TuftsDaily12-06-2012

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THE TUFTS DAILY

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TUFTSDAILY.COM

thursday, december 6, 2012

VOLUME LXIV, NUMBER 57

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Senate works to extend CSL allows for religious exemption pass/fail deadline from nondiscrimination policy by

Patrick McGrath

Daily Editorial Board

The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate last week approved a project that would extend the university’s pass/fail deadline until 10 weeks into the semester for all students. Senators Ethan Finkelstein, a freshman, and Jessie Serrino, a sophomore, submitted the project proposal. The current pass/fail policy gives upperclassmen students until five weeks into the semester to choose to take a course pass/ fail rather than for a letter grade. The Educational Policy Committee (EPC) earlier this semester approved a 10-week pass/fail deadline for freshmen, according to Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education Jean Herbert, a member of the EPC. She said the EPC did not vote to extend the deadline from five to 10 weeks for upperclassmen, as she had suggested. “EPC made the recommendation to the faculty, and the faculty voted and approved that the pass/fail deadline would be extended for first-year students only to match the 10-week drop deadline that first-year students have,” Herbert said. The senators hope to meet with members of the EPC, including Herbert, in the spring so that the extended deadline may be approved and implemented by next academic year. Students showed interest in extending the pass/fail deadline when the initiative was proposed in a Senate survey sent out to students earlier this semester, according to Finkelstein. “From what I understand from when I talked to the students, it’s definitely something students are more interested in

because they feel that the current deadline doesn’t give them enough time to realize how well they’re doing in a class to know if they want to take it pass/fail,” he said. Herbert explained that there are advantages to extending the current pass/fail deadline. “I don’t really like it when students withdraw from a course, losing the credit that they’ve spent a lot of time working on,” she said. “I think it just might help students stay in classes instead of withdrawing.” Since midterms often do not happen until the eighth week of the semester, Herbert said, students have in the past petitioned for an extension of the pass/fail deadline. Students are surprised by the grade that they receive and learn that they are not doing as well in a certain class as they might have initially thought, according to Herbert. “So the five-week deadline might be premature, in my opinion,” she said. Herbert added that this is the first time a formal proposal to change the deadline for upperclassmen has been discussed among faculty members since they decided on the original five-week deadline. David Hammer, professor and co-chair of the Department of Education and member of the EPC, expressed reservations about extending the pass/fail deadline for upperclassmen. “I’m worried about how much many Tufts students play the game of trying to maximize a GPA rather than get a substantive education, and I’m a little bit worried that our tweaking and fiddling with rules like this see PASS/FAIL, page 2

Dental and Medical Schools offer combined degree by Jennifer

White

Daily Editorial Board

The Tufts School of Dental Medicine and the School of Medicine have launched a new combined degree program in dental medicine and public health policy, which will enable current students to graduate with a joint Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) and Master of Public Health (MPH) degree. “The great interest in the program reflects the need for public health dentists and Tufts’ emphasis on active citizenship,” Wanda Wright, assistant professor of public health and commu-

nity service at the Dental School and program director of the new DMD/MPH program, said. The program focuses on providing comprehensive, interdisciplinary training to address dental health needs on a community-wide level through the development of policy and services aimed at oral health improvements, according to Mark Nehring, chair of the Department of Public Health and Community Service at the Dental School. “The goal of the proposed combined DMD/MPH program see DENTAL, page 2

by

Martha Shanahan

Daily Editorial Board

A new university policy will allow student religious groups, including Tufts Christian Fellowship (TCF), to request University Chaplaincy permission for religious exemption from the university’s nondiscrimination clause in choosing their leaders when applying for Tufts Community Union (TCU) recognition. The procedure was announced yesterday as an official resolution in the appeal case that TCF brought to the Committee on Student Life (CSL) after the TCU Judiciary voted in October to derecognize the group. The new policy changes the guidelines for the Judiciary’s group recognition process to allow religious groups to argue for “justified departures from the Tufts nondiscrimination policy” in their leadership decisions for Chaplaincy-approved religious reasons. The decision also allows TCF to remain “conditionally recognized” — without the rights to apply for TCU Senate funding — while it reapplies for recognition under the new guidelines within 60 days. The CSL, chaired this year by Associate Professor of Biology Philip Starks and senior Rebecca Spiewak, is a body of faculty members and students whose responsibilities include hearing appeals of decisions handed down by the Judiciary. The CSL was asked at the beginning of last month to hear and make a ruling in the TCF appeal case after the Judiciary removed the evangelical Christian group’s TCU recognition status because clauses in its

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The CSL announced a new policy that will give student religious groups the opportunity to seek exemption from the university’s nondiscrimination policy. constitution violated the TCU Constitution’s nondiscrimination clause. Its ultimate decision, over which the committee deliberated for the past month and released yesterday in an email to the student body, has two major clauses. “The [Judiciary] followed its policy correctly in de-recognizing the TCF” The decision first affirms the Judiciary’s vote in October to strip TCF of its status as a TCU-

recognized group. “Regarding the specific question of whether [TCUJ] acted inappropriately, we find no significant fault with the [Judicary],” the decision reads. “No human process is perfect, and while variation across decision processes should be minimized, it is our finding that the [Judiciary] followed its policy correctly in de-recognizing the TCF.” The Judiciary made the initial decision in September to see TCF, page 2

Tufts Libraries launches text-message service Tufts University Libraries has implemented a new service on their shared online catalog that allows users to have a call number texted to them when searching for books and other resources in the library. Students can click the “Text to Phone” icon on the Tufts University Library Catalog page to receive the call number, location and title of the item in a regular SMS text. The service works on all three of Tufts’ campuses, including in Tisch Library and the Lilly Music Library. “The catalog is shared by all the Tufts libraries, so this feature is available to all Tufts students and faculty regardless of which campus they are on or which library they are using,” Director of Tisch Library Laura Wood said. “We love that undergraduates will benefit from this, but

Inside this issue

it is really for the entire Tufts community.” The text message service has become standard in libraries at other universities, Wood added. “Within the last two years, it has become a very popular and common feature because texting and smart phones have become so popular,” she said. “The concept really goes hand in hand with the technology.” Systems Librarian at University Library Services Heather Klish, who coded and implemented the service, explained that the idea began when several Tufts librarians saw how well the service was working at other schools. “We have a libraries-wide team. All of the Tufts libraries have representation on this team. [It’s] called the Discovery Platform Team,” she said. “We get together and discuss the features in the library catalog.”

The Discovery Platform Team decided to move forward with a text-messaging feature for the catalog, Wood said. “Since the library catalog is shared, this is a core group of people who try to enhance the catalog, to add new features, to improve things that aren’t working very well and to make the library collections more usable,” she said. Although Tufts Libraries initially introduced the service last year, it was removed from the system due technical issues, Klish said. The service was reimplemented at the end of last summer, she added. “It really is a convenience feature,” Wood said. “It is something that is focused on making it a little bit easier to use the physical collections that we have.” —by Rebecca Kimmel

Today’s sections

Students seeking polished papers are turning to online editing services.

Check out the top movies, albums and TV shows of the year.

see FEATURES, page 3

see WEEKENDER, page 6

News Features Weekender Editorial | Letters

1 3 6 10

Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports

11 12 13 Back


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