The Oracle WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2015 I VOL. 53 NO. 3
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
Share-A-Bull bikes to improve cross-campus commuting By Grace Hoyte E D I T O R
LI F E STYLE
Essential apps to download for the new school year. Page 4
Montage
S PORTS Quarterback overcomes difficult journey to become starter. BACK
The Share-A-Bull program, which is set to launch this fall, is going to have a pre-launch event today at Bull Market. Those who attend will be encouraged to download the app for the service. SPECIAL TO THE ORACLE
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The Campus Recreation Center will soon have another service to provide to students, but this time, no one will have to trek across campus to reach the building. In collaboration with the USF Center for Urban Transportation Research (CUTR) and Social Bicycles, the Rec Center will soon unveil Share-A-Bull, a bike rental program that will eliminate the need for students to flock to the Outdoor Recreation office every day. The program, originally pioneered by Yu Zhang, a professor in the College of Engineering, consists of 100 bikes placed around campus. “(Zhang) wanted to do some research around alternative transportation around campus,” said Francis Morgan, assistant director of Outdoor Recreation. Zhang submitted a proposal for the bike-sharing program to the Student Green Energy Fund in collaboration with the Rec Center.
“We have infrastructure, we have vehicles, we have people who know how to fix bikes, to operate the system,” Morgan said. The program will be available to students to unlock and ride for free for up to two hours each day. Each bike will be equipped with a computer that requires a passcode from the corresponding mobile app to unlock. When someone registers for an account, they will be required to put in a form of payment, but only as a means of paying fees incurred by misuse of the bikes. And the program isn’t only for students, as Morgan said faculty and staff can also use the program. Morgan has worked together with Zhang and CUTR in developing the program, and he said using the bikes is very simple. “People are going to download the app, and once they’re registered … they’ll just sign in with their single sign-on, just like they do with anything else on campus,” he said. “When they go in, if they want a
n See BIKES on PAGE 2
USF course to pilot first open-access e-textbook By Russell Nay A S S T .
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The day when students are no longer required to pay hundreds of dollars each semester for textbooks and course materials may finally be on the horizon. During his recent fall address to faculty, USF Provost Ralph Wilcox announced that the students enrolled in professor Jennifer Schneider’s Literature in Childhood Education course
will use an open-access e-textbook to read digital literature collections, move through interactive lessons and visit children’s literature museums. “If we can find a way to reduce the cost of textbooks for students and engage them more fully in the learning process, students of this generation, I think, are going to be all the more successful,” Wilcox said in an interview. Schneider, an associate professor in the College of
n See BOOKS on PAGE 3