October 8, 2020

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VOLUME 139, ISSUE 1 | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2020

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UC MUST SUSPEND SAT AND ACT SCORES IN ADMISSIONS, SCHOLARSHIP DECISIONS, JUDGE RULES Lawsuit alleged that standardized testing requirements are “broadly biased”; UC may challenge ruling BY REBECCA BIHN-WALLACE campus@theaggie.org The University of California must immediately suspend its SAT and ACT score requirements in its admissions and scholarship processes, Alameda County Superior Court judge Brad Seligman ruled Sept. 6, according to The LA Times. The ruling is in response to a lawsuit which alleged that SAT and ACT requirements are “broadly biased,” particularly when it comes to disabled students attempting to access testing spaces and help amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The Superior Court decision comes in the wake of significant testing reforms within the UC system: in May, the UC Board of Regents voted unanimously to remove the SAT and ACT requirements from the UC application. The Regents concluded that the test scores were “unacceptably biased based on race, income, and parent education level.” Therefore, the UC previously decided that SAT and ACT scores would be made optional for two years before being phased out entirely, and could continue to factor into scholarship decisions. Seligman’s injunction, however, rules that test scores may no longer affect the admissions or scholarship process at all. “[The] UC respectfully disagrees with the Court’s ruling,” a spokesman for UC said in a Sept. 1 statement. “An injunction may interfere with the University’s efforts to implement appropriate and comprehensive admissions policies and its ability to attract and enroll students of diverse backgrounds and experiences.”

The statement indicated that the UC would also be deciding whether “further legal action” was necessary in response to the ruling, and suggested that individual campuses were better positioned to make executive decisions regarding admissions procedures. The spokesperson also said that UC’s decision to “adopt a test-optional approach” for the applicant class of 2021 and the university’s decision to phase out SAT and ACT score requirements to become test-blind by 2023 minimized the potential academic obstacles caused by COVID-19. Three UC campuses–UC Berkeley, UC Irvine and UC Santa Cruz–have already removed the testing requirements. The other UC campuses, including UC Davis, initially planned on considering the SAT and ACT scores if students chose to submit them. But in the ruling, Seligman maintained that there isn’t much data to demonstrate that standardized tests are an effective barometer of future academic success in college. The Superior Court’s ruling will be applicable to all UC campuses, meaning that SAT and ACT scores will effectively be irrelevant in the admissions process until 2025. The UC, beginning this summer, is working on a test that more closely aligns with UC expectations for current students. If the Regents find the test unfinished or insufficient in 2025, the test score requirement will be scrapped altogether. This article was originally published online on Sept. 7, 2020.

Standardized test form. (Wikimedia)

UC DAVIS CHAPTER OF ALPHA EPSILON PI TO OPERATE INDEPENDENTLY OF THE UNIVERSITY AFTER REGISTRATION REVOKED DUE TO HAZING Fraternity raises concerns about “lack of due process” in disciplinary process BY REBECCA BIHN-WALLACE campus@theaggie.org

KAITLYN PANG / AGGIE

HOW TO APPROACH FLU SEASON DURING A PANDEMIC Health experts give advice on how to mitigate the effects of influenza and COVID-19 BY MICHELLE WONG science@theaggie.org Several factors will affect how this flu season will unfold, according to Dean Blumberg, the chief of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Children’s Hospital. On one hand, Blumberg expects there to be an increased transmission of the coronavirus starting in the fall and extending into the winter since SARS-CoV-2 is a winter respiratory virus. With the current masking and social distancing protocols in place, however, there may be decreased transmission of influenza, meaning a milder flu season. Blumberg explained that evidence of this was seen in several places in the southern hemisphere, like Australia, during their respective flu season. Daniel Colby, an assistant professor in the department of emergency medicine at UC Davis Health, added that although it is still important to consider other factors that influenced this phenomenon, these cases give him hope that the U.S. will also have a mild influenza season. It is important to minimize the spread of influenza to make sure healthcare systems are not overwhelmed, Colby said. If there is a surge of both COVID-19 and the flu simultaneously, this could stress the system to its capacity. “A big concern is that we want to make sure that healthcare systems’ capacity is available to treat everybody who needs to be treated,” Blumberg said. “So that’s why we are strongly continuing to recommend the social distancing and the mask wearing as well as everybody getting the influenza vaccine this year. If there’s a surge of either COVID or influenza patients it may fill up the ICUs and we may not have care available who need it.” In order to minimize the influenza spread, Blumberg advises all citizens to get vaccinated as soon as possible, as it takes two weeks to develop immunity after receiving the vaccine, which lasts for six months. He explained that since the most common month for the influenza season to hit its peak is February, getting immunized now will make sure people will have immunity until then. Although it is known that coinfections of COVID-19 and influenza are possible, Colby explained that there is not enough information about the coronavirus to determine

what will happen if a patient contracts both viruses. This is something that can only be known once the flu season hits. “Honestly, in my opinion, no one in the world is truly a COVID expert still because the disease is too new,” Colby said. Despite the uncertainty of this upcoming fall and winter, the Department of Public Health Sciences is setting up programs such as the Aggie Public Health Ambassadors and Healthy Davis Together to continue to help UC Davis students and the larger Davis community navigate the pandemic. Bradley Pollock, the associate dean for public health sciences explained that the student ambassadors will be helping with COVID-19 screening on campus. In addition, he hopes that they will be able to reach students living off campus by setting up testing kiosks in communities in the future. As Colby explained, distinguishing flu symptoms from COVID-19 symptoms is very difficult, so it is important that people get tested even if they experience influenza-like symptoms. “People don’t know a lot about propagation of the virus, but one person gets infected and you have this exponential spread,” Pollock said. “You get this incredible one case turns into a huge number of people, so [we’re] trying to break the chain of that propagation.” Pollock hopes that by properly educating the ambassadors about COVID-19, their efforts along with the city’s efforts through the Healthy Davis Together program will help control the spread of COVID-19 and incentivize others to continue practices such as social distancing and masking. Colby added that students should continue to listen to public health experts and science as we progress into uncertain circumstances. “I know we’re all tired and would like this to be over, but I think with the change in season, it’s more important than ever for people to take scientifically proven actions that we know will decrease transmission, and that’s the social distancing and wearing a mask,” Blumberg said. “Those are the most important things that we can do to decrease risk of transmission and keep us all healthy and so that we can eventually return to our normal way of life.”

The Davis chapter of the Alpha Epsilon Pi (AEPi) fraternity has decided to operate independently of the university as of this school year, said Noah Stark, president of Davis AEPi, in an email statement two weeks ago. AEPi’s registration was revoked in Spring Quarter 2020 due to incidents of hazing, Kristen Dees, director of the Center for Student Involvement (CSI), said via email. The revocation will last until 2025, and AEPi is no longer listed as a chapter on the UC Davis Office of Sorority and Fraternity Life website. In her email, Dees said that UC Davis recommends students refrain from joining organizations with revoked or closed registration. AEPi has since been told to cease their operations at UC Davis, Dees added. The news, which was also posted on the fraternity’s Instagram, comes after a record number of UC Davis fraternities—Sigma Mu Delta, Delta Sigma Pi and Zeta Psi—had their registration revoked for five years due to hazing incidents in February 2020. The hazing in those three revoked organizations, described by anonymous sources, included physical punishments like push-ups, planking and consuming “unknown [concoctions] of mixed drinks” as punishment for failing to memorize or recite certain items. One pledge referred to the “physical and mental strain” of the rushing process. In the article, an executive board member from one of the fraternities complained about a lack of transparency in OSSJA’s investigative process, while acknowledging that they understood why the identities of those making allegations would be kept confidential. Another pledge said they did not think they had committed any acts of misconduct, since pledges can “drop out [of the process] at any time they want” and were already aware of what it would be like. At the time that the February article went to print, AEPi had not yet had its registration revoked, but was being investigated by OSSJA, as were the fraternities Theta Tau and Sigma Lambda Beta. Stark declined to comment on the contents of the article. “Our multiple, wrongful dealings with OSSJA [Office of Student Support and Judicial Affairs] affirm that there are improper safeguards to protect student organizations – as we plead to OSSJA Director and Associate Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs in appeal – and that a lack of due process and inadequate bias training has permeated throughout the school’s judicial body resulting in partisan results to the detriment of minority communities, Greek communities and student communities at large,” wrote Stark on behalf of the fraternity. He also described OSSJA’s investigations as “unscrupulous” and asserted that AEPi was “wrongfully punished.” AEPi’s statement said that OSSJA’s disciplinary actions mimicked a national trend of Greek organizations “being subject to uneven as well as unjust penal bodies,” adding that fraternities and sororities’ right to operate independently of universities had been legally upheld by the “highest court in the land.” Freedom of association—first recognized in a 1958 U.S. Supreme Court Case which struck down an Alabama law requiring the release of a list of NAACP members—continues to be affirmed in judicial decisions in the United States, and is largely viewed as an extension of First Amendment rights. The statement also highlighted the precautions that AEPi is taking during COVID-19, in accordance with university regulations. It suggested that UC Davis assist students and community members in fighting the disease rather than “brazenly [choosing to allocate] time and money towards persecuting Greek life.” “As always, we will continue building the next generation of Jewish leaders, which is and has been our foremost goal – and is more vital now than ever,” the statement said. This article was originally published online on Sept. 30, 2020.


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October 8, 2020 by The California Aggie - Issuu