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Monday march 21, 2016 vol. cxl no. 30
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } STUDENT LIFE
U. moves to revise course evaluations By Jessica Li News Editor
The Council on Teaching and Learning is currently working to redesign its course evaluation system, according to Dean of the College Jill Dolan. The Council was first charged with the task in late 2015 and has designated it as a committee priority for the 2015-2016 academic year, according to its website. Members of the Council solicited student input at a closeddoor luncheon open to preregistered students in midMarch. According to Dolan, the course evaluation system is currently being examined as all systems need periodic review. She added that the Council has been charged with looking into current practices and determining whether the system should be revised, since the course evaluation system is vital to both teaching and learning. Dolan said that research literature in the field of course evaluations shows that responses collected are
often biased due to gender and race for various reasons. Seeing this potential drawback, the committee is reviewing the research to see how the University’s questions might be adjusted accordingly, Dolan added. In a 2014 paper, two faculty members at the University of California, Berkeley, argued that teaching effectiveness, as measured by subsequent performance and career success, is negatively associated with student evaluations of teaching scores. The University wants to ensure that the course evaluations are as useful as possible to faculty, students and administrators, Dolan said. Per current University policy, course evaluations are reviewed by department chairs and representatives. The Dean of the Faculty and other administrators also review course evaluations when faculty are considered for promotion and merit increases, according to Dolan. “We also want students to understand that course evaluations aren’t just See COURSE page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
COURTESY OF NEW PITTSBURGH COURIER
Rebecca Haywood ‘90, was nominated to the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit on Saturday.
Rebecca Haywood ’90 nominated to Third Circuit By Marcia Brown staff writer
U.S. President Barack Obama nominated Assistant U.S. Attorney Rebecca Ross Haywood ’90 for a vacancy on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit on Saturday. The White House Press Office deferred comment to a statement. According to the statement, Haywood is currently serving as an Assistant United States Attorney in the Western District of Pennsylvania, where she has served as Chief of the Appellate Division since 2010. “[Haywood] has shown unwavering integrity and
an outstanding commitment to public service,” said Obama in the statement. Haywood graduated cum laude from the University with a degree in economics in 1990 and magna cum laude from the University of Michigan Law School in 1994, according to Pittsburgh’s Action News. According to U.S. Attorney’s Office spokesperson Margaret Philbin, Haywood is not allowed to give comments on this subject. During her time in the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Haywood has been actively involved in workplace management and training, the statement read. There, she served as the coordinator
for prevention of workplace harassment from 2004 to 2010. Haywood’s work has also included community involvement and speaking to “students and legal organizations about the law and her career,” according to the statement. The statement also noted that Haywood previously clerked for Judge Alan N. Bloch of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, served as Assistant United States Attorney of the Western District of Pennsylvania and worked for the law firm Jones, Dan, Reavis and Pogue. The law See COURT page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
U. will not discipline students for controversial opinions, Eisgruber says News Editor
COURTESY OF GOOGLE.COM
Raja Krishnamoorthi ‘95, engineer and aspiring politician.
Krishnamoorthi ’95 aims to join 115th Congress By Abhiram Karuppur staff writer
Raja Krishnamoorthi ’95, who won the Democratic Party primary on Mar. 15, believes he has a very good chance to serve in the the U.S. House of Representatives in Illinois’ 8th Congressional District. The 8th District includes the Chicago suburbs of Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg and Palatine. Krishnamoorthi won the Democratic primary on March 15, defeating his two opponents, Michael Noland and Deborah Bullwinkel. According to Krishnamoorthi, he is now focused on winning the general election in November.
“So far, the dynamic has been favorable, but we can’t take anything for granted,” Krishnamoorthi said. “We have to make sure we get our message out.” Krishnamoorthi is currently president of Sivananthan Labs, where he works on leading research teams developing semiconductor technologies, improved military technologies, solar cells and biosensors to detect weapons of mass destruction. He was formerly the Illinois Deputy Treasurer and served as the policy director for Barack Obama’s successful U.S. Senate campaign in 2004. See CONGRESS page 2
In Opinion Postdoctoral researcher Aaron Bornstein argues that graduate unions will help academic research, in response to the University’s amicus brief. PAGE 6
With regard to his recent comment that the University will not penalize students for possibly holding an event commemorating Osama bin Laden, University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 explained that the University is committed to the principles of free speech and will not discipline any members of the University for their political opinions. “We allow students, faculty and others the freedom to express their political opinions vigorously, even if those opinions are controversial or offensive to some,” he said. In an interview with The Indian Express last week, Eisgruber noted that in accordance with principles of free speech, the University will not discipline students even for potentially holding an event to commemorate Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden claimed responsibility for carrying out the terrorist attack of Sept. 11, 2001 that took the lives of 2,977 people in New York City, Washington, D.C. and outside of Shanksville, Pa. “It would be very disrup-
Today on Campus
tive. People would be very angry about the statement. But we would not discipline somebody for making statements of that nature,” he said to The Indian Express . In an interview with the ‘Prince’, Eisgruber noted the conversation began when he met with several reporters to talk about his trip and the University’s activity in India last week. During the forty-minute interview, the Indian Express reporter referenced recent assertions by an Indian minister that no American university would allow students to conduct a meeting to commemorate Osama bin Laden. The reporter subsequently asked whether the University would allow such a meeting and whether it would discipline a student for exercising the right to free speech, according to Eisgruber. Eisgruber said that he answered the reporter’s questions on the basis of the University’s vigorous commitment to free speech and academic freedom. “Free speech and academic freedom are essential to a great university and a scholarly community. Their benefits far outweigh any costs,”
4 p.m.: The Andlinger Center will present a seminar titled “Burning for Fusion Energy: In Pursuit of Self-heated Plasmas and Beyond.” Maeder Hall, Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment.
he added. Eisgruber further explained that the commitment to free speech he described during his interview with the Indian Express was articled in a statement that the faculty adopted last year, which he fully supports. The statement allows students, faculty and others the freedom to express their political opinions vigorously, even if those opinions are controversial or offensive to some, according to Eisgruber. “We believe that the appropriate remedy for bad speech is better speech, not discipline: poor arguments or false statements should be met with better arguments. That’s the only way to get at the truth,” he said. The question arose as a response to recent events that transpired in Jawaharlal Nehru University. On Feb. 9, 21 JNU students allegedly organized an event to commemorate the third anniversary of the hanging of Afzal Guru, a man convicted for orchestrating a 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament. Following the event, multiple students are currently See FREEDOM page 4
WEATHER
By Jessica Li
HIGH
51˚
LOW
29˚
Partly cloudy. chance of rain:
20 percent