The Battalion - February 11, 2019

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11 | SERVING TEXAS A&M SINCE 1893 | © 2019 STUDENT MEDIA

Defending Davis Diamond

No. 20 Texas A&M began its inaugural season at newly completed Davis Diamond. Cassie Stricker — THE BATTALION

No. 20 A&M softball goes 4-1 during opening weekend at new stadium By Angel Franco @angelmadison_ The cold, wet weather in College Station this weekend didn’t stop No. 20 Texas A&M softball from outscoring opponents 5314 on the opening weekend of the season.

For the first time since 2016, A&M was unable to sweep its opponents in the annual Aggie Classic tournament. The 2019 edition of the opening weekend invitational featured North Texas, California Baptist and Northern Colorado. The Aggies capped off a 4-1 record in the tournament with a commanding 15-0 run rule victory over California Baptist on Sunday. The Aggies jumped to a 9-0 lead in the bottom of the first half after A&M batted around

the order. Junior outfielder Kelbi Fortenberry capped off the scoring with a three-run home run with two outs. Texas A&M head coach Jo Evans said having a statement win after a major loss is important for team morale. “After not feeling great about that loss and seeing if we’re resilient and can manage this, I thought we did a great job,” Evans said. “When I showed up to meet with our team, I was walking down the hall and I could hear

them clearly just cutting up and getting loose, which is what I wanted to see.” The playing on Saturday was the polar opposite. In game one of the day, A&M defeated Northern Colorado 9-1 in five innings after an explosive second inning. Sophomore Gabby Moreno began the scoring after singling up the middle with two outs. After sophomore Ashlynn Walls singled SOFTBALL ON PG. 4

Food for thought Research to address current issues in nutrition, agriculture

By Savannah Mehrtens @SJMehrtens A new research institute focused on nutrition and agriculture has started its work with funding from the USDA. Texas A&M AgriLife Research’s Institute for Precision Nutrition, Responsive Agriculture and Health will include five multidisciplinary research hubs and two core facilities. The institute will give students and faculty members a chance to collaborate on cutting-edge research, said Susan Ballabina, deputy vice chancellor for Texas A&M AgriLife. “For students, they’re going to get great practical experience with world class researchers in these critical areas of food and health,” Ballabina said. The center will help identify where some chronic diseases can stem from, said AgriLife research spokesperson Blair Fannin said. Students can learn about how this may affect them or their families throughout their lives. “Nutrition plays just a critical role in our daily lives and eating good, healthy foods is the key to maintaining a healthy lifestyle, along with daily exercise and so forth,” Fannin said. Ballabina said the hiring and staffing process has begun, and she hopes the center will be running at full force in a few months. “We have already received some funding through the USDA to put together a research program around responsive agriculture, precision agriculture and precision nutrition — and more specifically, to bridge the gap between ag producers and consumers,” Ballabina said. “This is a very innovative way to approach agriculture and consumers, and I think it will be a real public value as we move into the future.”

Patrick Stover, AgriLife Research director and a dominant leader in the creation of the center, said the issue facing production agriculture is that the more that is produced, the lower the profit margins will be. There is also a tie to human health, which the center will be able to research. “Our producers are struggling,” Stover said.

Graphic by Nic Tan — THE BATTALION

“On the other hand, diet-related chronic disease costs the U.S. economy about a trillion dollars a year and is a major driver of healthcare costs. What we want to do is have a research initiative and also lead into extension and to the other service functions that we do. Our training for students is really to try to bring together ... production agriculture and human health.” Stover said the center is research-

ing a wide variety of implementations ranging from changes in the food itself to the effects on human health and on the environment from creating food. “On the responsive agriculture side, we can work on improving the quality of the food, try to breed out and remove a lot of the calories, put in more micronutrients so it has better health effects,” Stover said. “Also, continue to minimize the environmental footprint of the food system in terms of water usage and input usage.” Research will be done for the consumer side as well, inluding the use of technology such as a nutrition app and improvements to the quality of food consumed. “On the consumer side as well — address that simultaneously — by not only having higher quality food but really finding ways to motivate consumers to make the right choices, the helpful choices,” Stover said. One of Stover’s main goals is to help people find the connection between their health and their nutrition, and also involve the producers in such a way that they can be more understanding of consumer needs. “We want to build our precision technologies that allow consumers not only to monitor on a daily basis what their food habits [and] food intakes are, but also track their chronic disease,” Stover said. “They can see how when they make a lifestyle change, such as diet, they can see how that either accelerates or lessens their chronic disease progression or their likelihood to get chronic disease.” Fannin said the center’s broad focus can help yield a broad range of positive outcomes for the state and nation. “It’s a very broad, very extensive system that’s being developed in this institute,” Fannin said. “[It] will feature a variety of researchers across A&M AgriLife research, we’ll also be using AgriLife extension to some degree, but all of this is going to work in concert with the goal of making Texas healthier as well as the U.S.”

Cassie Stricker — THE BATTALION

A Learning Management System selection subcommittee is searching for a replacement for eCampus.

Out with the old University looks to replace current eCampus system, asks for student, faculty opinions on potential options By Camryn Lang @CamrynLang Texas A&M’s contract with the current eCampus learning management system is nearing its expiration date, and the university is looking to make improvements for future programs. The Blackboard Learn contract will expire on Aug. 31, 2021, and the Learning Management System selection subcommittee (LMS) has formed under the Division of IT’s Governance program to find a replacement. Canvas, Blackboard Ultra and Brightspace are all under consideration. The committee is updating system capabilities to give faculty and students a more intuitive experience. The official selection will be presented to the Executive IT Council on July 11. Sharon Mainka, the assistant chief of staff to the vice president for information technology and chief information officer, said the LMS subcommittee wants to find a system that most adequately aids student learning. “Ideally the LMS system should be an enhancement and a support for education for the students; a place for the faculty to go and put content for the students to help with their learning,” Mainka said. All three companies created sample versions of their software for faculty to test during the selection process. This allows users to generate mock versions of their courses with features including class links and a gradebook. “The goal is to have a tool that would benefit the students and the faculty, to make it easy for the faculty to get the content to the students that the students need,” Mainka said. “We also want student input on this, because students are the biggest users of this LMS.” As a co-chair on the committee, faculty senator and ECAMPUS ON PG. 2


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