October 2, 2015

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Friday october 2, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 80

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PERCUSSION

ACADEMICS

U. to start offering edX courses

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In Opinion Guest contributor Luis Ramos encourages students to embrace their ethnic diversity, and senior columnist Sarah Sakha reminds students to remember that adversity can strike anyone, anywhere. PAGE 4

Today on Campus 12:00 p.m.: The FacultyStudent Commitee on Sexual Misconduct willl host open meetings on the findings of the recently released WeSpeak report. McCormick Hall, Room 101

The Archives

Oct. 2, 1951

The Princeton International Student Organization, a group designed to support and bring together foreign students on the university’s campus, holds its first formal meeting.

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News & Notes Deadly shooting at Oregon community college

A shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore. on Thursday left 10 people dead and seven people wounded, The New York Times reported. Local law enforcement officials identified the gunman as 26-year-old Chris Harper-Mercer. HarperMercer had three weapons, including at least one long gun, according to the Times. In a 1:30 p.m. conference held Thursday, Douglas County sheriff John Hanlin said the gunman and police officers exchanged gunfire, resulting in the death of gunman Harper-Mercer. The gunman’s motive is still unknown. Umpqua Community College has about 3,000 students and will be closed for the weekend. Federal law enforcement has been supporting local law enforcement, President Barack Obama said in a 6:22 p.m. press conference on Thursday. He said mass shootings in America have become somewhat routine and each time this happens he will bring it up. “This is a political choice that we make, to allow this to happen every few months in America,” Obama said.

SUNNY HE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The JACK String Quartet performed with SO Percussion in Richardson Auditorium on Thursday evening. STUDENT LIFE

USG report brings change to dining hall hours, food By Zoe Toledo staff writer

Late Meal and dining hall weekend brunch hours have been extended, and dining hall food options will now more closely ref lect student preferences in response to recommendations from an Undergraduate Student Government University Student

Life Committee report released last March. Sunday brunch now begins at 10 a.m. in every dining hall, an hour earlier than in previous years, and Saturday brunch will continue to open at 10 a.m. Late Meal lunch hours have been extended to last until 3:45 p.m. Late Meal lunch, which operates from Monday to Friday,

LECTURE

previously ran from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Late Meal dinner hours remain the same — 8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. In addition, food served in the dining halls during heritage months such as African American History Month, National Native American Heritage Month and National Hispanic Heritage See FOOD page 3

The University will partner with online open course provider edX beginning this fall to launch courses in response to the changing needs of students and faculty, Jeffrey Himpele GS ’96, Director of Teaching Initiatives and Programs at the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning, said. Himpele explained that edX allows the University to integrate online learning into campus courses in new ways to make online and classroom experiences more interactive. He said that edX has a way of grouping students in a class that enables the professor to give certain assignments to some students and other assignments to other students, noting that this feature allows students at the University and students outside the University who are pursuing the same course to be given different assignments. The University started having conversations with edX during the late spring and summer, Himpele said. “We have been continuously interested in exploring a diversity of online course environments,” Himpele said. “edX also offers a robust set of analytic tools that faculty can use to understand their students’ learning and make responsive plans with class-time and constructive adjustments to their courses.” Wilson School professor Jennifer Widner is the instructor of the first University course to be offered on edX. The course, “Making Government Work in Hard Places,” will start later this month, she said. Widner explained that the course is a reduced version of a graduate-level course focused on addressing challenges that impede efforts to build an effective government. She said that participants will study a diverse array of cases from reform policies of Malaysia to Liberia and analyze concepts including improving service delivery, creating citizen-monitoring systems, coalition See EDX page 3

U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

Panel discusses psychological factors in achievement gap By Do-Hyeong Myeong associate news editor

Being stereotyped destabilizes an individual’s self-esteem and affects performance, Columbia psychology professor Valerie Purdie-Vaughns said at a panel on Thursday. “[Negative bias] calls into question that I’m a good, important person who is able to control important outcomes,” PurdieVaughns said. She added that especially in situations in which individuals are being evaluated, such as during examinations or in academic settings, negative stereotypes could seriously limit their achievements. Purdie-Vaughns joined Stanford psychology professors Gregory Walton and Geoffrey Cohen in speaking on the role of psychology in understanding inequality and achievement gaps in educational settings and successful psychological intervention models. Discussion moderator Dean of the College Jill Dolan explained that the panel was organized to open up a scientific yet accessible sustainable dialogue on inequality and achievement gaps both at the University and in the United States. Expanding on PurdieVaughns’s point, Cohen said students who don’t feel they belong to certain academic settings are often less likely to seek support and help when encountered by challenges, which prevents them from accessing resources and leads to achievement gaps. “Psychology mediates the reproduction of inequity,” Walton said, emphasizing the role of psychology in understanding why achievement gaps exist and the importance of psychological

intervention strategies in closing such gaps. Achievement gaps arise from the key factors of negative stereotypes and senses of alienation, Purdie-Vaughns, Cohen and Walton all said. Both Cohen and Walton noted that psychological interventions can foster a sense of belonging among students from less-privileged backgrounds, which increases their performance drastically and helps them better adapt to colleges. Walton explained that hearing stories of upperclassmen from similar backgrounds can help underprivileged students better adapt to college life by enabling them to anticipate challenges and letting them realize that they are not alone — that they, too, belong to the campus just as the upperclassman storyteller does. Another strategy, Walton noted, is to clarify the meaning of what could be a threatening message to many students: academic probations. Simply stating that the probation is there to better guide them and help them get back on track, rather than to stigmatize or punish them, helps many students regain their confidence and re-boost their academic achievements, Walton explained. “From one perspective, these results are hard to believe. They are like magic — but from another perspective, life can work like this,” Cohen said, praising intervention tools for bringing about drastic changes in students’ lives. Children who are in a more advantageous setting have opportunities for more positive circumstances, but psychological interventions help narrow See LECTURE page 2

COURTESY OF ARCHDAILY.COM

The cookies that used to be served in Murray-Dodge Hall can now be found in the Fields Center.

Murray-Dodge Café relocated to Fields Center due to renovations By Zaynab Zaman staff writer

Murray-Dodge Café will be housed in the Carl A. Fields Center on Prospect Avenue during the 2015-16 academic year, Office of Religious Life Operations and Events Coordinator Joanne Sismondo said. The entire Murray-Dodge building, which dates to 1900, is undergoing significant renovations in order to satisfy fire code regulations and become handicapped accessible, Sismondo said, noting that there will be handicap-accessible bathrooms in the basement and on the second floor, and an elevator that will go to all levels of Murray-Dodge Hall.

“Smoke alarms will be going in, and sprinklers, and all that 21st century kind of stuff,” Dean of Religious Life Alison Boden said. The Office of Religious Life, also housed in Murray-Dodge Hall, has temporarily relocated to Green Hall. Sismondo noted that the renovations will be complete in June 2016, at which point both the MurrayDodge Café and the Office of Religious Life will move back to Murray-Dodge Hall. Though many aspects of the café remain the same, the café will only be available from 9 p.m. to midnight daily instead of being open from 3:30 to 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. daily, student baker Mohamed

El-Dirany ’18 said. Lucinda Pastora ’18, also a baker at Murray-Dodge Café, noted that the storage facilities are slightly different in the Fields Center as opposed to the original café. In addition, she said, the oven is smaller and the bakers don’t have the same large trays they previously utilized. Murray-Dodge Café Supervisor Alex Cuadrado ’16 explained that the new kitchen setup has been hardest to adapt to, primarily because now the bakers only have one oven rather than two. However, the oven is newer and much faster, Cuadrado noted, so the bakers are adjusting well. See COOKIES page 2


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