Volume 91 • Issue 7
October 28, 2022
FSUgatepost.com
Great Scott! Doc and Marty visit FSU
Emily Rosenberg / THE GATEPOST
(Left) Juniors Matt Montiero and Mike Trueswell dressed up as Doc Brown and Marty McFly from “Back to the Future” for Gaming Club’s Halloween Extravaganza in the IAFSA Alumni House Oct. 25.
Framingham State’s 10-year accreditation review scheduled for 2024 By Sophia Harris News Editor
Framingham State is in the data and artifact collection stage of the New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE) accreditation review due Spring 2024. According to the NECHE accreditation website, “Neche is a voluntary, non-governmental membership association that serves as an institutional accreditor and promotes educational excellence and quality assurance to its member institutions.” ECHE accreditation determines institutional quality, according to the NECHE website. NECHE makes a determination
about the effectiveness of an institution as a whole using nine standards for accreditation, according to the NECHE accreditation handbook. The standards are “aspirational expectations” that must be at least “minimally” met, according to the NECHE commission handbook. These standards include missions and purposes; planning and evaluation; organization and governance; academic programs; students; teaching, learning, and scholarship; institutional resources; educational effectiveness; and integrity, transparency, and public disclosure, according to the NECHE website. These standards outline that a university has a “clearly defined purpose that is appropriate to a higher
- learning institution, has assembled and organized those resources to achieve its purpose, is achieving its purpose, and has the ability to achieve its purpose,” according to the NECHE accreditation handbook. The accreditation initiative for Framingham State is led by Mark Nicholas, assistant vice president for assessment, accreditation, and strategic planning, and co-chaired by English Professor Alexander Hartwiger. Nicholas said, “We are looking at the mission of the institution. ‘What is our mission?’ And then we’re looking at that mission through this quality framework to answer the question, ‘Are we fulfilling our mission as
See REACCREDITATION page 5
Community garden tidied by Green Initiative cleanup By Ryan O’Connell Arts & Features Editor While taking a walk down State Street, most students are not familiar with the narrow concrete path that branches off past the McCarthy Center. Nestled between picket fences and the array of windows lining the McCarthy Center Forum lies a box of tools, and a plot of earth. Fenced off, the patch harbors wildflowers, fruits - and weeds. Here is Framingham State’s community garden, a public locale used mostly by biology students and the Green Initiative, although it’s open to everyone. Green Initiative held a community
garden cleanup event Oct. 20, calling to students interested in helping de-weed and clean the small fenced area against the southern wall of the McCarthy center. Leticia Rita Santos, a sophomore American Sign Language major and secretary of Green Initiative, said she knew the club had cared for it in the past, though they don’t control it. “Someone in our club last year took care of it, and though it is not directly affiliated with our group - because it’s a community garden for any student that wants to participate - we saw that it is incredibly overgrown,” she said. Santos added Green Initiative took the opportunity of tidying the garden
News
Emma Lyons / THE GATEPOST SGA pg. 3 BOARD OF TRUSTEES pg. 4
Opinions VOTE ‘YES’ ON QUESTION 1 pg. 7
Sports WOMEN’S SOCCER pg. 9 MEN’S SOCCER pg. 9
to alert other students to its existence, and as a form of inviting them to take from, provide for, or otherwise use the community garden. “I’ve always gardened growing up, and so it just brings me back to that point, and it makes me just a little bit happier. It’s also nice to see a place that’s been so overgrown be treated how it should be,” she said. Santos said the event was important for informing students the space was open to them, as well as preparing it for Maddison Behringer / THE GATEPOST the coming spring. CELEBRITY COSTUME PARTY pg. 10 Ben Hurney, a sophomore studio art major and member of Green Initiative, SPOOKY SUGGESTIONS pg. 12-13
Arts & Features
See GARDEN CLEANUP page 11
INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 10