Feb 22, 2011 | The Miami Student

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The Miami Student VOLUME 138 NO. 41

Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIO

In 2002, The Miami Student reported Miami alumna State Rep. Linda Reidelback introduced a bill that would require all schools to teach the intelligent design theory of evolution. The theory was disregarded by some as “too religious.”

Shifting schedules

ASG proposes cutting fall break, adding reading days By Adam Giffi and Matt Levy For The Miami Student

Those banking on some extra days off during future breaks should make sure they write any plans in pencil. Although Associated Student Government (ASG) is looking into changing fall break and adding dedicated reading days before finals starting in fall 2011, it will be a complicated road to get any changes made. Narmar Doyle, ASG secretary for academic affairs, said the body has proposed a wide variety of options for Miami University to consider. Doyle said one option they have suggested is dropping fall break and increasing the length of Thanksgiving break. “We could eliminate fall break and have the whole week off for Thanksgiving,” Doyle said. According to Doyle, a consistent problem and a reason ASG has been proposing schedule changes is students skipping classes the week of Thanksgiving break, creating a difficult

situation for professors and class schedules. “You may have 30 or 40 percent of the class missing, and teachers don’t want to move forward with the material or they want to repeat it when everyone returns,” Doyle said. “I think it’s a better option to at least consider eliminating fall break for a full or enlightened Thanksgiving break.” Another change suggested by ASG is adding reading days between when classes end and final exams begin. “It could be more efficient if we shift the calendar so classes end on that Wednesday or Thursday and then the reading days come on Thursday and Friday,” Doyle said. “There is so much pressure with finals, so it’d give them more time to prepare.” According to Doyle, many schools Miami compares itself to already have dedicated reading days in their academic calendars.

While Doyle said changes to the academic calendar could go into effect during the fall 2011 semester at the earliest, Steven Wright, chair of the senate executive committee, said chances look bleak for immediate calendar adjustments. As the issue currently stands, Wright said the academic policy committee has already given its recommendation to the senate on the ASG proposal. “They’ve recommended not pursuing the extension of fall break at the moment,” Wright said. “They’re not ruling it out altogether. There are a lot of calendar issues, and we need to consider all of them together rather than any of them one at a time.” There are so many calendar issues, the academic policy committee has recommended to the senate executive committee that they form an ad hoc calendar

wSee CALENDAR, page 3

SAMANTHA LUDINGTON The Miami Student

Faculty offices in Bachelor Hall have fallen victim to recent thefts.

Police investigate thefts in Bachelor Hall offices By Emily Glaser For The Miami Student

SAMANTHA LUDINGTON The Miami Student

Bottled water for sale at the Haines Food Court is a popular beverage choice for Miami University students.

Schools bring new meaning to dry campus By Jenn Smola For The Miami Student

Various universities across the country have begun to ban and restrict the sale of bottled water on their campuses, according to a report in The Chronicle of Higher Education. While Miami University has not yet implemented any water bottle restrictions, David Prytherch, sustainability coordinator, said water bottle restrictions are being considered. “We’re in the exploratory stages,” Prytherch said. “Housing and dining has considered this sort of thing, but there’s no formal process right now.” Washington University in St. Louis banned the sale of water

bottles on campus in 2008, and Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvania has removed bottled water from its meal plan. American University has yet to instate a ban but has begun installing various filtered water stations around campus in order to cut back on bottled water sales. Establishing more eco-friendly ways to hydrate doesn’t come without challenges. Many universities are locked into contracts with beverage companies, making it difficult to impose bottled water bans. Other options, such as installing filtered water stations, have proven to be expensive for some universities. Muhlenberg College has spent

$40,000 on bottle-filling stations and filtration units around its campus, according to the report in The Chronicle. Prytherch said offering students at Miami more access to filtered water would be ideal, but cites the cost of filtration units, filters and maintenance as obstacles. Prytherch also said he believes there could be a business model for implementing such changes at Miami that can be both economically and environmentally sustainable. According to Prytherch, members of Miami’s environmental organization, Green Oxford, recently teamed up with business

wSee WATER, page 3

Two Miami University faculty members reported their locked offices in Bachelor Hall were broken into in the first two weeks of February, according to Miami University Police Department (MUPD) crime alerts. The two professors reported unknown suspects stole textbooks and other items. Lecturer Paula Byrkett said she was teaching a class when her office was broken into Feb. 3. Her purse and two textbooks were stolen. “About a half hour after I got back into my office, I was getting ready to leave, so I started looking for my purse,” Byrkett said. “I thought I had just misplaced it. I called my cell phone immediately because I knew it was turned on and fully charged, and it went straight to voicemail. Someone had turned it off.” According to MUPD Lt. Benjamin Spilman, this isn’t the first time offices in Bachelor have been targeted. A similar incident was also reported Nov. 4. According to an MUPD employee, the November case is no longer being investigated unless a suspect comes forward. The crime alert from Feb. 16 said “Miami University Police are investigating this and several similar, previously reported incidents in Bachelor Hall.” Byrkett said she believes someone broke into her office and stole textbooks twice in the past, but she did not report the previous two incidents to police. “The more (my co-workers) talk about this, the more incidents we become aware of,” Byrkett said. “We have so many textbooks in our

GRE undergoes historic change in content

BY THE NUMBERS

By Hannah M. Biggs

The new top GRE score:

For The Miami Student

Miami University students planning to attend graduate school will likely be taking the revised Graduation Record Examination (GRE). The Educational Testing Service (ETS) will launch the new revised general test in August 2011. All aspects of the current exam have been overhauled in the most significant change in the test’s 60-year history. According to the GRE

website, the changes to the test will better show knowledge of skills necessary for graduate school programs. The revised test will feature changes in test content, design and scoring. The exam will no longer include antonyms and analogies, which will be replaced by more reading comprehension and sentences, according to Andrew Mitchell, director of graduate programs for Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions. “(The new test shows a) shift away from memorizing and

more toward critical thinking,” Mitchell said. With the addition of a calculator, the test will feature more data interpretation in the quantitative portion of the exam, Mitchell said. One of the major changes in the design of the test is the ability to change answers and skip questions. When Miami senior Kelsey Bishop took the current version of the test, she didn’t like that she could not go back to answer questions she had skipped, so she

170

had to guess to finish within the time allowed. “The big change is the scoring scale,” said Bruce Cochrane, dean of the graduate school at Miami. “People will have to think differently about the numbers.” The scoring system will go from being a 200 to 800 point scale in 10-point increments to

office, we don’t realize sometimes that they are missing.” According to Spilman, textbooks are stolen because they are easy to sell online for top dollar. Spilman said during the day Bachelor is essentially a public building. “Door locks are the primary line of security,” Spilman said. “There is no access control that would prevent someone who is not affiliated with the university from entering the building.” Jennifer Eden, a visiting assistant professor, reported a computer adaptor cord and several textbooks were missing from her office sometime between 5:30 p.m Feb. 14 and 5:30 p.m. Feb. 15. “I noticed right away because the books on my bookshelf were kind of tousled, not the way I normally leave them,” Eden said. “The stack I normally have was much smaller.” Sophomore Becca Taustine has a lot of classes in Bachelor. She said the reported thefts left her feeling uneasy. “It makes you uncomfortable to think that something like that can happen right under your nose,” Taustine said. “It’s just scary.” According to Spilman, there are no current suspects in either case, but officers are still investigating the reported crimes. “The first thing we are encouraging people to do is make sure they lock their doors,” Spilman said. “We want to make sure people are aware of this problem so they pay attention to people who might not belong in the building so we can check them out and make sure they do in fact have a reason for being there.” According to Spilman, there have been no similar break-ins in other academic buildings this year. a 130 to 170 scale in one-point increments, according to the GRE website. The tighter scoring scale makes it harder to stand out when applying to graduate school and makes admission more competitive, Mitchell said. “ETS has been very proactive about what has been going on,” Cochrane said. Kaplan is working on new materials and a course for the revised version of the test, but Mitchell recommends students try to take the current exam because there is a lot of preparatory

wSee GRE, page 3


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