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Viva Fiesta!
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Vol. 57, Issue 14
Est. 1981
April 24 - May 11, 2018
The Paisano
Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio Community /ThePaisano
/PaisanoOnline
@PaisanoMedia
www.Paisano-Online.com
@ThePaisano
UTSA combats sexual violence CLASE survey identifies most common sexual harasment, assault perpetrators on campus By Gaige Davila Co-News Editor The Faculty Senate subcommittee on Preventing Sexual Violence will present a report concerning on-campus sexual violence at the May 3 Faculty Senate meeting. A preliminary report was presented by the subcommittee on Apr. 12 that outlined findings in the Cultivating Learning and Safe Environments (CLASE) survey. The full report is supplemented by results from the UTSA CLASE survey, released Mar. 24, 2017, in which 3,385 UTSA students participated, a 13.8 percent response rate. According to a UTSA Today article from Mar. 24, 2017, students were asked to self-report their experiences in five areas. Thirteen out of 14 UT
System institutions participated in the CLASE survey. “There’s an issue. Period,” concluded Dr. Crystal KalinecCraig, assistant professor in the interdisciplinary learning and teaching department and member of the faculty senate subcommittee on Preventing Sexual Violence. Twenty percent of UTSA students who responded to the survey said they have experienced sexual harassment or victimization by other students; 12 percent have been victims of stalking; 11 percent said they experienced sexist gender harassment by faculty or staff members; 10 percent have been victims of unwanted sexual touching; six percent said they had been raped and four percent were victims of attempted rape.
Graph comparing CLASE survey results among UT System schools.
The CLASE survey also found that the most common perpetrators of faculty/staff sexual harassment were faculty (62 percent) and student employees
Espy named new provost By Sam De Leon Co-News Editor Kimberly Andrews Espy, Ph.D., has been named UTSA’s Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs. Espy will replace interim Provost and Vice President of Academic affairs Mauli Agrawal, beginning June 4. Espy officially returns to Texas after an extensive career in research and administration at top tier universities around the nation, including the University of Oregon and the University of Arizona. Espy brings to the Provost’s position years of experience in student success and academic research and she recently met with faculty, administration and staff of the Main and Downtown Campuses April 18 and 19 to discuss missions and objectives the university holds. “UTSA is a thriving discovery enterprise in San Antonio, one of the nation’s greatest cities, and it is poised to become a model for multicultural research universities of the future,” Espy said. “UTSA is an institution on the move, guided by a strong vision that student success and academic excellence go hand in hand. I am eager to help drive that effort to advance the university and the San Antonio community, create opportunities for our students and support social and economic
prosperity here.” Espy earned a psychology degree at Rice University and went on to earn her master’s and doctorate degrees in Clinical Neuropsychology from the University of Houston. Espy began her administrative career in 2004, when she served as an administrative intern for the Provost and Vice Chancellor for Research Offices at Southern Illinois University. From 2005 to 2011, Espy served as the associate vice chancellor for research at the University of Nebraska to enhance her skills in higher education budgets, policy, planning, communication and economic development. She left Nebraska in 2011 to serve as the vice president for research and innovation for the University of Oregon, one of 62 institutional members of the American Association of Universities. “Dr. Espy is an esteemed scholar and administrator with proven leadership at large, Carnegie R1 (research intensive) and Association of American Universities institutions,” Eighmy said. “She has an unparalleled commitment to students, faculty and the role that research universities play in solving society’s grand challenges. Her breadth of experiences and her body of work closely align with our path forward.” Espy has most recently served as the senior vice president for research and chief research officer for the University
(29 percent); according to the victims 49 percent of unwanted sexual contact victims and 76 percent of unwanted sexual contact perpetrators had used
of Arizona (UA). There, Espy oversaw the university’s research development services, corporate engagement services, global research alliances and research administration and compliance. At UA, she partnered with the provost to implement a cluster-hiring initiative that yielded 28 new faculty at the university, including 20 new faculty to lead various academic initiatives. Espy will bring her experience to UTSA’s nine colleges, the Graduate School and libraries. Eighmy has strategically placed Espy in this position because he believes she will help accomplish the strategic initiatives he set last fall; more specifically, Eighmy believes she will serve a crucial role on his campaign for the reimagination of the Down-
Graphic by: Amber Chin
Continued on page 2 See “Faculty senate analyzes sexual violence on campus”
town Campus, the development of new degree programs and institutions and the implementation of UTSA’s newest budget model. “I know Dr. Espy shares my passion and energy for the potential of UTSA as an exemplary urban-serving, Hispanicthriving discovery enterprise,” Eighmy said. “I am delighted to have her join our senior leadership team.”
Photo courtesy of The Creative Commons
Dr. Kimberly Espy (left) during her welcoming reception on April 18. Sam De Leon/The Paisano
The UTSA Student Government Association (SGA) and the UTSA Libraries are crowdfunding to raise $3,000 for free textbooks for UTSA Students on Launch UTSA. Funds raised will be awarded to UTSA faculty who are transforming courses that have relied on traditional, expensive textbooks to open educational resource (OER) learning materials that are free and low cost for students. The crowdfunding initiative will run through May 1. For a full article on the initiative, visit paisanoonline.com