Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Page 1

Daily

Herald

the Brown

vol. cxlvi, no. 42

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Since 1891

One-third plan further education after graduation Voters give By Aparna Bansal Senior Staff Writer

Just over 35 percent of undergraduates plan to attend medical, law, business or graduate school immediately following graduation, according to last month’s Herald poll. About onefourth of current students — 23.9 percent — indicated they plan to

the herald poll take up jobs after graduation, and 7.6 percent indicated they will be participating in service programs such as Teach for America and the Peace Corps. More than one-fourth of undergraduates are still unsure about their plans. According to data collected by the Career Development Center, 56 percent of the class of 2009 were employed as of April 2010, while 27 percent of that class told the CDC they were enrolled in full-time education programs. The Herald poll results for this question showed no statistically significant differences across grade

level. Because students usually join service programs for a limited time, many plan to continue on to further education or employment after their one- or two-year commitments end. Service programs provide “structured opportunities that are attractive to a lot of students,” said Andrew Simmons, director of the CDC, adding that these programs do not require the same “amount of legwork” as looking for other employment opportunities and do not shoulder students with the burden of graduate school tuition. Participating in service programs also helps students applying to medical and law schools, he said. “Law schools don’t take people straight out of college. They want to see more experienced people … so it’s a win-win situation,” said Harrison Stark ’11, a BlogDailyHerald contributor who will be working for Teach for America this year. According to data collected by the CDC, 306 Brown students applied to enter law school in fall 2009 and 264 were accepted. But of those accepted,

What are your plans immediately following graduation?

By Ben Kutner Staff Writer

Brown’s political alums are facing flagging support among Rhode Island voters, according to a new poll released by the Taubman Center for Public Policy.

city & state

patients. These changes have galvanized interest in the Med School. Applications increased more than 15 percent this year, Gruppuso said. He attributed the dramatic increase to the move to the new building and said he expects applications to continue to rise. The Med School was “always known as an intimate medical school, so there was a concern that that familiarity and closeness might be lost” as the Med School expands, Borkan said. The committee’s accreditation

Less than a third of voters approve of the way Gov. Lincoln Chafee ’75 P’14 and U.S. Rep. David Cicilline ’83 are doing their jobs, according to the poll, which found Chafee’s approval rating at 32 percent and Cicilline’s at 17 percent. Mayor Angel Taveras received a 52 percent approval rating. The survey of 425 registered Rhode Island voters, which was released March 24, also measured public opinion on the firing of Providence teachers and support for collective bargaining rights. It showed voters split on Chafee’s proposed sales tax changes, which include lowering the tax from 7 to 6 percent and imposing a 1 percent sales tax on currently tax-exempt items like taxi fares, dry cleaning and heating fuel. The poll also found 54 percent of the state’s registered voters oppose reducing the collective bargaining rights of public sector unions. The narrowing opinion on union bargaining rights among Rhode Island voters “reflects the more general trend across the country of declining support for unions,” wrote Wendy Schiller, associate professor of political science and public policy, in an email to The Herald. “Public figures have generally

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Rafael Chaiken / Herald

85.3 percent took one or more years off between college and law school. Evelyn Limon ’11 will teach at the MATCH Charter Public School in Boston next year before attending law school. She wanted to do something she was passionate about before beginning law school and

starting a career, she said. “I don’t know if, law school-wise, it will be a benefit to my application,” she said. “It’s more an internal desire, feeling like I’m doing something worthwhile — especially because law continued on page 2

Amidst changes, Med School to conduct self-study While settling into its new home at the Medical Education Building downtown, the Alpert Medical School will also conduct a self-study over the next year to prepare for the upcoming Liaison Committee on Medical Education accreditation investigation in fall 2012. The committee, which requires participating medical schools to undergo a yearlong self-study before evaluation, oversees accreditation processes for medical schools and determines eligibility for grants. The self-study coincides with the

Med School’s ongoing curricular overhaul and relocation to its new building in the Jewelry District. “We’ve had (the committee’s) accreditation standards in mind for every change we’ve made,” said Philip Gruppuso, associate dean for medical education. The move to the Medical Education Building will be key to (the committee’s) approval, Guppuso said. “There are huge problems with medical students trying to find study space,” he said. Class size will increase from 75 students in each graduating class to about 120 after the new building opens. As a result, the Med School is

introducing a new “academy model” for career and personal advising. Each class will be divided into three academies of 40 students. “The new curriculum will focus on traditional clinical training in the core areas and expand to public health and medical ethics. There will also be a more robust program on advising students on what they should do in their fourth year, which is largely elective,” Gruppuso said. The new building will also provide more space for teaching, said Jeffrey Borkan, professor of family medicine, as well as group meeting rooms and simulation rooms, where students can work with simulated

City schools hit with two more blows

Under pressure

By Claire Peracchio City & State Editor

Freddy Lu / Herald

inside

The conversion of the University’s boilers is scheduled for completion in May. See full coverage on page 3.

news...................2-3 CITY & State............4 editorial..............6 Opinions...............7 SPORTS...................8

Just say no

Proposed recovery schools would fight youth addiction City & State, 4

Calling for sweeping cuts to close a two-year $180 million budget gap, Providence Mayor Angel Taveras called the city’s finances a “category five” hurricane. But last Tuesday, that would have more aptly described the city’s embattled school system. Still reeling from the mayor’s decision to fire all of Providence’s teachers and close four of the city’s schools to rein in the city’s deficit, the district suffered two additional blows as its top education official resigned, and four of its schools were singled out for

Bad deal Debt obligations outweigh U.S. aid

Opinions, 7

state intervention. The Rhode Island Department of Education named five low-performing schools that will require

city & state comprehensive reform under federal guidelines. Providence Public School District Superintendent Tom Brady also announced he would be leaving his position this July, three years after taking the reins as the city’s leading school administrator. Brady’s resignation begins a search for a replacement, adding a new uncertainty to ongoing negotiations with the Providence Teachers Union over

Track stars Teams post competitive results

Sports, 8

weather

By Caroline Flanagan Staff Writer

thumbs down to alums

the fates of the 1,926 teachers the mayor fired this February. The back-to-back announcements come as the district — which serves many of the most impoverished communities in the state — confronts the twin realities of failing schools and diminishing resources available to fix them. Since education officials began naming the state’s worst schools last year, eight of the 10 schools announced have been in the Providence school district. And with education spending making up over half of the city’s budget, schools have come under continued on page 4

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