Tuesday, December 01, 2015

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2015

VOLUME CL, ISSUE 113

Intoxication during class

About 15 percent of undergraduates have been intoxicated during class. Over 9 percent have been under the influence of marijuana — and 7.6 percent have been drunk — during class. Less than 4 percent have been under the influence of another controlled substance during class. I have been intoxicated during class: 14.5%

10 percent

9.1% 8

I have never been intoxicated during class: 85.5%

STAFF WRITER

Marijuana

3.8%

Alcohol

Another controlled substance

2

Source: Herald Fall 2015 Poll EMMA JERZYK / HERALD

Students attend class under the influence

By SHIRA BUCHSBAUM STAFF WRITER

While many think of alcohol and marijuana as confined to parties and

Percentage of courses taken S/NC jumps to 20.7 percent this fall from 17.6 percent in spring 2011 By RACHEL SACHS

0

Nine percent of students have attended class under the influence of marijuana, poll shows

Popularity of S/NC option rises among undergraduates

7.6%

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WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

dorm rooms, these substances also stage an appearance in the classroom. Approximately 15 percent of Brown students have attended class under the influence of a substance, according to a poll conducted by The Herald last month. About 9 percent of Brown students have attended class under the influence of marijuana, 7.6 percent of students have attended class under the

influence of alcohol and 3.8 percent of students have attended class under the influence of another controlled substance, according to the poll. The poll revealed a correlation between gender and intoxication during class: Male students were twice as likely as female students to have attended class under the influence. “I would say, anecdotally, the » See INTOXICATED, page 2

The percentage of students taking one or more classes Satisfactory/No Credit jumped from 54.4 percent in spring 2011 to 63.4 percent in fall 2015, according to data obtained from the Office of the Registrar. The overall percentage of courses taken S/NC also increased from 17.6 percent to 20.7 percent in the same time period, according to the registrar’s office. But the percentage of students taking all of their classes S/NC remained at below 1 percent. This data only accounts for undergraduates enrolled in at least four courses a semester. Christopher Dennis, deputy dean of the College, said more students may be taking courses S/NC to avoid earning low letter grades. “There’s no question that some of the use of S/NC is grade protection,” he said. The option for students to take an unlimited number of courses S/NC is a trademark component of the open curriculum. Since Elliott Maxwell ’68 P’06

and Ira Magaziner ’69 P’06 P’07 P’10 helped introduce the open curriculum in 1969, students have weighed several factors when choosing whether to take a course S/NC or for a traditional letter grade. The Office of the Dean of the College office hopes that students take advantage of S/NC in the spirit of the curricular reforms that led to its creation, Dennis said. S/NC is meant to encourage students to take academic risks without fear of lower grades, he added. Several students said they gravitated toward the S/NC option just once during their undergraduate careers. Kian Ivey ’16, an applied math-economics concentrator, took an English course S/NC during his first semester as a transfer student at Brown. “I wanted to try a course somewhat outside of my comfort zone,” he said. Ivey said the course’s S/NC status influenced how he approached his work “closer to the end of the semester, when other courses had finals or papers” that would affect his “actual grades.” Saminya Bangura ’16, an international relations and East Asian studies double concentrator, has also taken one class S/NC. She said she chose to take an elective S/NC during a semester in » See S/NC, page 3

Students, faculty travel to Paxson outlines downtown expansion efforts Paris for climate conference U. establishes working Conference complements students’ learning, research in environmental studies course By HARRY AUGUST STAFF WRITER

A dozen students and two faculty members from the University’s Climate and Development Lab are attending the Paris Climate Change Conference as part of the course ENVS 1575: “Engaged Climate Policy at the U.N. Climate Change Talks.” The two-week conference, which began Monday, seeks to create the first legally binding agreement to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. J. Timmons Roberts, professor of environmental studies and sociology and co-teacher of ENVS 1575, created the course to share with students the experiences and contacts he has gained at U.N. Climate Conferences, he wrote in an email to The Herald.

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

INSIDE

“There is no better way to learn about climate policy than to see it being made,” he wrote. The students, equipped with tools to “effectively shape policy,” will attend the conference events and conduct research for the class with the hope of “fostering transformational learning experiences,” wrote Guy Edwards, visiting research fellow in environmental studies, who co-teaches the class alongside Roberts, in an email to The Herald. Other University researchers who study climate change stressed the importance of this climate conference and the need for immediate action. “Unless dramatic emissions reductions are achieved now, we are headed for the most rapid climate change in several million years,” wrote Stephen Porter, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, in an email to The Herald. Moreover, “slow processes in the earth will keep a ‘memory’ of what we do now for centuries — every year of increased emissions and warming commits us to a longer-term future » See PARIS, page 8

group to spearhead Jewelry District development

By ROLAND HIGH STAFF WRITER

President Christina Paxson P’19 presented the University’s vision for future development in the Jewelry District — highlighting the eventual construction of a translational science complex — at the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce’s annual meeting Nov. 23. She originally announced the proposals in her operational plan released Sept. 15. Translational science is “the entrepreneurial pathway that connects basic science to practice,” Paxson said. While Brown culture encourages collaboration among departments, the University lacks a “physical home for translational sciences,” said Cass Cliatt, vice president for communications. “There is a vision right now, but it’s way too early to say that there is a

METRO

SAM BERUBE / HERALD

Future development in the Jewelry District will include the University’s construction of a translational science complex. plan,” Cliatt said. The University still all departments necessarily need more has much to accomplish in terms of space, the projects could prove helpful fundraising, developing partnerships for those that seek increased room or and planning academic programming, collaboration. she said, noting that a working group Both Arthur Salisbury, president of has been established to spearhead the Jewelry District Association, and these efforts. Terrie Wetle, dean of the School of Details such as the cost of the com- Public Health and professor of health plex and the scope of the expansion services, policy and practice, expressed have not yet been determined, she excitement about the University’s inadded. vestment in the Jewelry District. Kavosh Asadi GS said though not » See EXPANSION, page 3

WEATHER

TUESDAY. DECEMBER 1, 2015

METRO R.I. HPV vaccine mandate for seventh graders causes outcry from community members

SCIENCE & RESEARCH U. works to increase funding of graduate programs, add resources to STEM fields

LETTER Murage ’17: Students should not target understaffed CAPS when lamenting mental health issues

COMMENTARY Doyle ’18: A few B’s or C’s on students’ transcripts will not ruin their future prospects

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