Mount Holyoke News AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1917 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2021
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LEAP showcases summer Students reflect on College no-guest projects in hybrid format policies since the start of the pandemic BY MARIAM KEITA ’24 MANAGING EDITOR OF WEB & NEWS EDITOR
Photo by Naomi Jiang ’25 Students attend a panel titled “Conversations as an Archive” as a part of the LEAP symposium.
BY TARA MONASTESSE ’25 STAFF WRITER
Mount Holyoke College’s 2021 Learning from Application (LEAP) Symposium took place on Friday, Oct. 22, featuring presentations from over 150 students recounting their summer internships. Emerging from a completely virtual format in 2020, this year’s program was presented in a hybrid format that included 28 in-person panels and 14 panels exclusive to Zoom. The presentations took place over four sessions and were open to all members of the Mount Holyoke community, with inperson panels hosted in classrooms throughout the Science Center. The Symposium is the final product of a course entitled “Reflecting Back: Connecting Internship and Research to Your Liberal Arts Education,” which runs for half a semester and grants two credits. While open to all students, completion of the course is required for all students completing a Nexus program and is a way for students who received funding through the Lynk program to fulfill the requirements of the grant. The internships spotlighted at LEAP spanned a wide variety of career fields, including in-person work at legal firms, historic museums, medical centers and beyond. Many students completed their internships virtually due to COVID-19, while others experienced a hybrid format that incorporated both online and in-person activities. Students made the decision together whether to present their panels over Zoom or in person, weighing the pros and cons of each presentation format and choosing the option they felt would best help them connect with their audience. Sandra Popadic ’22, who presented at the Zoom-exclusive “Researching our Living Environment” panel, believed that displaying her slideshow on Zoom was the optimal way to communicate her experience. Her summer internship, which involved research at the biochemistry company SwissAustral, was entirely virtual. “When we’re presenting on a computer solely, we’re actually able to have full control over our presentation,” Popadic said. “Even our
moderator was saying she loved the Zoom presentation format because she said it was so much more seamless than in person, and I’d agree.” Anna Chait ’23, who presented in-person as part of the “Exploring Pathways in Law and Advocacy” panel, completed a summer internship at a law firm conducting research for attorneys. Her panel decided on an in-person format that was simultaneously streaming to a Zoom meeting available to the public. “We all felt comfortable with COVID[-19] procedures that the school has implemented for the semester,” Chait said. “We also just saw a lot of value in having an inperson audience … Zoom is great, but it’s not the real thing.” Members of the “Media/Film/ Television & Literature through the Zoom Lens” panel also opted for an in-person presentation format. Keisy Hernandez-Letona ’22, one of the panelists, completed a virtual internship analyzing photographs submitted by volunteers that documented the impact of the pandemic on family life. While the pandemic complicated the internship process for her and her fellow panel members, Hernandez-Letona believes that the overall LEAP experience was still worth it. “It wasn’t what we anticipated when we went in, and we all came out surprised, but in the best way possible,” she said. The LEAP program allows students to connect their internship experiences back to their academics at Mount Holyoke. Hui Shen ’22, an art history major and East Asian studies minor, was able to conduct her internship entirely in person, working as a gallery curator at the Xu Liaoyuan Museum of Modern Art and Design in Chengdu, China. As presenter for the in-person “Museums and Research through Time and Space” panel, she described LEAP as an important part of analyzing her internship and its impact on her career path. “Sometimes you have new thoughts when you review the old things,” Shen said. Shen felt that her experience indicates great promise for future art curators in China’s developing art market. “I want to use my own way to prove that there’s still opportunities for art history major students,” she said.
Mount Holyoke allows vaccinated guests at events BY KATIE GOSS ’23 BUSINESS MANAGER & NEWS EDITOR
The College sent out an update on Oct. 20 about new COVID-19 policies. Effective on Oct. 25, Emeriti faculty and other retired staff members are allowed to enter and use the Williston Memorial Library and Kendall Sports and Dance Complex as long as they show proof of vaccination and get tested by the College regularly. Starting on Nov. 1, one non-College guest will be allowed at indoor student events for each student attending, until a 75 percent capacity is reached. Each guest must be with their host during the event and cannot enter other buildings aside from the location of the event. There will also be select events where guests are allowed without a student as their host, and will only be allowed to
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stay at the event location. For indoor sporting events, there is limited space for guests until a 75 percent capacity is reached at the venue. Whether guests will be permitted at an event is still up to the event organizers. These new policies continue to exclude residence halls. Events where guests are allowed will require either proof of vaccination from a Food and Drug Administration or World Health Organization authorized vaccine or a negative COVID-19 PCR test result within the previous three days or a negative rapid test result within the previous 24 hours. These cannot be self administered tests and must come from an authorized medical agency such as a pharmacy or testing center. The current mask policy at the College has also been extended until further notice.
A&E: the ‘Twilight’ Renaissance
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At Mount Holyoke College, students have returned to a full residential experience this semester. While many students have eagerly returned to in-person classes and exchanging stories over late-night, others are unhappy with the College’s decision to extend its no-guest policy through the end of the semester. Mount Holyoke’s policies surrounding off-campus travel and oncampus guests have changed several times since the start of the pandemic in the spring of 2020. The College defines a guest as any person who is not enrolled in a Mount Holyoke course and does not participate in the College-sponsored asymptomatic testing program. This most recent update was sent to the community via email on Oct. 6. Following the announcement, the College sent out a survey on “students’ interest and comfort with having guests in the residence halls” on Oct. 19. Last semester, in spring 2021, each residential student was asked to sign a student community compact as a prerequisite for arrival on campus. Under the spring 2021 community compact, no family members or other guests were allowed to enter “any residence halls at any time, including during move-in.” Additionally, students were limited in their interactions with other residential students and were not permitted to travel beyond 10 miles of the campus radius without permission. Overnight stays off-campus that were not approved by the Office of Residential Life were also a violation of the community compact. Furthermore, each residential student was assigned to a single room to prevent the spread of COVID-19. After a campus-wide 14-day quarantine period, students were then also permitted to have up to one “guest” who also lived in their residence hall in their room. According to Fatou Barry ’24, who resided on campus during the 2020-2021 school year, many of the COVID-19 restrictions had a negative effect not only on her social life, but on her mental health. “I was by myself for most of the semester, and there was nobody there. Things weren’t open so there
weren’t open spaces to see people and … the dining hall wasn’t open, [so] you had to go in the dining hall, take your food and come back,” Barry said. “I felt really, really lonely because I literally didn’t talk to real humans, other than the dining hall [staff], telling them what to put on my plate.” Only students who had been granted permission by the College, such as on-duty Residential Advisors, were permitted to enter residence halls that they did not live in during the 2020-2021 school year. Additionally, “only on-campus students and approved faculty and staff” were permitted to enter non-residential buildings on campus. Despite this allowance, almost all academic buildings were closed to residential students as nearly all courses were exclusively offered remotely. In the 2021 spring semester, the College defined a guest as any person who did not live in a student’s residential hall. A select few campus buildings, such as the Community Center, were open to all residential students, while other designated spaces, like the Language Resource Center, Dwight Hall and the Reading Room were open to residential students by appointment. The Dining Commons did not offer indoor seating. All self-serve stations were closed and all meals were carry-out only. In Barry’s words, even her interactions within the Blanchard Dining Commons were limited, as she often found it difficult to motivate herself to leave her room to get food. Looking back on that time, Barry now has strong feelings about the College’s COVID-19 related guest policies last school year. “I feel like it wasn’t reasonable because then, since there was nobody on campus, you could hardly make friends. If you didn’t know anybody prior to being on campus, you would suffer, and you wouldn’t be able to bring people that you already knew to hang out with you,” Barry said. Grace Lara ’24 arrived on campus as a student for the first time in the 2021 spring semester. Unlike Barry, Lara believes that last semester’s guest policy was reasonable considering the circumstances. “We didn’t have access to a
vaccine … and we still didn’t really know a lot of the things that maybe we know now about COVID[-19],” Lara said. “I think having stricter terms, and having those greater restrictions was definitely annoying, but I think it was a good thing.” Like Barry, another Mount Holyoke sophomore also struggled to adjust to COVID-19 restricted life on campus during the spring 2021 semester. This student admitted to having violated some aspects of the community compact last school year, including rules surrounding travel and guests. Once, the sophomore even took a weekend trip to Boston, an act which was not permissible last school year, but is now allowed under the fall 2021 community compact. “My mom knew how much I was struggling [on campus] so she decided to come [to Boston to] see me, and I would meet her and go with other family members. I was safe the whole time it was for a day. My mask was on, I was fine,” the student said. Lara expressed mixed feelings about the evolving guest policies. “I feel like having some kind of policy does maintain a certain level of safety. It’s better than just letting people do whatever they want. When there are health concerns for so many people, it is really scary to just know that there’s no restriction,” Lara said. “But I also think that having [the policy] be so strict, to be like no guests at all, is also tempting for some people to want to break that rule.” Lara said that, had they known the person who brought a family member into the residence hall, they considered reporting the incident to the Office of Residential Life. According to Lara, there seems to have been a cultural shift on campus in the number of community compact violations being reported. They credit this shift to the increased number of students residing on campus and the loosened restrictions since COVID-19 vaccines were introduced. “I think this semester, it’s a lot more chaotic and vague, because there are so many more people on campus,” Lara said. “That makes everything feel a little bit less stable, or CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
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Senate fills several E-Board vacancies BY HOPE SIMPSON ’24 STAFF WRITER
SGA senate convened this week with an announcement: from now on, students will be able to use safety net funds to cover outside medical related expenses, such as transportation and urgent care costs. In further health-related news, the senate’s COVID-19 & Content Commission group is planning to petition the administration to relax the guest policy. Their proposed plan would involve guests filling out a Google form where they would have to provide proof of vaccination, agree to be masked indoors and in other designated spaces and commit to adhere to all other aspects of the community compact. Commission members suggested that Mount Holyoke students who break this policy should then be required to meet with the Honor Code Council. Additionally, the Academic Outreach Commission noted that some students, specifically first-years, have had difficulties navigating the registration process. As second semester registration is around the corner, they discussed strategies that could help lessen these struggles. One suggestion was to have guides and video tutorials available to walk students through the registration site, course catalog and more. It remains uncertain whether these measures could be put in place in time for upcoming registration. Senate has been in session for two months now and has continued to add members throughout the fall semester. The SGA now has all its E-Board positions filled. These po-
Photo by Lynn Sleiman ’24 A senate committee convenes in the Great Room to discuss assigned issues during the meeting.
sitions were announced at the start of the senate meeting with Maille Romulus ’24 as the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion officer, Liv Pitcher ’23 as the archivist and Megan Horner ’23 as the chair of committees. During the open floor, students raised concerns about water-filtered sinks within residence halls. The Ham Hall senator explained their hall’s water filter hasn’t been replaced since the semester began. Though the building does have a water fountain, it’s located in the old dining hall, which students only have access to during M&Cs. Another student mentioned that Buckland Hall has no water fountain at all, nor does it have a filtered tap. However, the SGA E-Board vice president explained that all residence halls have at least one water-filtered tap
S&E: the history of ghost-hunting technology
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or a water fountain. The Buckland senator also raised complaints about recent cleanliness problems in the bathrooms, specifically within stalls. Senators were informed that it is best to go to their RF/RA with residence hall related concerns, as they can often handle such matters faster than the SGA can. However, if problems persist they should inform the E-Board, so they can follow up with the correct parties. Senators also shared some upcoming events. The Ham Hall senator reminded senate that the field hockey season is almost over, with the final game on Saturday, Nov. 1. This Sunday, in addition to being Halloween, is also the date of the flute and violin faculty concert. The performance will be held at 4:00 p.m. in Pratt Music Hall.
COMMUNITY: halloween costume for your sign