THE VARSITY October 22, 2018
University of Toronto's Student Newspaper since 1880
Vol. CXXXIX, No. 7
DECISION TIME (From left to right) ANN MARIE ELPA, JACKSON WHITEHEAD, ANDY TAKAGI/THE VARSITY
Business Business Board reports on university’s investments, capital projects
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Comment Introducing The Varsity’s new Public Editor
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Feature Normalizing the conversation around female masturbation
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Arts & Culture U of Tears’ humour outlet: an interview with The Boundary
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Results of Trinity student experience survey reveal systemic issues
Transparency, inclusivity, alcohol at centre of findings Andy Takagi Associate News Editor
Tensions ran high in a meeting held by the Trinity College senate on October 15 to present the results of the 2018 student experience study, a survey of students at the college conducted every four years. The meet was held in the George Ignatieff Theatre and conducted by Trinity College Assistant Provost
Jonathan Steels and University College official Naeem Ordóñez. The survey was the source of controversy after college administration announced in July that Trinity student fees could no longer be used to purchase alcohol, and that major events such as the Saints and Conversat Balls would be held off-campus at permanently-licensed venues. Citing the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, Steels
Student-led petition calls for separate Computer Science convocation Petition had over 800 signatures Ann Marie Elpa Associate News Editor
Computer Science (CS) students started an online petition calling for a review to hold a separate convocation for the department. The petition, titled “Let CS Graduate Together!” proposed that students be given the
option to graduate with other students from their department. Currently, CS students graduate with other students from the college to which they belong. After three months of petitioning, the student-led petition received 809 of its targeted 1,000 signatures. Professional faculties and Rotman
study consistently found that students cared about issues around alcohol use, the transparency of the student government as well as the administration, and inclusivity. In addition, they placed high value on student leadership.
and Ordóñez declined to present any information that would reveal the demographics of the respondents, which included the removal of axis labels on all graphs that they showed. Students in the audience heavily criticized this decision and tensions between the presenters and students in attendance remained high for the rest of the event. Compiling the responses of 450 respondents and 70 focus groups, the
Alcohol use On issues of alcohol consumption, Steels first presented alcohol surveys from 2012 and 2015 that found that three in four respondents were drinkers, and a high number reported binge drinking, hospitalization due to alcohol consumption, reports of altercations, and vandalism of Trinity property.
Commerce are the only undergraduate divisions with their own ceremonies. “Members of the committee are aware of the petition and are considering and taking concerns from Computer Science students,” said Elizabeth Church, Interim Director of U of T Media Relations. “The review is also including a survey of graduates at this year’s spring and fall convocations,” said Church, adding that they also contacted recent alumni and five student governments for comment. Lana El Sanyoura, a fourth-year CS student and organizer of the petition, spoke with The Varsity regarding her concerns about current convocation procedures and what
led her to creating the petition page. “As Computer Science students, we spend so much of our time working together, so many of our courses are group-based, and we spend hours, even go past midnight, working in the Computer Labs at the Bahen Centre. We also take a majority of Computer Science courses, and have a strong, thriving, localized community that lies within the Bahen Centre, with the student union office, study lounges, computer labs, classes, and professor offices all in one place,” said El Sanyoura in an email.
Trinity, page 3
CS, page 3