The Columbia Chronicle, March 30, 2015

Page 1

Arts & Culture: CIMMFest celebrates seven years,

6

See pg. 17

Online exclusive video

Opinions: College ratings hold no weight in

Chinatown delivers authentic Chinese cuisine

SPRING 2015

WEEKS LEFT

student decisions, See pg. 32

No. 1 Non-Daily College Newspaper in the Nation MONDAY, MARCH 30, 2015

THE OFFICIAL NEWS SOURCE OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO

VOLUME 50, ISSUE 24

How big is too big?

College weighs in on increased class sizes Lou Foglia THE CHRONICLE Stan Wearden, senior vice president and provost, has said increasing the average class size by one student could save the college $1 million a year. The college is also currently exploring larger lecture hall style classes to be implemented in future semesters.

JACOB WITTICH Campus Editor STUDENTS CAN EXPECT larger class sizes in some courses offered next semester when fall 2015 registration goes live April 6, as courses with up to a 200-student capacity could be introduced to the curriculum. According to Dominic Pacyga, a professor in the Humanities, His-

Survey parts sea on religion, science

ABBY SEITZ

Sports & Health Reporter THOUGH CHARLES DARWIN’S theory

of evolution is considered rock solid by scientists and researchers all over the world, politicians and public policy-makers alike have wrestled with how scientific and religious communities contrast, overlap and occasionally conflict. A study titled “Religious Communities, Science, Scientists, and Perceptions: A Comprehensive Survey,” was presented February 13 at the 2015 American Association for the Advancement of Science’s Annual Meeting with the goal of getting hard data about where the Americans who comprise the

xx SEE RELIGION, PG. 14

tory & Social Sciences Department, a course of approximately 200 students has been proposed to serve as a replacement for the First-Year Seminar Program, which Stan Wearden, vice president and provost, announced would be eliminated after the current semester. The course—which will aim to familiarize students with the history, culture and background of Chica-

go—will feature a large lecture hallstyle setting in which around 200 students meet weekly with Pacyga and a teaching assistant as an introduction to the college, Pacyga said. Wearden said increasing the college’s average class size—which was 16.75 students in the Fall 2014 Semester, according to the Office of Institutional Effectiveness—by one student could save the institution

$1 million per academic year. In response to this, students and faculty have expressed concerns regarding how increased class sizes could impact the college. “I’ve asked department chairs to take a look at all their course offerings [to determine class sizes],” Wearden said. “Some classes are small just by tradition, but there’s no need for them to be that small.

For example, in a lecture class you can lecture 20 people just as easily as you can lecture to 15, so it makes sense to increase the class sizes and reduce the number of sections.” Wearden said decreasing the number of offered course sections would save money by lessening the number of adjunct professors necessary.

xx SEE SIZE, PG. 10

Budget transparency goes digital MEGAN BENNETT Campus Reporter STUDENTS WONDERING WHAT their tens

of thousands of tuition dollars are doing within the college’s budget can now know with the launch of the college’s new budget web pages. Developed by Michelle Gates, vice president of Business Affairs and CFO, and the Student Government Association, the web pages provide charts that break down the amount of money that goes into each section of the college’s revenue and expenses. President and CEO Kwang-Wu Kim unveiled the new web page, hosted on the college’s website, in a March 17 collegewide email outlining the multi-million-dollar budget for the 2014–2015 school year. Designed to inform students where the college is receiving and spending its money, a nearly identical

Lecturers to receive representation at college • PAGE 4

Cassidy Johnson THE CHRONICLE

model is also available for faculty and staff. The site features two charts that detail the college’s estimated revenue and expenses and also reveals where the college planned on receiving and spending millions during the 2014–2015 school year. Gates said the administration plans to update the site annually to increase budget transparency.

NFL Draft punts to Chicago • PAGE 11

“It tells how much you invest in the students, the instructional department and academic administration, [which] tells you what your overall commitment is in returning resources to the core of educating students,” Gates said. The college planned to bring in $215 million in revenue, with more than three-fourths coming from tuition and fees. The expenses of

Evolution in real time • PAGE 20

the budget were $216.5 million, with more than two-thirds of that going toward expenses in the instructional departments, according to the website. SGA began working with Richard Dowsek, the college’s former interim CFO, last spring on a plan for budget transparency, said Sara

xx SEE BUDGET, PG. 10

State Senate considers new alcohol law • PAGE 35 T HE COLUMBIA C HRONICLE


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