SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 79
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
University clarifies role of responsible employees Title IX Office to rely on knowledge reported to students designated as responsible employees By KATE TALERICO SENIOR STAFF WRITER
MARIANNA MURDOCK / HERALD
Dana Suskind, University of Chicago professor and author of “Thirty Million Words: Building a Child’s Brain,” and Mayor Jorge Elorza spoke at a panel Monday on the importance of developing children’s vocabularies.
Panel surveys Providence Talks’ impact Mayor Jorge Elorza and other panelists discuss 2013 education project’s progress, future By AGNES CHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Mayor Jorge Elorza joined three other panel members, including University of Chicago Professor of Surgery Dana Suskind, to discuss Providence Talks —
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a 2013 initiative designed to improve children’s vocabularies — at a policy forum in Petteruti Lounge Monday. The panel members focused on the necessity of increasing children’s vocabularies during the first few years of life in order to reduce the gap in children’s readiness for kindergarten. Suskind introduced her book released last month, “Thirty Million Words: Building a Child’s Brain,” during the panel and was available to sign copies afterwards. The Providence Talks program — which emphasizes the importance
of enhancing parent-child interactions to improve learning — won the Bloomberg Philanthropies’ 2013 Mayor Challenge and received $5 million to fund its implementation. In addition to Elorza and Suskind, the policy forum, which was the first since the program’s inception, also featured Anne Emig, a representative from Bloomberg Philanthropies and Kenneth Wong, professor of education and chair of the department. Suskind also serves as a surgeon at the University of Chicago, and she said » See PANEL, page 3
The University has clarified the designation of Residential Peer Leaders, Brown University Dining Services supervisors and Meiklejohn Peer Advisors as “responsible employees,” dictating that they must report any knowledge of cases of sexual misconduct or harassment to the Title IX Office, said Title IX Program Officer Amanda Walsh. The Title IX Office will use this reported knowledge to provide survivors with resources intended to aid them in deciding whether or not to take a case to the Title IX Conduct Board, said Executive Vice President for Planning and Policy Russell Carey ’91 MA’06. The designation is not new to any group but BuDS supervisors — both RPLs and Meiklejohns have been responsible employees in the past, as dictated by Rhode Island State law. But the administration has increased clarity regarding the role this year, Walsh said.
In the past, some students designated as responsible employees may not have fully realized what the role entailed. Upon realizing that they were obligated to report incidents of sexual assault, some students — particularly RPLs — came forward to the University with concerns about the circumstances in which they must fulfill the role, said Sazzy Gourley ’16, president of the Undergraduate Council of Students. “Students have expressed frustration about what it means to be a responsible employee and how the information was communicated,” Gourley said. All Meiklejohns and RPLs contacted for this story declined to comment, with RPLs citing an email from a community director asking them not to speak to The Herald. In deciding which employees would be classified as responsible employees, the University was bound by Rhode Island state laws. “Those designated employees in a leadership or supervisory position, or who have significant responsibility for the welfare of students or employees” are designated as responsible, according to the University’s Sexual and Gender-Based Harassment, Sexual Violence, Relationship » See RESPONSIBLE, page 2
Aid recipients navigate Plans for winter session inch forward contribution expectations Administrators circulate UCS, Office of Financial Aid collaborate to form advisory board to hear student voices By AGNES CHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Features of student financial aid packages, including outside scholarship reporting and summer earnings requirements, can cause financial and logistical challenges for students. The Office of Financial Aid is working with the Undergraduate Council of Students to address these challenges through the creation of a financial aid advisory board which will facilitate direct communication between students and the financial aid office. “We’ve been working really hard to elevate advocacy efforts around specific financial aid improvements,” said Sazzy Gourley ’16, UCS president. “It is critical to elevate this conversation to the Corporation level, so that Corporation members as well as other
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administrators understand how important it is that we’re resolving some of these barriers to success for students.” Forty-four percent of all undergraduates receive need-based financial aid from the University, said Jim Tilton, director of financial aid. The University set aside $112.5 million for financial aid for the 2015-2016 academic year — an increase from the $104.1 million budgeted last year. The Office of Financial Aid determines a student’s family contribution based on two forms: the Free Application for Federal Student Aid and the College Scholarship Service Profile. The FAFSA uses a formula established by the federal government to calculate a family’s expected contribution by taking into account a family’s taxed and untaxed income, assets and benefits. But because the University also considers information on the CSS Profile, the amount of aid the University gives to a student is often different from the value derived from FAFSA. The CSS Profile paints a clearer » See FINANCIAL, page 2
initial proposal for threeweek January term, innovative courses By BAYLOR KNOBLOCH SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Dean of the College Maud Mandel and Dean of the Faculty Kevin McLaughlin P’12 will present an initial proposal for a winter term at Tuesday’s faculty meeting, Mandel said. The proposed Winter Session will feature “a handful of intense, creative experimental courses in January” that span three weeks and cover the standard 48-contact-hour requirement of semester courses, Mandel said. A working group composed of faculty members, staff members and students, co-chaired by Mandel and McLaughlin, formed last January to discuss the idea of a January term, which the group agreed to call Winter Session. The group explored the feasibility and demand for Winter Session in “a preliminary discussion about a
larger discussion,” said Ian Kenyon GS, a member of the committee and a Herald opinions columnist. The group met “about every two weeks semester and pursued the various parts of the president’s charge, which were asking us to consider the pros and cons of a winter session,” Mandel said. These meetings culminated in a set of recommendations encouraging the pursuit of a winter term, which Mandel and McLaughlin presented to President Christina Paxson P’19 and former Provost Vicki Colvin in May. Due to the transition in the provost position over the summer, “it was really President Paxson and Provost (Richard Locke P’17) who got back to us over the summer,” Mandel said. The two “thought it would be a good idea to take the recommendations of the committee to faculty and campus this semester,” she added. Mandel and McLaughlin are currently visiting various faculty and student governance committees to discuss the proposal, Mandel said, adding that so far, it has been met with support. The two administrators will present
the proposal to the Undergraduate Council of Students’ Academic and Administrative Affairs committee at a meeting Thursday that will be open to the public, said Sazzy Gourley ’16, UCS president. Financial aid availability and calendar consistency surfaced as two key elements that the group made sure to include in its proposal. “We agreed that the thing we were striving for was inclusion across the student body,” Kenyon said. According to the proposal, students on financial aid would have full access to their aid packages for Winter Session tuition. In addition to student inclusion, maintaining the University’s schedule emerged as a clear priority for the committee. “The idea of moving the calendar was, for many people, a dealbreaker,” Mandel said. The proposal fits Winter Session into the existing structure of winter break, not disrupting the date of graduation or other large University events. An additional characteristic of the proposed Winter Session is that it would allow faculty members to offer » See WINTER, page 2
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TUESDAY, OC TOBER 6, 2015
UNIVERSITY NEWS University joins coalition working to develop tools to improve college application process
UNIVERSITY NEWS Partnership with Naval War College leads to series of cybersecurity lectures
METRO Six maps of Providence demonstrate wide variation in population demographics
COMMENTARY Kenyon GS: Society should focus on individuals behind mass shootings rather than guns
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