Year in Review 2021-2022

Page 35

NEWS: ACADEMICS

The college decided not to conduct the dean searches in the 2020–21 academic year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The interim deans will remain in place for the 2021–22 academic year. Steve TenEyck, professor and chair of the Department of Theatre Arts, said that he was made aware of the potential department move at the end of Spring 2021. He said that the new dean of the School of Music will be responsible for both the Department of Theatre Arts and the School of Music beginning in Fall 2022. “There are some scheduled sessions to hear from faculty and staff from both units about what this might look like,” TenEyck said via email. “So we are early in the process.” Walz said conversations between the School of Music and the Department of Theatre Arts are beginning to figure out how to move forward. “I am looking forward to hearing from faculty and staff about benefits, and, so far, I have heard ideas around collaboration, curriculum and admissions,” she said via email. Walz also said there have been conversations about the search for the new dean of the School of Music. Junior Anchal Dhir is a student in both the School of Music and the Department of Theatre Arts. She said she is getting her bachelor’s in music and has an outside focus in theater arts management. She said she thinks the department moving to the School of Music makes sense to her and seems like a fairly harmless, understandable decision for the college to make. “The students who are in the music school are interacting with people from the musical theater program,” she said. “There’s so many different events and auditions that are interconnected. It would just make more sense for all the information to be distributed to all of the students in one way.” Dhir said she missed out on important opportunities like auditions because the School of Music and Department of Theatre Arts are not very connected. However, she also said she was not fully aware of what the second phase of the APP was and what the process would entail, but she said she thinks that a lot of the

things that will happen are good ideas. “It all sounds like positive business ventures for Ithaca College,” Dhir said. “It doesn’t seem like anything that would negatively impact students. It all seems like this is positive.” However, Dhir said that she felt like there was not a lot of open communication about what people should be expecting from the second and third phases. “A simple email is enough to tell us what’s going on,” she said. Stein also said the college is reexamining the admissions process. The “Shape of the College” document recommended broadening the way students apply to specific schools within the college. The Park Pathways program was included in the “Shape of the College” document. The program is expected to start in the 2022–23 academic year. Students can apply undecided to the Park School, take a variety of classes in different departments throughout their first year and then declare a major during their third semester. Jeane Copenhaver-Johnson, associate provost in the Department of Academic Affairs, and Stacia Zabusky, senior associate dean for curriculum and undergraduate programs in the School of Humanities and Sciences, are the co-chairs of the Curricular Revision Liaison Committee (CRLC). Copenhaver-Johnson said that the CRLC is meant to support faculty while departments begin to think about curricular revision. She said that this is a way to support student achievement and success while at the college. However, she said many of the revised curricular changes will be seen starting Fall 2023. “Students in some departments may be consulted as their faculty consider changes to programs or majors, as also happens during the regular program review process,” she said via email. Copenhaver-Johnson said departments started to submit proposals for any kind of curriculum changes this academic year. She said the CRLC will be working with the Academic Policies Committee to review curriculum proposals on a rolling basis throughout the year. Copenhaver-Johnson said the revisions vary from department to department, depending on how recently the curriculum was last revised or what faculty have been thinking of doing to their curriculum. “We already have been hearing many innovative ideas from some departments and look forward to collaborating with our colleagues on these exciting curricular developments,” she said via email.

Editorial: Merger overshadowed by lack of transparency Ithaca College has announced that the School of Music and the Department of Theatre Arts will merge to create a new school: the Ithaca College School of Music, Theatre and Dance. These two are to become one, yet the response to this merging process remains divided, with good reason. Faculty and staff responses are largely split into one of two camps: the vocal minority who opposes the merger and the majority who favors it. There are three things of note here: 1. most who are in the majority do not have the security of tenure, 2. those in the minority are not being afforded the time such a large decision should elicit and 3. this is a major decision that was initiated by a primarily interim administration. How can the interim members of the administration ensure a stable transition and security for students, staff and faculty when their roles are suggested to be temporary? This is a fast-paced, authoritarian move with little regard to what is being ignored — a decision that is the result of disaster capitalism. The merger aligns with the strategic plan, Ithaca Forever, and is a part of the second phase of the Academic Program Prioritization (APP). The first phase of the APP dealt with the devastating ongoing elimination of 116 full-time equivalent faculty positions and a number of majors, departments and programs. The college must learn from its past mistakes with the APP. The new school merger should not be celebrated as readily as it was at the All-College Gathering. If there is one thing that we have learned from this ongoing, worldwide pandemic, it is not that things need to move fast, but that they actually need to slow down. There is nothing slow about this merger. Faculty members, who both oppose and support the merger, will not find a cooperative, fair process when processes are moving along at such a fast pace. How can those opposed to the merger of these two schools truly be listened to and respected by the college? How can those who support this decision find the time to fully support and understand the opinions and concerns of their colleagues on the opposing side? While there certainly are upsides to the merger — like the fact that collaboration between students in the new school will be far easier and that the dance program is receiving a larger spotlight — it is overshadowed by the lack of shared governance and the growing schism between faculty members.

on suites. Ana Maniaci McGough/The Ithacan.

35


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Football Head Coach Leaves

4min
page 146

New Football Head Coach

3min
pages 147-151

Women’s Cross Country Captain 144–145 Equestrian Club

10min
pages 143-145

Gender Equity Gap

5min
page 142

Club Sports

5min
page 140

Editorial: Limited Club Sports Funding

4min
page 141

Basketball Guard 1,000 Career Points

3min
page 136

Sprinter Breaks 60-Meter Dash Record

4min
page 135

Football Kicker Travels Country

6min
page 134

All-Americans

5min
page 133

Editorial: 63rd Cortaca Jug Sparks Concerns

5min
page 131

IC Athletes Attend NCAA Convention

4min
page 132

Shang-Chi

3min
page 116

Cortaca Jug 2022 Venue

3min
page 130

Tick, Tick ... Boom

3min
page 115

Dune

3min
page 114

Super Hearts Day Nerf Event 104–105 State and National Parks

17min
pages 103-107

Encanto

3min
page 113

Editorial: Cons of NFTs

4min
page 111

NFT Trend

3min
page 110

The Milkstand

5min
pages 108-109

Campus Hip-Hop Culture

4min
page 102

Astrology

5min
page 96

School of Music Mental Health Group 98–99 Via’s Cookies

10min
pages 97-101

Pellet Gun Shootings

5min
pages 91-95

Shots-Fired Incident

3min
page 89

Pandemic Budget Cuts 86–91 SAFETY

5min
pages 85-86

Spring Semester Reopening

4min
page 84

Two Swastikas Discovered

5min
page 87

Testing Options

4min
page 83

Surveillance Testing

3min
page 82

Editorial: Mask Mandate Removal

4min
page 81

Indoor Mask Mandate Dropped

4min
page 80

Quarantine Regulations

4min
page 79

Booster Shots

4min
page 78

Synagogue Hostage Crisis Response

5min
page 72

In-Person Fall Classes

4min
page 77

Afghan Refugees

9min
pages 73-76

Reproductive Rights Rally 68–69 Ithaca Decarbonization Plan

20min
pages 67-71

Trader K’s Closing

4min
page 66

Acting Mayor Laura Lewis

4min
page 65

Gentrifcation

4min
page 64

Day of Learning: Grappling with Antisemitism

5min
pages 61-62

Mayor Svante Myrick Resigns

4min
page 63

Campus Climate Initiative

5min
page 60

Commentary: College Fails Students of Color

6min
page 59

Understaffng

5min
page 57

Health Support & Services

4min
page 58

Mouse Sightings

4min
page 56

Commentary: Free Public Transportation

5min
page 55

Inflation

2min
page 54

Center for IDEAS Director

8min
pages 48-50

Zine Addresses Rape Culture

4min
page 52

Student Veteran Support

4min
page 51

Presidential Search

3min
page 44

President La Jerne Cornish

4min
page 46

AAUP Calls for Transparency

5min
page 45

Reaction to 10th President

5min
page 47

Dean Searches

12min
pages 41-43

Editorial: Music Theater School Merger

5min
page 35

Alumni Donations

5min
page 31

Opera Director Program

4min
page 33

Commentary: Course Registration

10min
pages 37-40

Tuition Increase

3min
page 36

Sakai to Canvas

4min
page 32

August & September

2min
page 11

Academic Program Prioritization Phase Two

4min
page 34
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