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mcgilltribune.com mcgilltribune.corr
H jMI E E
M c G I L L Vol. 22 Issue 5
16
T R I B U N E
Published by the Students' Society of McGill University since 1981
Tuesday, October 1, 2002
Wind the body's clock Natalie Fletcher
NATHAN LEBIODA
Sixty-five years after graduating, these Engineering alumni still know how to celebrate McGill-style with drinks in hand.
State of the Arts: joining teaching and research James Grohsgal Laura Saba Students, professors and administrators in the Faculty of Arts are exploring ways to improve education for undergraduate stu dents who must deal with capped classes, crowded conferences, limit ed course selection and a high stu dent-faculty ratio. The most promi nent proposal is to increase oppor tunities for undergraduates to par ticipate in research with their pro fessors. “There aren’t enough research opportunities for undergraduate students,” said Fred Sagel, Students’ Society of McGill University Vice President of University Affairs. Sagel sits on the Senate Subcommittee for Teaching and Learning, which is meeting this
month. Sagel and the Subcommittee are considering the implications of the 1998 study by the Boyer Commission on Educating Undergraduates in the Research University, entitled “Reinventing Undergraduate Education: A Blueprint for America’s Research Universities.” Known as the Boyer Report, it outlines how large research-intensive universities can mobilize their resources to improve undergraduate learning. Carman Miller, Dean of the Faculty of Arts, has seen how pro fessors’ courses and research inter ests can coincide. Fie cited a semi nar taught by James McGill Professor of History Brian Young, in which students look at archival family papers in the McCord Museum and present their findings at the end of the course.
“This is a chance to do handson writing of history, not just ran sacking a number of books. This is a chance for a person to practice being a historian,” said Miller. “I always say to Professor Young that the only difficulty is that at the end, everyone wants to be a historian.” Arts also offers seminars for first-year students, but Miller said that their popularity and a shortage of professors have led to fewer courses and an increase in class sizes. The Faculty received some good news this fall: 50 new tenure or tenure-track positions are being created and the Faculty is receiving some of the $4.3 million in research funds granted by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Both more research money and new professors will benefit stu
dents, according to Miller. “People often falsely juxtapose research and teaching as if they were contradictory,” said Miller. “There are ways in which we can and should construct courses so that students in undergraduate forma tion in Arts have an opportunity to do hands-on research.” Dean of Students Bruce Shore believes these positive steps correct an imbalance in government atten tion and will give students greater access to their professors. “These new appointments also tell Arts students that what they are studying is important to McGill,” said Shore. “In recent years most of the federal and other special pro grams have helped the natural and medical sciences. As Dean of Students I can only add that all stu dents are important... More profes-
Late-night crammer? Early-bird exerciser? University students lead busy, eclectic lives, most of the straining, unhealthful variety. Shifting sleep patterns, coupled with mental exertion and frantic athletics, make for a jerky schedule, one that often neglects important aspects of time. Unlike contemporary cultures, many ancient civilizations had a dualistic view of time: the planetary conception and the bodily concep tion. The famous ecclesiastical say ing, better known as the pop hit by the Byrds, reflects this presumed concept: “To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.” Yet the world today generally operates according to solar move ment, leaving little appreciation for the particular seasons individual bodies experience and prefer. “Underneath this cheerful façade of eternal daylight and per petual summertime, there lurks a primitive sense of real time,” explains Valerie Vaughan, an astron omy professor. “Inside each of us is a child of nature who can tell it’s actu ally dark, who knows it’s really win ter.” See CHR0N0BI0L0GY, page 8
Arts N ew s
Le O PIN IO N /E DITO RIA l
Gay Young A m erica FEATURES
Tryin g to break your A r t s & E n t e r t a in m e n t
R edbird baseball S ports
“No man is happy; he is at best fortunate. ”
See ARTS, page 5
^c ry innc~z
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