May 9, 2019

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VOLUME 137, ISSUE 26 | THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2019

May is Pride Month at UC Davis LGBTQIA Resource Center presents “Collective Healing for Liberation” as month’s theme

Non-binary students find security in pronouns, peer support Students discuss their journeys toward authentic gender expression

G EOR G E L I AO campus@theaggie.org

CA IT LY N SA MPL EY / AG GIE

Pride Month at UC Davis began with a kick-off event on May 2, 2019 and will continue with a host of additional events throughout the month of May. The events will be held at the UC Davis LGBTQIA Resource Center in the Student Community Center, the Student Health and Wellness Center, the Quad and other locations on campus. The theme for this year’s Pride Month is “Collective Healing for Liberation,” focusing on healing within the LGBTQIA community. Joel Gutierrez, a third-year gender, sexuality and women’s studies and American studies double major and community coordinator at the Center, spoke about this year’s theme. “This year’s theme is collective healing for liberation,” Gutierrez said. “We are really focusing on healing, and what that looks like for the communities, and how there can be many different forms of healing for people.” In this effort, the the Center is actively collaborating with the Health Education and Promotion program within Student Health and Counseling Services, according to Gutierrez. During the first week of Pride Month, a series of activities called “Student Healing Week” will be provided in collaboration with HEP, allowing the Center to, “really hone in on [our] theme and make sure that we’re doing programming that reflects that theme.” Though healing is the overarching theme of the whole month, long-running events will also take place again.

“For example, Pride Kick-Off and Out On the Quad are [events] that are pretty much similar every year and don’t necessarily have to align with the theme completely,” Gutierrez said. “They are ways to celebrate pride.” A diversity of events are on the docket, including therapy dogs and bug-contact events. “Something we really worked on is to think about forms of healing that [people] don’t think about right away when you think of healing,” Gutierrez said. “For example, we are doing therapy fluffies like when they have the dogs during midterm season and therapy bugs [...] At the Bohart Museum [of Entomology], someone is bringing some bugs from there. That way folks can interact with the bugs. That is healing, so they can relax [with the bugs].” While animal events are common outside of the Center, events led by other community coordinators at the Center will be prominent as well. “One of our staff is doing a movement-based healing [and] workshop. One of my co-workers is doing a tincture workshop,” Gutierrez said. “We are also really thinking about how we can heal just by being with community as well.” To Gutierrez, Pride month is a way to show off the size of the LGBTQIA community at UC Da-

vis to help dispel the “myth that there are not that many LGBTQIA people” and the misconception that the LGBTQIA community on-campus is not as large as many people think. “I think Pride Month is an example that there are a lot of us,” Gutierrez said. “If someone were to go to every single event, they would see so many different faces and also that people have many different interests. I want to tell the greater campus community that our community is really strong and benefits from being together and really finding connections with each other as well, because all of our communities are so interlinked.” Lehma Sawez, a fifth-year history and international relations double major, spoke about the importance of the Pride Month Pick-Off event held on May 2. “Pride Kick-Off is a way for us to start off the month of May in a way where we are able to gather community and celebrate Pride Month,” Sawez said. “It is a way for us to come together to celebrate being community so that we can further plan for the events for the month.” Out on the Quad will be the largest of the Pride Month events and is planned for May 14 from 12:00 to 2:30 p.m. The event expects a large turnout from the UC Davis community. “Out on the Quad will be one

of our biggest events,” Sawez said. “We [will] occupy the front part of the east quad, and we have tables and events and we give out shirts, and it is just a way for the community to be visible and present here on campus and also to just spend time with each other.” Kit Phillips, a third-year wildlife, fish and conservation biology major, spoke about what the Pride Month Kick-Off event and other events during Pride Month mean to them. “It’s not necessarily that it is just this event only,” Phillips said. “Events such as these and spaces such as these are for some people, the only place where people are allowed to safely be themselves [and] to be out as their identify without fear of being rejected by peers. We pride ourselves on being a safe space for that to happen. For people who cannot be themselves outside of this space, this is a really big thing.” Phillips is also looking forward to the festivities during Out on the Quad. “I’m really looking forward to Out on the Quad,” Phillips said. “It’s always a highlight of the year for me to go and see all of our centers, clubs and all of our tables and activities that we do not just on a weekly basis here [in the center] but it is showcasing this is who we are, and we are not going to hide ourselves, and engaging in community and having a great time.”

Aggie Job Link shuts down, university transitions to Handshake

BY MI KI WAY NE features@theaggie.org Much of our world is split up into binaries. As a result, our society puts a significant amount of pressure on individuals to demonstrate an identity which fits into a binary standard. With contemporary society’s expanding perceptions of gender, however, many individuals are finding that they do not fit directly into this binary system. The term used to define this identity is referred to as gender non-binary. The UC Davis LGBTQIA Resource Center defines non-binary as “a gender identity and experience that embraces a full universe of expressions and ways of being that resonate for an individual. It may be an active resistance to binary gender expectations and/or an intentional creation of new unbounded ideas of self within the world.” While it may not be immediately apparent, there are many individuals who attend UC Davis who identify as non-binary. In a 2018-19 student demographic survey, .2% of the UC Davis population marked “other” in the gender category. Compared to the national average — for which non-binary individuals make up .15% of the population — this is quite a significant statistic. This begs the question: is the university doing enough to accommodate this population? First-year environmental science major

NON-BINARY on 11

Z ACHA RY L ACSON / AG GIE

Faculty, employers, students express satisfaction over switch in hopes that it will improve recruitment rates BY CL A I RE D O D D city@theaggie.org UC Davis’ job posting site Aggie Job Link will be replaced by the up-and-coming career network site, Handshake. Over 700 universities, including UC Berkeley, Stanford and Princeton already use the platform, and Davis hopes that this switch will boost its recruitment rates. The new site will make it more appealing for employers to share opportunities with Davis students. Before, companies needed to make a separate Aggie Job Link account to interact with individuals, but Handshake has created a one-stop shop where companies only need one account to reach students from hundreds of schools. Alex Amerling, a member of Handshake’s university partnership team, described the tech company as the nation’s largest early talent career network. He emphasized that

Handshake is a true network, in comparison to other systems designed for specific schools. “Handshake offers the ability for students to learn from one another, for employers to easily join a network of 800+ universities and send messages about potential opportunities,” Amerling said. “All of this aligns with our mission — to help level the playing field for every student across the nation to find a great job.” The Internship and Career Center is using Spring Quarter 2019 as a “soft launch” for Handshake and officially opened the program for students on April 29. The ICC hopes that all students will be fully transitioned by the upcoming fall. Aggie Job Link is still up and running, but the ICC is currently notifying all users, companies and students of the shift. Many universities have already been using Handshake for years. Marcie Kirk-Holland, the executive director of

the ICC, explained why it took UC Davis over three years to make the switch. “We’ve been looking at Handshake from when it first launched,” Kirk-Holland said. “There were a couple of issues that were of concern to us. One was the privacy issue, and this idea of who owns the data — it’s a very different model.” With Aggie Job Link, UC Davis was in control of students’ data. Bringing in this outside site means that this data will change hands, with Handshake storing some of the information. Amerling and the website’s privacy policy page, however, made it clear that students are in complete control of their data and that Handshake does not sell personal student data. “For us, student security and safety will always be number one,” Amerling said. “We constantly make improvements to the platform to ensure students are in full control of their data.”

Furthermore, Kirk-Holland emphasized that once the privacy issues were dismissed, it became clear that implementing Handshake would be the best thing for students. “It got to the point that there was a risk associated with us not being on the platform, because one of the things Handshake does is it aggregates the data, so there should never be a way that any individual could be identified,” Kirk-Holland said. “The data sets then, help inform companies about where to recruit. By not having our data set in there, we could actually end up obscuring UC Davis students from companies’ views.”

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She also noted that Aggie Job Link student usage has been on the decline in the past several years. Kirk-Holland hopes that Handshake’s user-friendly format will help attract students seeking career opportunities, and she noted that other universities who implemented the platform saw a 30% increase in student usage. Both interviewees noted that using Handshake was standard in most universities, with Kirk-Holland mentioning that she’d gotten specific requests for the program. “There have been a lot of students who have been asking for it,” Kirk-Holland said. “They say their friends or rela-

tives at other campuses are using it, and so there’s some pentup demand.” Jack Stafford, a third-year managerial economics major, mirrored this sentiment with an expression of relief over the change. “Honestly, ever since I’ve gone to college, I keep hearing my friends from home talk about this job site,” Stafford said. “Handshake is what they use to search for jobs or internships, and they’re able to find opportunities outside of their college town. Aggie Job Link definitely had some good stuff, but it sounds like this new

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