Tuesday, September 27, 2016

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2016

VOLUME CLI, ISSUE 73

WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

U. prepares for NEASC accreditation after decade University focuses on reinforcing mission, amassing data, identifying areas for improvement By SHIRA BUCHSBAUM SENIOR STAFF WRITER

GUS REED / HERALD

Rhode Island Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea discussed various ways she hopes to increase voter turnout. She hopes to implement automatic voter registration and enhance voter education measures. She also supports overturning voter ID laws in Rhode Island.

RI Secretary of State aims to expand voter turnout Gorbea discusses automatic voter registration, importance of voting, political obstacles for women By ELI BINDER STAFF WRITER

Rhode Island Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea delivered a speech on voting policy and practice in Rhode Island at the Joukowsky Forum Monday. The lecture was the first hosted by Women, Empowered, a new student group funded by the Watson Institute

for International and Public Affairs. Gorbea, a Puerto Rico native, became the first Hispanic to hold statewide office in New England when she was elected in 2015. In her talk, Gorbea highlighted the path that led her to the Ocean State. In her free time, she became involved in local community groups and was quickly appointed to leadership

Independent concentrators chart interdisciplinary paths Students say ICs lack publicity, leading to reputation of exaggerated obstacles, disinterest By ROSE SHEEHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

1969 — the year the New Curriculum received approval — marked the first time a Brown student created an independent concentration, said Peggy Chang, director of the Curricular Resource Center and assistant dean for engaged learning. “If you think of the time back in ’68, ’69 — that was the Civil Rights Movement, that was a time when a lot of places like Brown were going co-ed,” Chang said. “There was a lot of conversation back then about philosophical questions — about what is learning, what are we learning, who

INSIDE

is teaching it.” This atmosphere of activism and exploration begot the independent concentration, which gives students the opportunity to design and earn a degree in their own unique course of study. Some ICs are anomalies and have appeared on a Brown diploma only once since the independent concentration became an option, while others prove so popular that they have become standard concentrations. “The lore goes that even concentrations like neuroscience, science and technology studies, literary arts, Middle East studies and now the latest example is contemplative studies — they became standard concentrations in part because there was demonstrated student interest,” Chang said. During the 2015-16 academic year, 45 IC proposals were submitted and “at least twice that many students came » See IC, page 3

positions. She served as deputy secretary of state before running for secretary of state in 2015. “I am having a blast being your secretary of state here in Rhode Island,” Gorbea said. Many of Gorbea’s achievements in her first year in office have involved voting, one of the main responsibilities of the Rhode Island Department of State. She has procured new voting machines for all polling places, instituted electronic poll votes and created an online voter registration system.

Gorbea said that one of her goals is to implement automatic voter registration. “If the state knows that you’re a citizen … why do we have to ask you if you want to register to vote?” she said. She believes automatic voter registration will enhance ongoing voter education efforts and make the broader process of voting more accessible. Establishing an online voter registration system was a necessary first step because “you can’t do all the » See GORBEA, page 3

This semester, the University is gearing up for its reaccreditation by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, a process that will extend until spring 2018. Preparing the report for NEASC is a time- and people-intensive process that requires a steering committee and ultimately the entire university’s participation, said Joe Meisel, manager and editorin-chief of the self-study and deputy provost. NEASC’s accreditation process involves demonstrating success in the association’s nine standards, which encompass a number of topics including the mission and governance of the University, admission practices, research and educational efficacy. The standards “cover all of the important areas” and apply to all kinds of educational institutions in a “broadly applicable manner,” Meisel said. Maud Mandel, dean of the College and chair of the College Curriculum » See NEASC, page 2

OIDI launches faculty, staff training Voluntary DIAP professional development includes lecture series, lunch trainings, book club By JULIANNE CENTER SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Office of Institutional Diversity and Inclusion is offering a variety of voluntary professional development opportunities this fall for faculty and staff members to “engage in discussions, interactive workshops and capacity-building activities around diversity and inclusion issues,” wrote Liza Cariaga-Lo, vice president for academic development, diversity and inclusion, in her Sept. 16 communitywide email. The lineup of faculty and staff trainings and initiatives falls under the umbrella of programs mentioned in the Diversity and Inclusion Action Plan released in February.

The first of these initiatives, the Diversity and Inclusion Lecture Series, will include two lectures, one by Claude Steele, professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley, on Nov. 9 and one by Douglas Massey, professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton, on Nov. 16, according to Cariaga-Lo’s email. Steele will devote his lecture to “understanding and unpacking contextual understanding of how people of color and other diverse populations in the classroom experience curricula” as well as pedagogical approaches to issues of diversity and stereotypes, Cariaga-Lo said. Massey will speak about his work on the experiences of immigrant students and first-generation college students as well as about inequality and pipeline programs, Cariaga-Lo said. The lectures aim to answer the question: “How do we ensure that we in fact are being inclusive in the classroom about the ways that we

advise, support and mentor students?” Cariaga-Lo added. The University will also launch an eight-week Diversity and Inclusion Professional Development Lunch Series on Sept. 28. Each of the eight “highly interactive workshop sessions” will speak to the different needs of different populations, Cariaga-Lo said. In response to requests for book recommendations following last spring’s professional development trainings, the OIDI will be facilitating the creation of book clubs by purchasing copies of six recommended books and lending them for free to various constituencies at Brown whose members wish to continue conversations about diversity and inclusion in their own communities. The books — from Steele’s “Whistling Vivaldi” to “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini — will include both scholarly texts and works of fiction. To provide a more concrete way for » See DIAP, page 4

WEATHER

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2016

NEWS Inside Higher Ed: Yale, Harvard, UMich College Republicans split over Trump

NEWS Economist Branko Milanovic spoke about how global income inequality affects nations

COMMENTARY Liang ’19: Students concentrating in STEM disciplines often neglect open curriculum

COMMENTARY Vilsan ’19: Celebrities who exploit their feminism for fame, money do not represent movement

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Tuesday, September 27, 2016 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu