C A L I F O R N I A
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U N I V E R S I T Y ,
F U L L E R T O N Wrestler pins down spot in NCAA championships
INSIDE sports: The solution to the Dodgers’ 5 nproblem is to trade Gary Sheffield
—see Sports page 5
news: Suspect arraigned on four 6 ncounts of murder in alleged drunk driving accident at UC Santa Barbara
W e d n e sd ay
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Freshman proficiency exam scores improve nEDUCATION: While remedial English exam percentages hold steady, math results are up three percent By Peggy Gomez
Daily Titan Staff Writer Administrative concern over the freshmen failure rate is dwindling as freshmen defy lowered expectations.
Javier Ramirez, an intensive learning experience counselor for student academic services, said that less than 100 freshmen were disqualified from entering CSUF as sophomores for the 2000 academic year because of failure to complete or pass remedial math or English level courses. Students that were disqualified from re-entering a CSU in their second year were advised to seek education at community colleges prior to re-entrance. “Historically, students have been putting off these courses until they reached advanced courses where these basic skills were necessary, and they struggle in the advanced courses,” said Ken Swisher, CSU
assistant vice chancellor of access and retention. The primary reason freshmen fail entry-level math placement exams is that Cal State Universities demand much higher test scores than the national average for entry level placement. “The national average is about a 400 where the Cal States require a score in the 550’s on the math portion of the SAT’s,” Swisher said. Swisher added that one explanation for the poor scores on entry-level placement tests is linked to students not taking a math course in their senior year of high school. In most cases that would leave
F e b r u a r y 28, 2001
60
Percentage of freshman in fall 2000 proficient in mathematics and English. 59.20%
59 58 57 56 55 54
54.80%
54.33%
53 52 51 50
FRESHMAN/ 4
CSU
MATH
CSUF
CSU
50.94% CSUF
ENGLISH
AS pushes effort to recycle
Too much good stuff in San Francisco!
nENVIRONMENT: The Ad Hoc Recycling Committee’s program to clean up campus began Tuesday By Sara Stanton Daily Titan Staff Writer
Each year, thousands of pieces of trash are thrown away in campus trash recep-
Daily Titan/Daily Titan
Foreign exchange students Javier Guevara of Chile and Clarissa Dri of Brazil savor their freshly prepared food at Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco.
Titan Hefty grant to aid nursing program extras expansion by offering online classes online nTECHNOLOGY: The new approach will mainly
out affect nurses already in the industry who find it the Daily difficult to fit school into their schedules Titan online this year at http:// The new approach will mainBy Kelly Mead ly effect registered nurses who are dailytitan.fullerton.edu. Daily Titan Staff Writer
n Check
Distance learning is making it easier for working nurses to achieve a bachelor of science degree. Cal State Fullerton’s Professional Nursing Education Outreach Program n Read about the tenth received $340,554 to further distance anniversary of the learning over the next year. The grant will help further a partRodney King beating in Friday’s issue of the nership that CSUF has developed with the Kaiser Permanente Foundation, a Daily Titan non-profit affiliate of Kaiser hospitals, said Susan Katsaros of Public Affairs. Beginning this fall, CSUF classes will be offered both on the Web and on television at Kaiser hospitals. Four Southern California Kaiser n Need to announce an Permanente facilities will participate in the program: Los Angeles, Bellflower, event? Visit our Web Anaheim Hills and San Diego. site to download our Registered nurses will sign up for NEW events calendar the class through CSUF. Nurses who form. Get your club’s attend classes at Kaiser Permanente facilities do not have to be employed events noticed!! by the hospital.
u p co m i n g
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already working in the industry. “It’s kind of understood in every field that you have to have a BA to advance,” said Shauna Leach, an administrative assistant for the Distance Nursing Program at CSUF. The partnership was started because many hospitals are now requiring nurses to have a bachelor’s degree in nursing to further their career. Registered nurses who have already developed families as well as careers find it difficult to work school into their schedules, said Diane Wren, the project manager for the Distance Learning Program at Kaiser Permanente. ”We wanted to consider the working adult … because most BSN programs are geared to the full-time student, and are therefore not accessible to working adults,” Wren said Wren added that Kaiser chose CSUF because the tuition is inexpensive and the technology for the
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OVerview of Online Nursing Courses At CSUF Courses focus on: • The theoretical basis of nursing • Developmental life cycle concepts from prenatal period through death • Health promotion and health assessment • Critical analysis and design of nursing interventions to maintain or restore health •Health teaching and counseling • Group, family and community systems and their dynamics • Professional, leadership and management issues • Critical inquiry and research
http://dailytitan.fullerton.edu
tacles. Some items don’t even make it into the receptacles, many of which can be recycled. In a conscious effort to clean up Cal State Fullerton, and with concern for the environment, Associated Students, the university and the Titan Student Union are funding a plan to have recycling bins on campus. Elliot Sacks, director of statewide affairs for AS, has been working on this project for the past year. He has formed an “Ad Hoc Recycling Committee,” which includes campus officials, staff and students. An Ad Hoc committee is a nonpermanent committee that is established to serve a certain purpose. Once its purpose has been accomplished, the committee is dissolved. The recycling committee’s mission revolves around cleaning up university grounds around the TSU and surrounding environment, Sacks said. At the AS meeting Tuesday, Sacks said that the Ad Hoc Recycling Committee is “responsible for the education of campus and community in the importance of recycling.” The recycling bins will have multiple openings, allowing recyclables such as papers, plastics and aluminums to be thrown away in one place. Eleven bins have been purchased and will be placed around the TSU. Though the bins will not be on campus until next month, recycling efforts are currently underway with the disposal of cardboard waste from the food court, collected at the south end of the TSU. The first cardboard pick up for recycling was picked up Tuesday, Sacks said. Sacks said that this committee
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