacramento home, understands that sentiment.
Last fall, the civil engineering major was supposed to be in a three-person room, but the ongoing pandemic halted those plans.
For spring quarter, she said, one of the trio moved to off-campus housing, while another, who lives in nearby San Ramon, decided to remain at home to save money.
āItās tough for everyone,ā said Andaya, ābut hopefully more people will be here this fall.ā