Vanguard February 22, 2011

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WEEKEND WINS GIVE VIKS BID TO TOURNAMENT Basketball beat Weber State and NAU

SPORTS: PAGE 12

DOWN WITH THE CLOWN Petitions don’t replace being a parent

OPINION: PAGE 4

INDEX NEWS OPINION ARTS SPORTS

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FREE The Vanguard is published twice weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays.

ESTABLISHED 1946

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22ND, 2011

VOL. 65 NO. 40

PSUVANGUARD.COM

Kitzhaber plans to radically restructure Oregon education Oregon Education Investment Board would turn the state’s schools into a “seamless” system

In light of the education reform bills currently on the Senate floor, Portland State President Wim Wiewel led a discussion last Thursday about the growth of academic capitalism among American universities and the proposed restructuring of university funding in Oregon. WIEWEL ON PAGE 7

Looking to study abroad? Winter Education Abroad Fair to highlight international capstone options RYAN DEMING VANGUARD STAFF DREW MARTIG/VANGUARD STAFF

Streamlining education: Pat Burke explains how Governor Kitzhaber's plan could reduce the redudancy in Oregon's educational bureaucracy.

funding stream for the state’s “cradle to career” education pipeline. “We are very happy to see [Kitzhaber’s] investment in early childhood because that will pay dividends down the road,” Smith said. “The more you invest early in kids, the less the system will need to supply resources for remediation, social services, etc.” Pat Burk, an associate professor of education leadership and policy at PSU, said that the

governor’sproposed overhaul could reduce the redundancy in the Oregon’s educational bureaucracy. Oregon’s K–12 schools, community colleges and public universities all receive state revenue. But right now, the distribution of this revenue requires three different bureaucracies to account for the money: the Oregon Department of Education, the Department of Community Colleges EDUCATION ON PAGE 3

PSU Salutes award ceremony today Event honors distinguished alumni and faculty KATRINA PETROVICH VANGUARD STAFF

Portland State will hand out its PSU Salutes awards to recognize its alumni and faculty members for their career accomplishments. The ceremony will be held at the Governor Hotel in Portland. According to Mary Coniglio, associate director of Alumni Relations, the Salute awards are a way to recognize PSU’s outstanding alumni and faculty for their career achievements, volunteer service and professional distinctions. Coniglio said that PSU’s alumni population has over 120,000 graduates, making the winners of the Salute awards a select few. The PSU Salutes program is now in its 22nd year of existence. About two years ago, the award program underwent some major changes.

Administration, students and faculty discuss the future of PSU MIRANDA SCHMIDT VANGUARD STAFF

ERICK BENGEL VANGUARD STAFF

Governor John Kitzhaber, making good on his gubernatorial proposal to radically reform Oregon’s schools, held a press conference at Portland State on Feb. 11 at which he called for the creation of an Oregon Education Investment Board, a high-level policy group over which Kitzhaber would preside that would coordinate the state’s education system from preschool through post-secondary education. That same day, the Office of the Governor released an executive order that calls for a 12-member interim body called the Oregon Education InvestmentTeam, tasked with designing a framework for the forthcoming Investment Board by May 31. Nancy Golden, education adviser to the governor, said that Khitzaber's staff has drafted the bills necessary to make the executive order a legislative reality. According to Susan Smith, spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Education, the permanent Investment Board would change Oregon’s education system so that its four main levels—pre-school, K–12, community colleges and higher education—are treated as an integrated whole rather than as a cluster of independent interests competing for state funding. By changing this institutional perspective, Kitzhaber aims to break down the budgeting silos for each level and thereby create a seamless

Visiting scholar sheds light on academic capitalism among public universities

It now more narrowly focuses on alumni and some award categories have been removed, according to Coniglio. The PSU Alumni Association awards only five winners each year. The program recognizes alums in different professional fields at different stages in their careers. The awards include: the outstanding international alumni award, the distinguished alumni award, the distinguished alumni service award, the outstanding young alumni award and the distinguished faculty achievement award. The winners are chosen through a nomination process in which anyone is free to make a nomination. A volunteer selection committee then chooses the winners out of those nominated. The award recipients are meant to represent the entire university, with winners in a variety of disciplines. This year’s outstanding international alumni award will be given to André Craan for his work as a scientific evaluator in the field of biotechnology for Health Canada. He also

works as a professor of toxicology and biology of pollutants at the University of Quebec at Montreal. The distinguished alumni award will be presented to Angela Wykoff, a retired executive from Bonneville Power Administration. She has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in mathematics, as well as a bachelor’s in civil engineering from PSU. Wykoff was also a member of the search committees that hired PSU President Wim Wiewel and Maseeh College of Engineering and Computer Science Dean Renjeng Su, and the president of the Alumni Association from 2006–07. The distinguished alumni service award goes to Amber Fowler. Fowler is the founder and CEO of Dress for Success Inland Northwest, an organization that provides support and career clothing for women. Fowler also holds many corporate positions involving marketing and PSU SALUTES ON PAGE 3

To raise awareness about Portland State’s international capstones and short-term facultyled programs, the Education Abroad Office is hosting its winter Education Abroad Fair this Thursday. The purpose of this year’s fair is to introduce any interested students to international capstones and faculty-led trips, as well as how to incorporate study abroad experience into one’s academic goals. STUDY ABROAD ON PAGE 7

New Avenues for Youth to open Ben & Jerry’s at PSU Organization helps homeless youths gain work experience and training MIRANDA SCHMIDT VANGUARD STAFF

New Avenues for Youth, a Portland organization dedicated to helping homeless youths in the metro area, will be opening a Ben & Jerry’s partner shop at Portland State this spring. The new shop will be modeled after its current shop near Pioneer Square, which opened in 2004. The Ben & Jerry’s shop is a part of the Promoting New Avenues to Employment (PAVE) program. The PAVE program helps homeless Portland youths to gain job skills and training. Since its downtown shop opened, New Avenues has provided paid training to over 150 youths and given half a million dollars in wages, according to Angela Pratt, the organization’s communications director. NEW AVENUES ON PAGE 7


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