5 | ARTS & LIFE
3 | OPINION
2 | NEWS Third floor of JPL reopens with floor-to-ceiling Vol. 65, Issue 11
Voters need to look past aesthetic Est. 1981
7 | SPORTS
The Pearl celebrates Día de los Muertos with altars, artwork and live music
UTSA soccer wins Conference USA November 8 - November 15, 2022
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Bexar County Democrats team up with O’Rourke in final efforts to mobilize voters
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New design grants University faculty take part awarded to faculty in system-wide for development of brain health summit open educational resources
more funding needs to be put.” “It’s very unique. It’s going to bring together scientists, governUTSA faculty members are ment officials, laypeople, doparticipating in the first-ever nors, students, staff — anybody University of Texas Systemand everyone who’s interested wide Brain Research Sumin the brain,” Hsieh added. “The mit, taking place in Austin on goal of the summit is really to Nov. 7 and 8. The summit is a highlight how the UT System collaborative effort that aims to institutions are working on the highlight research at UT System brain, they’re doing important institutions. research, and they’re collaboratJenny Hsieh, chair of UTSA’s ing with each other. The summit Department of Neuroscience, [is also] going to be recognizDevelopmental and Regening important donors that have erative Biology and director of supported UT System Brain UTSA’s Brain Health Consorresearch.” tium, explained that the summit Similar to the collaborative aims to bring together individunature of the summit, UTSA’s als involved in different aspects Brain Health Consortium is a of brain research. partnership among UTSA faculObjectives of the summit ty involved in different avenues include sharing “clinical and of research. basic research The consortium advanceaims to integrate ments” across “researchers the UT System with expertise in while fostering stem cells [and] “collaborative precision medineuroscience cine, neurosciresearch in ence, biomedical Texas, espeengineering, cially among psychology and [UT System] behavior.” institutions.” Hsieh exThe twoplained that day sumthe consortium mit features several panel Hsieh, who serves as the Director of USTA serves as a way for faculty at discussions Brain health Consortium, is one of the facfocusing on “a ulty members who is attending the summit. UTSA to come together and broad spectrum Photo Courtesy of the Department learn about each of Neuroscience, Developmental and of neurological other’s research. Regenerative Biology disorders.” “We all have “[With] reour own expertise, but … if we search, we’ve come a long way work alone, we’re only, you to resolving a lot of the brain know, kind of solving or having disorders, but there’s still a lot one piece of the puzzle and we of challenges and … a long way don’t maybe understand the to go,” Hsieh said. “In the Q&A whole picture,” Hsieh said. sessions, we’re [going to] spend As a part of the UT System, a lot of time just hearing the UTSA also has neuroscience respeakers try to address some of search underway on campus. For these challenges and remaining example, one of the more recent questions, and then … the audiavenues of research at UTSA is ence will have an opportunity the development of personalized to ask questions at each of the stem cell models called brain sessions. So, that will be very important, to hear from the audi- organoids to study neurological disorders. ence and … families and careBy Gauri Raje News Editor
UTSA Libraries has been offering grants for OER implementation since 2016. Riley Carroll/The Paisano
By Gauri Raje News Editor
A
s part of its Adopt a Free Textbook Initiative, UTSA libraries awarded 13 grants to faculty members for the 2022-2023 academic cycle to incorporate Open Educational Resources (OERs) into their curriculum. Four of the 13 grants were awarded to faculty members to develop their OERs. An OER is any openly licensed educational resource that is available free of cost in the public domain, including free textbooks. The Adopt a Free Textbook Initiative, launched in 2016, aims to encourage faculty members to use OERs to defer textbook costs for students. “[The advantage of an OER is that] it doesn’t cost the student anything,” Dean Hendrix, university librarian at UTSA, said. “They have the resource before the class starts, they have the resource during the class and they have the resource after the class.” UTSA faculty members can apply for an Adopt a Free Text-
book grant every year. Applications are assessed based on the course being taught, the cost of the textbook and the number of students impacted. Faculty can apply for individual grants as well as group grants. Awarded faculty members receive grant money which can be “used to support professional development, to purchase materials/supplies that support teaching, or to fund student work on the proposed project.” In return, faculty members must adopt an OER — usually a free textbook — into their course for four consecutive semesters. All OERs used are required to be licensed by Creative Commons, a nonprofit that allows for the open licensing of intellectual content. Until last year, the initiative only offered grants for adopting pre-existing OERs; however, 2022 is the first year that the initiative awarded the aforementioned grants to aid faculty in developing their own OERs.
See Design on Page 2
givers — where their challenges are and what their questions are and where more research and
See Summit on Page 2
UTSA Research conducted by State Demographer and Director of the UTSA Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research Lloyd Potter suggests that the current water rate structure places a disproportionate financial burden on some low socioeconomic households due to increasing water demands in San Antonio. The research supports moving to a tiered water system, which would ensure customers are charged fairly according to their water usage. The San Antonio Water System board met last week to discuss the new water structure, which is estimated to reduce monthly water bills for around 83 percent of residential customers.
Texas Students at Texas A&M University are accusing Brazos County of voter suppression after officials moved on-campus early voting, which previously took place in the Memorial Student Center, to the College Station City Hall. Commissioner Nancy Berry has shared that the decision was partially made in response to low voter turnout. Officials have since expressed that the relocation was a mistake, although they ultimately decided not to restore the original voting location at this time. On Monday, Nov. 7, the U.S. Department of Justice shared that it will be sending election monitors to local voting sites in three Texas counties — Harris, Dallas and Walker. The counties are among 64 jurisdictions in 24 states that will involve federal observation on election day to ensure local compliance with federal voting rights and other regulations.
U.S. Twitter Inc. has reportedly asked dozens of employees, who were recently let go following Elon Musk’s $44B acquisition of the platform, to return. Musk tweeted on Friday evening, “Regarding Twitter’s reduction in force, unfortunately there is no choice when the company is losing over $4M/day.” The mass layoffs were estimated to have reduced the Twitter workforce by nearly 50 percent.
World This weekend, Italian authorities blocked refugees from disembarking Humanity 1, a rescue ship run by the German charity SOS Humanity. The group reports that out of 179 total refugees, they were instructed to only disembark children and sick or otherwise vulnerable passengers. In a series of tweets posted Sunday, SOS Humanity promised to pursue legal action against the Italian government for violating European law and the Geneva Refugee Convention.