2 6
Notice: Sunday is the final day to drop a course with a full refund. April 6, 2012
Revisiting Japan a year after the 2011 earthquake
Rainouts a common problem for MHCC baseball
advocate the
Volume 47, Issue 22
www.Advocate-Online.net
Financial aid now linked to attendance by Jeff Hannig The Advocate
Photo by John Tkebuchava/The Advocate
Above: Electrical construction continued Wednesday, east of the 1400s classroom area. Construction began March 12 and is estimated to continue until June.
It’s more than just a hole Replacing the electrical system will cost $3 million and is projected to be completed by June 20
Photo by Shelby Schwartz/The Advoccate
Above: Construction work was done over spring break between the College Center and the Visual Arts Theater.
Mt. Hood Community College
by Tiarnan Fortes The Advocate
The MHCC campus is now undergoing a $3 million electrical system replacement project that runs from Stark Street to Northeast 17th Street. Construction began March 12 and according to Paul Dunlap, the manager of capital construction projects, only three parts of the campus — fisheries, the baseball fields, and the Early Childhood Center — will not be affected by the work. Two years ago, water leaked into a hole between the College Center and the Visual Arts Gallery and caused a problem with the high voltage electrical system. According to Dick Byers, director of facilities, the weather has not been a problem since the leak. The new electrical system is being built parallel to the old system so that the school does not have shut down. A majority of the work is done underground using machines. Byers said, “(There are) hundreds of feet of wiring. It’s a big problem because without replacing this old system, we (have) the potential for catastrophe that could close the college for months.” Byers said the 2010 failure was due to “dilapidated equipment” and added that the wiring had “outlived its intended useful life.” According to Dunlap, systems have a 40-year life span as the copper in electrical wires degrades over time. Byers said a loan was taken by MHCC to pay for the construction. Dunlap is in charge of the project and Jennifer Dement, the director of finance, is in charge of the finances for the project. Dunlap said the infrastructure is now being built. Dunlap said the construction includes three levels of construction, including excavation, boring and electrician work. Construction continued over spring break and on March 26 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., there was a power shut down in the Early Childhood Center (ECC) in order to work on one of the construction sites. Concrete demolition and excavation also occurred near the 1300 through 1700 classroom areas. Projected completion of the project is June 20.
MHCC teachers are to submit student attendance records for the first week of school or students may not be eligible for financial aid. According to Administrative Regulation AR-7080-B: “The refund deadline is the seventh calendar day of the term (or the equivalent for non-standard length classes). Tuition and fee charges will be removed from classes dropped by the refund deadline and the classes will not be recorded on the MHCC transcript.” This new procedure is an attempt to make the awarding of financial aid more efficient and accurate, said Peggy Maas, MHCC’s director of admissions, registration and records. This is the first term in which the school is enforcing its new policy. “Last term was a pilot session,” said Maas. Some students may have noticed their teachers being extra diligent about their attendance recording efforts in this first week of the spring term. Quiz taking, student participation or the old-fashioned roll call are all examples of acceptable forms of student participation/attendance listed on a handout mailed to part-time faculty members. As for distance learning classes, also known as online classes, students are asked to do more than just logging in: a student must be active in an online discussion about academic matters, or by initiating contact with a faculty member to ask a courserelated question. Students who are not present for the first week of class or make insufficient contributions in their distance learning discussions may be dropped from the class and “this could reduce a
See Attendance on page 8. Gresham, Oregon