11.05.19

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5 | Arts & Life

7 | Sports

Fact or fiction?

XC competes at conference championship

Vol. 60, Issue 11

Est. 1981

November 5 - November 12, 2019

The Paisano

Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio Community /PaisanoOnline

/ThePaisano

@PaisanoMedia

@ThePaisano

www.Paisano-Online.com

San Antonio to host TEDx By Joseph Torres Co-News Editor The city of San Antonio will be hosting TEDxSanAntonio at the Charlie McCombs Empire Theater Nov. 9, from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. The theme for this event is “re:frame,” where speakers from all over the country will take turns speaking on topics such as psychology, blogging, environmental conservation, music and more. The TEDxSanAntonio website (tedxsanantonio. com) explains, “TED means Technology, Entertainment, Design with one mission in mind – Spreading Ideas.” Unlike the global outreach associated with TED events, TEDx specializes in local communities. This enables communities to provide their members with an opportunity to promote dialogue and stimulate conversations locally. TEDxSanAntonio has produced 151 talk videos that have collectively acquired over two million

views on the TEDxTalks channel. San Antonio has hosted TEDx since 2009 and will be celebrating their 9th conference experience this weekend. The event is hosting the following 10 speakers: Kierra Alderman, CEO of BOL Empowerment, author and minister, will be discussing female leadership within the ministry. Her talk will focus on large-scale gender inequality in the church. “If our goal is to reframe our thought process on gender equality in relationships, education and employment opportunities, we must be willing to identify and be willing to call out gender inequality in the church and explore the ways in which such inequality contributes to societal gender bias,” Alderman said. Graham Conway, principal engineer at Southwest Research Institute, aims to address the contradiction of battery-operated vehicles. Conway plans to highlight the negative implications of rushing

battery-powered vehicles onto the market. By challenging the idea that battery-operated vehicles are environmentally friendly, Conway will discuss the use of fossil fuels and the CO2 emissions associated with the production of the vehicles’ battery packs. Dan Cooper, creator of the leadership development program at Southwest Research Institute, will provide tips and tricks that individuals may use if they become creatively stuck. Cooper will provide new techniques, based on modern research, that may be implemented to overcome creative blocks. Elizabeth Crawford, chief executive officer at Sendero Wealth Management and Sendero Family Enterprise, will be speaking about children’s financial literacy. “Nearly half of American parents would rather talk with kids about the birds and the bees than about dollars and cents. And while sex talk can be shocking to adults and kids alike, talking about money

Graphic by Lindsey Thomas

is often just as shocking,” Crawford said. Hector Garcia, psychologist at the University of Texas Health Science Center, has published many works on the research of PTSD in combat veterans and will be discussing

the gender of war. Garcia The Bloggess, is most takes a look at the comrecognized for various monalities associated with writings on her struggles the origins of conflict and with mental illness. She concludes that wars are will examine the impor“almost exclusively started Continued on page 2 and prosecuted by men.” See “TEDxTalks’ 9th anJenny Lawson, writer nual event held at Charline and blogger, known as McCombs Empire Theater”

Student success research receives grant

By Josh Peck Assistant Managing Editor

By Joseph Torres Co-News Editor UTSA will host a Bexar County polling station inside the HEB Student Union on Nov. 5. Students will be able to vote on: the Joint Constitutional Amendment; the General, Special and Bond Election on

Graphic by Jacqueline Cantu

the State of Texas Propositions 1-10; General Elections for San Antonio River AuthorityDistrict; the General Election for Green Valley; the General Election for City of Converse; and the Special Election for City of Castle Hills.

Dr. Guan Saw, UTSA assistant professor of educational psychology in the UTSA College of Education and Human Development, was recently awarded a $350,000 National Science Foundation (NSF) grant for his research on student success in the Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) field. Saw seeks to learn what drives student participation, motivation and achievement in STEM education and training, particularly for underserved and underrepresented student populations. He received the NSF grant after a seed grant of $20,000 from UTSA’s Office of the Vice President for Research, Economic Development and Knowledge Enterprise. Saw emphasizes social capital in his research. Social capital is a

UTSA architecture team wins competition

By Ethan Gullet Assistant Photo Editor

The student architecture team at UTSA competed in an event held by the Texas Society of Architects and brought home the victory against teams from Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Del Mar and Rice. The team consisted of Mauricio Garza, Rachel Henkes, Armando Arazia and Jesus Alfonso. The four are currently graduate students, some of which with a focus in green design — a subfield of architecture dealing with environmental attributes as design objectives aimed at improving performance and functionality without com-

promising quality and the useful life of a product. The Texas Society of Architects was founded in 1939, and its members elected their first officers out of 47 architects. Currently, the organization consists of 18 different regional components and has over 7,000 members. This year, the society invited several teams to find a solution to Galveston’s diminishing shoreline as a result of climate change and rising sea levels. The UTSA team came up with a solution that would not only keep Galveston Island habitable, but it would also preserve decades of architecture and culture on the island as

well. Their solution, consisting of three phases, was to raise the sidewalks and build on top of preexisting buildings. The students’ website states that phase one is to “introduce floating modular palettes to Galveston before significant flooding occurs.” Phase two consists of physically assembling the palettes and introducing them to the public. The final phase will be their application of the palettes into everyday life, while building the new city on the foundations of the preexisting one, making cars obsolete within twenty to fifty years into the future.

term referring to instrumentally valuable social networks that provide increased professional and educational access to people in the networks. In the case of STEM, social capital involves aspects such as having a family member who works in the STEM field or a STEM teacher who provides extra support. Saw uses social capital in his research in part because there has yet to be a standard set of techniques to measure it in STEM. “For this particular NSF research project, my goal is to eventually develop and validate new survey scales for measuring students’ STEM social capital, which are currently not available,” Saw said. “Current studies on explaining and addressing the disparities in STEM education tend to focus on the psychological or motivational factors

of students. This project will advance and expand the use of concepts and measures of social capital — a prominent sociological theory — in improving the STEM outcomes of underserved and underrepresented students.” Saw is working alongside the UTSA Pre-freshman Engineering Program, a STEM program meant to prepare middle and high school students to pursue degrees and careers in the STEM field, to develop new scales to measure STEM social capital. Saw believes understanding STEM social capital is key to improving STEM outcomes for underserved students. “The concept of social capital offers me a powerful theoretical lens to understand and analyze Continued on page 2 See “Assistant professor studies STEM education”

Students celebrate Dia de los Muertos

Students display ofrendas in the Student Union in celebration of Dia de los Muertos.

Donald Escamilla/ The Paisano


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