Issue 40

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Lanthorn G R A N D VA L L EY

T H E S T U D E N T- R U N N E W S PA P E R S AT G R A N D V A L L E Y. W W W. L A N T H O R N . CO M VIEW THE SLIDESHOWS:

INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

R E A D T H E B LO G :

M./W. BASKETBALL TEAMS FACE OFF AGAINST LAKE SUPERIOR STATE

M. BASKETBALL SWEEPS WEEKEND OPPONENTS

‘NOTES FROM ABROAD’: COURTNEY HART BLOGS ABOUT LIFE IN TAIWAN

www.lanthorn.com/multimedia

SPORTS I B1

www.lanthorn.com/blog

M O N DAY, F E B R UA RY 6 , 2 01 2

Team-taught courses a rare advantage at GV BY Lizzy Balboa GVL NEWS EDITOR

GVL / Bo Anderson

Better than one: Jeff Chamberlain speaks to students in Live. Learn. Lead., a course team taught by four Honors faculty members, including Chamberlain. GVSU has 184 team-taught course sections.

As a liberal arts institution, Grand Valley State University manifests its interdisciplinary by investing in team-taught courses, which often combine professors of different departments or colleges to provide various viewpoints on different subjects. According to records kept by Institutional Analysis, GVSU had 184 course sections with more than one professor during the 2010-2011 school year. These teamtaught courses made up 1.7 percent of the total 11,000 sections offered. “The university believes that bringing

together the perspectives of two people, perhaps from different disciplines, can be extremely advantageous for students,” said Mary Eilleen Lyon, assistant vice president for News and Information Services. “It is one of many valuable approaches to teaching.” With Honors Jeffery Chamberlain, director of the Frederik Meijer Honors College, said GVSU is unique in offering team-taught courses. “It’s not done nearly as much (as GVSU does it),” Chamberlain said. “It’s talked SEE TEAM, A4

Probation violations increase at GV

GVL / Robert Mathews

Fight for justice: Former Olymian John Carlos (left) and author Dave Zirin discuss athletics, racism and power during Thursday’s event.

Athlete brings racial, political insight to GV BY Brady Fredericksen GVL Sports Editor

GVL Archive

Checking in: A GVPD officer checks the list of probationers. More than 100 GVSU students are currently on probation that the university is aware of.

GVPD list of students on probation surpasses 100 in 2012, violations hit 42 in 2010-11 BY Chelsea Lane GVL STAFF WRITER

A

t first glance, it would seem that a legal rehabilitation system first pioneered by Boston boot maker John Augustus in the mid-1800s would have little impact on the modern college student’s life. But for the approximately 100 Grand Valley State University students presently on probation, the system requires many life changes, and for the increasing number

of students who violate probation, some tough decisions, too. The number of GVSU students on probation constantly fluctuates, but Grand Valley Police Department Officer Jeff Stoll, who executes the required drug and alcohol tests for students on probation, said GVPD’s list currently sits at just over 100 students. The list usually has between 80 and 130 students on it, with the number decreasing during the summer months. However, this list only reflects the

number of students on probation that the university is aware of. Most of GVSU’s probationers are serving probation through the Ottawa County Court system, but if a court puts a student on probation from a different part of the state, the student is not required to disclose that information to the university unless specifically asked or their probation officer requires it. Stoll said the number of violators that SEE PROBATION, A4

The two hour-long, standing-room only conversation between Olympian John Carlos and author Dave Zirin at “Not Just a Game: Politics and Power in American Sports” on Feb. 2 didn’t touch much on athletics, but athletics weren’t the point. The event wasn’t about Carlos’ efforts in the 1968 Summer Olympics or his bronze medal in the 200-meter dash that year, it was his involvement in the civil rights movement and how his impact from that day in Mexico City is still felt today. Carlos stood with American teammate Tommie Smith, the gold medalist, on the medal podium and as the American flag was raised, the duo each raised a fists in the air, signifying racial solidarity and creating one of the most memorable moments in civil right’s history. “It wasn’t about the medal, there was no need to suffice my taste buds for an Olympic SEE OLYMPIAN, A4

No changes planned for sabbaticals BY Samantha Belcher GVL STAFF WRITER

Courtesy Photo / Heather Tafel

On the road: GVSU professor Heather Tafel poses outside of St. Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow during her sabbatical from GVSU. About 61 professors, or 7.3 percent, go on sabbaticals each year.

Professor sabbaticals have come under fire as university budgets tighten, but Grand Valley State University Provost Gayle Davis said the amount of sabbaticals at GVSU won’t change. Currently about 61 of GVSU’s 834 tenured or tenure-track professors, or 7.3 percent, take sabbaticals each year, according to data from GVSU’s Office of Institutional Analysis. Of those, 47, or 77 percent, take off one semester, with the rest taking off the whole

year. Professors and staff members can take semester- or year-long breaks from their jobs to volunteer, travel, study or research. They receive full pay for one semester or half pay for a full year. According to GVSU’s Administrative Manual, “Sabbatical leaves are intended primarily to encourage and promote the professional growth of those with faculty status and to enhance their teaching and scholarly effectiveness.” Davis said sabbaticals are “practically indispensable” because they provide SEE SABBATICAL, A4


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