SUNY Plattsburgh’s independent student newspaper since 1997
VOLUME 106 - ISSUE 1
FRIDAY, FEB. 18, 2022
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ALEKSANDRA SIDOROVA/Cardinal Points
Emily Scholler, a SUNY Plattsburgh senior majoring in childhood education, helping wobblers, children from ages one to two, do an activity in Sibley Hall’s child care center.
Child care center pays interns BY ALEKSANDRA SIDOROVA
Staff Writer
In partnership with the Early Childhood Education and Human Development and Family Relations academic departments, the Child Care Center at SUNY Plattsburgh opened a paid internship position for upperclassmen students. As of the third week of the semester, six interns have been selected. Four are already working at the daycare for about 20 hours a week, earning minimum wage. The paid internship is aimed at
SUNY Plattsburgh students majoring in education or human development and family relations. It is designed to complement their coursework, provide practical experience and expose them to work in the area of early childhood education, which can later turn into employment. Interns are expected to complete workshops, familiarize themselves with the curriculum used at the daycare, select and co-create lessons and work with small groups of students. “You have to be able to negotiate a lot of things at the same
time — that’s part of the fun of it,” Child Care Center Director Sally Girard said. They also work with the different professionals and service providers for children at Sibley Hall — occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech-language therapists, special instructors and others. “Our interns would actually have an opportunity to see what’s going on there, which mimics what happens in not only early childcare settings, but schools,” Maureen Squires, associate pro-
ALEKSANDRA SIDOROVA/Cardinal Points
fessor and chair of teaching education, said. “So if our students graduated here and went to school, they would get to see that. They would see the collaboration, and they would be part of that.” For the daycare, the internship invites extra “helping hands,” as one of its goals is to attract college students to work in early childhood education settings. “[The internship] really allows [students] to get a foot in the door, so to speak, and see what it’s like to work in a daycare setting, and then,
hopefully, entice them to continue working in that setting.” Squires said. Some other benefits interns bring to the daycare are enthusiasm and new ideas. “[Interns] come in eager and excited, and they offer a whole new element to our early childhood program,” Girard said. To apply, students submit an application form, letters of recommendation and complete an interview.
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OLGA MUKA/Cardinal Points
Construction workers help fix damaged water pipes on campus.
Fuerza and attendees raise a Black power fist after Black History Week event.
Water pipe breaks, disrupts water supply
Fuerza celebrates Black History Month
BY ALEKSANDRA SIDOROVA
Staff Writer
A pipe supplying several campus buildings with water broke near Wilson Hall Feb. 9. As a result, Clinton Dining Hall and DeFredenburgh, Hood, Moffitt and Wilson residence halls lost their water supply from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., when the pipe was fixed. For the duration of the
emergency, Housing and Community Living granted students in the residence halls which were affected “access to Mason and Macomb Halls to use their bathroom facilities,” as per a mass email from Nikki Deyo-Pugh, administrative assistant at Housing and Community Living. The email also contained apologies for the inconvenience: “We recognize that this will be a huge inconve-
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nience and we will do our utmost to make sure that you all stay informed. We of course would not be doing this, if this was not an emergency.” Until 2:30 p.m., it was uncertain when the issue would be resolved. “We don’t know how long the water will be shut off,” the aforementioned email read.
BY OLIVIA BOUSQUET News & Managing Editor
Outside of the Angell College Center Tuesday night, the wind whipped and the temperatures dropped. However inside the warmth of the ACC, a rhythmic beat from a speaker spilled out of the Alumni Conference Room. Inside the room, Fuerza, the Black and Latinx union, prepared for its 7 p.m. event called “Dating outside your race.” A panel of nine students, of different ethnic, racial and religious backgrounds, WATER l A2 answered prepared questions from Fuerza
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Event Coordinator Ivonne Diaz and Fuerza On Campus PR Albert Tejada. The panelists were Kenneth Baez, Lorenzo Johnson, Bianca Nieves, Arianna Santiago, Samuel Marmol, Grisbel Peña, Elizabeth Baez, Isabella Perez and Moustapha Diop. “I feel it definitely just adds to just making sure that everyone is open minded and seeing that it’s life,” Fuerza President Charlin Peguero said on the importance of these discussions. “You have to experience things sometimes, and it’s not always as black and white as people see.”
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