The Fordham Ram Serving The Fordham dh University Community Since 1918 Volume 97, Issue 20
FordhamRam.com
November 11, 2015
Fordham Falters in New Report
For Student Athletes, Grad Rates Increase
By LAURA SANICOLA
By ERIN SHANAHAN
NEWS EDITOR
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
Fordham placed 1,166th out of 1,275 universities in a ranking of U.S. colleges and universities released by The Economist in late October. The rankings, which were the first-ever released by the magazine, were derived from “a simple, if debatable, premise: the economic value of a university is equal to the gap between how much money its students subsequently earn, and how much they might have made had they studied elsewhere.” It places Fordham in the eighth percentile with expected earnings of $59,931 and actual earnings of $55,400, a devaluation of $4,531. The rankings compare the estimated salary of a college’s current students to the real salaries of alumni that share certain characteristics. Fordham placed far behind several of the nation’s Catholic universities, including University of Notre Dame (193), Georgetown University (16) and Boston College (587). However, it placed 104 places above Yale Uni-
This past Wednesday, Nov. 4, the NCAA released the graduation rates and graduation success rates for the 2005-2008 cohorts. With a 93 percent graduation success rate, Fordham University is ranked among the top schools in the Atlantic 10. "We are proud of the NCAA graduation success rate results which are a direct result of the hard work our student-athletes put in, both on and off the playing fields," Dave Roach, director of Fordham Athletics, said to Fordham Sports News. "It is also a testament of the dedication demonstrated by our coaches, academic advisors and the entire academic support team, as well as the faculty, at Fordham." Fordham’s Athletes’ Federal graduation rate is 87 percent, higher than the overall Fordham student body rate of 80 percent as well as the NCAA student-athlete average of 67 percent. Fordham's 93 percent graduation success rate is fourth among all Atlantic 10 schools. Fordham’s NCAA rate was only beat out by Davidson (98), Dayton (95) and George Washington (94). The Federal Rate differs from the Graduation Success Rate (GSR) for Division I in two ways. U.S. Department of Education requires the student-athlete graduation rate to be calculated based on IPEDS-GRS method, according to Roach. This method looks at the graduation rate of athletes who enter the university as firstyear, full-time student-athletes with institutional aid. Athletes must graduate from their institution within six years to be a part of the Federal Rate. Student athletes who transfer from Fordham are considered non-graduates at both the college they left and the one from which they will eventually graduate through the Federal Rate. The NCAA was asked in the early 2000s to develop a more modern and fair measure of
SEE RANKINGS, PAGE 6
New Social Work Major Approved By CAILIN MCKENNA ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
Fordham Rose Hill social work majors received exciting news a few weeks ago when the Fordham College Rose Hill Council, a council of associate professors, approved a proposal to create a stand-alone major. The standalone social work major has been in place at Fordham College Lincoln Center and the School of Professional and Continuing Studies for several years. However, Rose Hill students will now be able to concentrate on their social work major without having to fulfill the requirement of a second major. The Bachelors of Arts in Social Work program is accredited by the Council of Social Work Education and ranked as the fourth leading social work undergraduate program in the nation. Fordham’s program is a five-year accelerated Bachelor of Arts and Masters of Arts program in which students receive both a BASW degree and a MSW degree. Many social work majors at the university opt to take a fifth year of classes in order to earn a masters degree in social work. “In line with Fordham’s strong commitment to social jusSEE SOCIAL WORK, PAGE 5
ANDREW ESOLDI/THE FORDHAM RAM
Rams Soar High Above Bucknell In their last regular season home game on Family Weekend, Fordham defeated Bucknell 24-16. See Page 20
Protests on Race Reach Fever Pitch Demands for Response Mount at Fordham and Across Nation By JOE VITALE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Following a string of racial and bias incidents at the University of Missouri, protests from students and threats of boycott from student-athletes came to a head this week when two top administrators agreed to step down from their positions at the university. Students there were calling for ad-
ministrative action after what they said were inadequate responses to discrimination and racism directed at students of color. Yielding to the demands of student and faculty organizers, Tim Wolfe, the university president, took responsibility for the simmering tensions on the university’s campus, suggesting his resignation “was something that needed to be done that was im-
mediate and substantial for us to heal.” The organizing students at Missouri are not alone in their calls for swifter and stronger responses to incidents of discrimination on college campuses. At other universities across the county, including Yale University, the University of California Los Angeles, the University of MichiSEE INCIDENTS, PAGE 6
Students Stand Alongside ‘Fight for $15’
FORDHAM RAM ARCHIVES
An April rally for higher adjunct wages saw students and professors united.
By KATIE MEYER MANAGING EDITOR
On Tuesday, several groups of Fordham students braved rainy, dreary weather and schlepped downtown for a cause they say cannot be ignored: fair wages. They were attending national coalition Fight for $15’s official Day of Action, which included three major protests through-
out the day and drew hundreds of protestors, all fighting for better pay. Students involved were affiliated with three primary groups: the Rose Hill chapter of Fight for $15, Fordham Students United (FSU) and Fordham Faculty Forward. All came from different backgrounds. FSU supports and ad ocates for a varied assemblage of
causes and describes itself on Facebook as an “intersectional coalition of student leaders, activists, faculty and alumni.” Fordham Faculty Forward is a subdivision of a larger national organization, which is dedicated to raising adjunct wages. Fight for $15 more generally aims to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour nationwide with a special emphasis on raising the wages of fast food workers. But all these student groups, as they joined with hundreds of other protestors at various points throughout the day, were united under one cause. As Mohan Seshadri, FCRH ’16, a member of both FSU and Fordham Faculty Forward, said, the idea behind the protests transcended ideologies. “A living wage is important because we all have a right to live, ‘to be human,’ and to take care of ourselves and our families,” Seshadri, who played a large role in mobilizing students for the event, said The Day of Action started early Tuesday morning, with students meeting to catch a bus from Rose Hill at 4 a.m. They were in Brooklyn by 5 a.m., and congregated with other protestors at CadSEE PROTEST, PAGE 5
SEE ATHLETES, PAGE 2
in this issue
Opinion
Page 7
NYC Benefits Students by Making SAT free
Culture
Page 11
Does Social Media Win Debates?
Sports Page 20 Fordham Defeats Bucknell In Final Home Game