Spring 2019 - Issue 2

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CATALYST

BRIEFS BOB WOODSON pg.

february 20, 2019 VOLUME XXXVIII ISSUE 2

New College of Florida's student-run newspaper

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Record number of New College students present at Florida Conference of Historians BY NOAH BASLAW From Feb. 22-23, the Florida Conference of Historians (FCH) will be hosted on New College’s campus. Presentations of diverse and compelling historical topics will be available for both the New College and greater Sarasota communities, which means students will be given the opportunity to practice talking about their research in public. This year also marks the largest group of New College students to present at the annual conference. Additionally, this year’s conference is eager to showcase their keynote speaker, history professor at the University of Chicago, Dr. Kenneth Pomeranz. The title of his talk will be: How Did China Get So Big? Redefining the Realm and Its Subjects, 1750-1900. Pomeranz is a prolific writer and a well-known scholar, specifically for his book The Great Divergence: China, Europe and the Making of the Modern World Economy. Moreover, in

parallel with New College’s Black His- Co-President of FCH David Harvey tory Month (BHM) programming, FCH told the Catalyst. Harvey is leading the will host two plenary sessions presented charge in organizing FCH on the New by the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI)—the College campus, alongside New College first being “Overcoming Our History of Professor of History Brendan Goff. Harvey has Hate,” and the secknown about FCH ond “Public History, “Presenting at a he began reSocial Justice: The historical conference as since ceiving periodical Making of the Nanotices from the tional Memorial for an undergraduate conference organPeace and Justice.” student is not very izers in 2000, the The Florida common.” same year he arrived Conference of Hisat New College. torians has been “I got involved with FCH for the around for more than 50 years. It began as a professional society for history teach- first time in 2006,” Harvey said. “One of ers in the community college system and the things I liked about it was that it had other less selective private college sys- an undergraduate research section, which tems in Florida. It grew to include faculty is really unusual among history conferat the research universities, graduate and ences. I immediately saw the potential for undergraduate students and some histo- taking New College students and having this be a venue that could show off our rians from outside of the state. “We always get a few people from program in a good way.” Over the next few years, he tried to beyond Florida or even from abroad,” New College Professor of History and get some students involved and took a

few of them to the conference to present their papers. “Initially I was marketing it towards thesis students,” Harvey said. But he thinks that branding scared too many people away, since many thesis students are not ready to present in the beginning of spring term. “It was when we opened it up to a broader student population that we started to see a lot more participation,” Harvey explained. “I hosted the conference for the first time in 2013 and then we got even more New College students participating, and that’s when it really gelled.” Since then, New College has taken a sizable number of cohorts to FCH each year. Over the last few years, the conference has expanded in scope, according to Harvey. He thinks the coordinated efforts of fellow history colleagues in the

for me.” Winfrey was among the students who first piloted the e-contract system with her contract sponsor, Professor of Classics Carl Shaw. “Initially I was a little skeptical about them,” Winfrey said. “I’m pretty satisfied with them [but] I feel like we lost a personal touch.” There was some concern that e-contracts would detract from or hinder in-person meetings when the system was first announced. Baram does not find this to be an issue. “I’m very comfortable interacting on email and other forms, and I don’t think that is an artificial conversation,” Baram said. “The piece of paper was never the basis of my face to face interactions with my advisees.” Faculty members cannot edit the contents of the e-contracts. They can only choose to electronically sign it or not. “We decided that because the contract was an agreement between the student and the faculty member, and because it would be very difficult to modify the system as it currently exists, that the preference would be to completely have the student fill out their e-contract,” Regis-

“I filled out my contract completely and just forgot to scroll down and electronically sign it before the deadline, I then got kicked off of Canvas for all my classes without warning and received a letter in the mail saying I was no longer registered at New College,” Ernst said in an email interview. “So I had to call the Registrar’s office and they sent me a form to petition the Provost. They also said I would have to pay a $50 late fee. I was told that the fee would most likely be waived due to this being a technical issue though.” Scholten said that the e-signature was redundant because one has to verify themselves to access the Student Evaluation System (SES) with their myNCF login. Ernst agrees that a “submit” button would be more intuitive. “If they would have found a way to have a “submit” button, that would have cleared things up very quickly,” Ernst said. “That way, students have to scroll all the way to the bottom and make sure they filled everything out before leaving it for approval. As it is now, you just fill

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E-contracts go campus wide for Spring semester BY MICHALA HEAD

https://doc-0k-18-docs. googleusercontent.com/ docs/securesc/s7jurnmk912se8sp3mgg3hd8llrh0uos/obdpo7fpcdn719co01n4qb7

First piloted in the fall semester of 2018 by seven professors and their advisees, e-contracts fully replaced New College’s previous paper contract system the following spring. The campus seemingly did just fine with the change. “I thought it actually went really smoothly, everyone got things to me in a timely manner,” Professor of Anthropology Uzi Baram said. “Information popped up as it needed to in email and on the page. It all fits what we have talked about in previous semesters.” Baram said the e-contract was a good solution to the time management issues that would come up with paper contracts. “What’s nice about the e-contracts is that students don’t need to rush to find me to get a physical signature and don’t have to rush to hand it in by 5 o’clock on that second Wednesday,” Baram said. “I definitely put it off to the last minute,” second-year Anna Lynn Winfrey said. “There wasn’t any way I could have gotten my advisor to sign it at 2 a.m. on Tuesday morning when I actually sent it in, so I guess that was more convenient

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juried art show

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trar Brian Scholten said. “And then that would be a static document that the faculty sponsor would review. If they wanted to have the student make changes before they approve it, then they would have to communicate that to the student.” Scholten also discussed the potential futures for this online system. “Eventually we would like the whole registration process, and things that are associated with it, to be part of the e-contract system, even if we change the name of it,” Scholten said, referring to registration documents. “The plan is, sometime in the future, to make the [Prospective Area of Concentration] PAOC and the Thesis Prospectus forms electronic documents.” More short term goals include e-contracts for study abroad students, who mailed in paper contracts rather than having the e-contract system available to them this semester, improving the functionality for professors by allowing them to create and propose tutorials in the system and adding a “submit” button in place of the e-signature. Thesis student Eva Ernst would have preferred a submit button to the e-signature.

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Activist Newsletter

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8 Bhm open mic


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