Thursday, February 28, 2013

Page 1

Daily

Herald

THE BROWN

vol. cxlviii, no. 25

INSIDE

POST

post-

Goin’ nuts for donuts, oral morals, licensed to drive

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2013

Admin racial diversity ranks among lowest in Ivies As three ongoing senior administrative searches proceed, the University looks to increase diversity By JENNIFER KAPLAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Page 6

Gender gap R.I. ranks no. 1 for gender difference in dropout rates Page 7

Bills bills bills Bill would charge non-R.I. students $50 semesterly fee today

48 / 32

tomorrow

43 / 30

The University’s senior administration ranked the second least racially diverse in the Ivy League in an analysis conducted by the Daily Pennsylvanian earlier this month. At 5.6 percent, or one out of 18 total senior administrators, the University’s proportion of minority senior administrators is only higher than Yale’s 3.8 percent. The data compiled by the Daily Pennsylvanian looked at the percentage of top administrators who are black, Asian or Hispanic across the Ivy League. Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 said he is not content with the level of diversity among Brown’s senior administrators,

adding that expanding such diversity is one of his goals. “Having diverse perspectives involved in leading the University is a strong advantage,” he said. “There is absolutely no question about that.” Searching for diversity Search committees have been formed to find replacements to fill three of the 18 senior positions: vice president for Computing and Information Services, vice president for research and dean of medicine and biological sciences. Schlissel, who is leading the latter two searches, said diversity will be one of many factors considered by the committees. “We have certainly made efforts to make sure we have as diverse an applicant pool as possible,” he added. The difficulty, Schlissel said, is finding the right candidate who wants the job. “In each (search) there are different challenges, and each has a different population of people who are in those fields already,” said Beppie Huidekoper,

SAM KASE / HERALD

The University senior administration is the second least racially diverse in the Ivy League. executive vice president for finance and administration. She is heading the search for a vice president for CIS.

Doctoral students desire closer undergraduate ties The forum sparked discussion on how to make University graduate programs distinctive By MAGGIE LIVINGSTONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Graduate students suggested increasing involvement in the design and teaching of online undergraduate courses and observing and applying effective program techniques from the undergraduate level to graduate disciplines during an open forum hosted by the Committee on Doctoral Education. The forum was held Tuesday evening and attended by a small crowd of doctoral students, professors and committee members. The Committee on Doctoral Education is one of six strategic planning committees expected to influence President Christina Paxson as she formulates plans for the

University during her tenure. The discussion’s focus on possible graduate involvement in constructing and implementing online courses was sparked by the University’s announcement last semester to create three pilot online not-for-credit courses open to the public through Coursera. The Committee on Educational Innovation, another strategic planning group advising President Paxson, submitted an interim report in January that recommended developing 250 online or partially online courses, including summer for-credit classes and combined online lecture format courses during the semester, The Herald previously reported. A cognitive, linguistic and psy-

chological sciences Ph.D. candidate in the audience encouraged the use of online courses, citing the potential for more hands-on engagement in the classroom while lecture material could be taught through online learning. He added that it was a “huge opportunity for graduates to develop these courses.” Peter Weber, committee chair and dean of the graduate school, said three graduate students are already involved in designing the online courses, but added that the suggestion of increased graduate student involvement would be taken into account. Weber moderated the forum, along with Bernard Reginster, committee co-chair and professor of philosophy. Though Weber and Reginster led discussion with general questions from a slideshow presentation,

graduate students in the audience largely dominated the dialogue. Topics included how to measure postdocs’ success after graduation, quantitative metrics of graduate programs and if students were receiving adequate support academically and in their research pursuits. A bulk of the discussion also centered on how to differentiate Brown’s doctoral programs from those of other universities. Weber said the committee is examining data from peer institutions, which he said are “mostly in the Ivy League,” and comparing the University’s graduate programs to them. Many audience members supported a suggestion to, as one student put it, “look to what the undergraduates are doing right and take from that to use in the grad school.” Examples included the / / Grad page 9

U. looks to expand Looming sequester academic ties to Brazil threatens R.I. funding New initiatives will seek to connect University academics to the South American nation By SONIA PHENE SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The University is looking to strengthen its existing ties and form new connections with Brazil as part of a multi-step process of engagement, said Matthew Gutmann P’14, vice president for international affairs. Gutmann highlighted the University’s commitment to new research initiatives in conjunction with Brazilian scholars, a move concurrent with a push from faculty members to make Brown a leading hub for Brazilian studies. The University’s pivot to focus on Brazil also

since 1891

comes amidst increased competition among elite American universities for attracting the rapidly growing country’s top students. Last week, Gutmann traveled to Brazil to sign agreements with the Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education, known as CAPES, and the Sao Paulo Research Foundation, known as FAPESP. These and other future agreements will “make it easier for Brown scholars to work more closely with colleagues in Brazil,” Gutmann said. The agreement with CAPES will bring a Brazilian scholar to Brown every year as a visiting professor, which is a “high honor for Brown in general, but particularly important with regards to Brazil,” he said. The deal with the funding organization FAPESP / / Brazil page 5

Potential cuts include reducing spending on defense, education and humanitarian aid By MARIYA BASHKATOVA SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The federal budget sequester that goes into effect tomorrow — unless Congress can agree on a way to tackle the national deficit by the March 1 deadline — will cut Rhode Island’s federal funding by more than $39 million in this fiscal year, according to a White House report. If the sequester is not prevented, education, military spending, public health and humanitarian programs will all see reductions in federal funds.

CITY & STATE

The Rhode Island Senate unanimously passed a bipartisan resolution yesterday to ask Congress to come to a decision about budget cuts in order to avoid the sequester, according to a state press release. If Congress does not prevent the sequester, the state’s education programs will lose $2.4 million in funding, endangering 30 teaching jobs and funding for 10 schools. These cuts will be accompanied by a $2.1 million decrease in funding for about 20 teachers and aides who work with disabled students, according to the report. Financial aid and work-study programs, as well as the state’s Head Start program, which serves underprivileged and low-income children ages three to five, will also receive less from the federal government. The military will see $31.5 million in cuts — more / / Cuts page 9

These different challenges are being met with varied solutions. A search / / Admin page 3 firm has been

NE WS IN BRIEF City approves Thayer apartments The Providence City Plan Commission approved final plans Tuesday for 257 Thayer Street, a luxury student apartment complex slated for construction in June 2013, the Providence Journal reported. The four-story complex is expected to house 270 tenants — mostly students — in furnished apartments with single bedrooms, private bathrooms and living rooms featuring big screen televisions, The Herald previously reported. The apartments are a project of Gilbane Development Corporation, chaired by Robert Gilbane ’71 P’02 P’05. The apartments will rent for about $1,000 to $1,400 per month, Gilbane told The Herald last March. The complex will replace most of the current buildings on the block of Thayer Street bounded by Meeting Street, Euclid Avenue and Brook Street — nine houses including Squires Salon and Sahara Hookah Bar, The Herald previously reported. When the plan was initially proposed last year, some community members expressed concerns that the complex would be too intrusive and closed off from the neighborhood instead of being incorporated into the street’s current architecture, The Herald reported. The final plans include a courtyard that opens onto Brook Street, instead of the original closed-courtyard design, The Herald reported. — Mariya Bashkatova


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.