Vol84issue18

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THE MANEATER

FEBRUARY 7, 2018 • THEMANEATER.COM

A researcher uses The Connector’s user-friendly BINDERS tool to construct a project profile. PHOTO BY PAIGE SAILORS | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

RESEARCH

MU Libraries brings back Research Smarter, Not Harder workshop series for spring semester These workshops aim to help students and faculty familiarize themselves with various databases and provide basic tutorials regarding research. TASHFIA PARVEZ

Staff Writer

MU Libraries has brought back the Research Smarter, Not Harder: Fridays

@ the Library Workshops for the spring 2018 semester. Every semester, workshops are held on Fridays at Ellis Library to promote better research skills among students and faculty by helping them navigate the resources and databases the library has to offer. Joe Askins, head of MU Libraries Instructional Services, said there is a different topic every week that is not designed for any specific class, so anyone can come in and learn the basic functions of various databases that

may be useful for a class assignment. “It’s my responsibility to identify topics and themes that would make for good workshops, find the appropriate librarians (or faculty, staff, and/or students) to present those workshops and put together the schedule,” Askins said in an email. The first workshop of the semester — “Finding Government Statistics for Your Research Project” — was held Jan. 26. The presentation was led by Marie Concannon, head of government information and data archives at MU

ENROLLMENT

Six residence halls to reopen for fall 2018 A 16.8 percent increase in applications will likely bring in a larger freshman class. WILLIAM SKIPWORTH

Staff Writer

The university announced at the UM System Board of Curators meeting on Thursday that six of the seven residence halls that were offline this year are set to reopen for the 2018-19 school year. The seventh, Responsibility, will be rented out by MU Health Care for an administrative building. MU closed Center, Discovery, Excellence, McDavid,

Responsibility, Respect and Schurz residence halls during the 201617 school year after seeing low freshman enrollment. Some of those residence halls were used as guest housing for football weekends and other special events. The reopening of these halls comes in the wake of a report that next year’s freshman class may see a rise in enrollment due to increased applications. This could end a two-year stretch of falling enrollment that many attribute to racial controversies on campus in 2015. The university has received 16.8 percent more freshman applications than it had at this time last year, jumping from 15,060 to 17,583, according to a Jan. 29 MU News

Bureau release. This is significant for the Department of Residential Life, as the only students required to live on campus are freshmen. Transfer applications also saw an increase, rising from 806 to 904. Residence Halls Association President Maggie Recca is also excited about some of the residence halls reopening. “I know last year we were a little bummed whenever some of the halls got closed, which really they went offline because of enrollment, and enrollment is looking really good for next year,” Recca said. Recca said that growth in the number of operating residence

RISE | Page 4

Libraries. College of Education graduate student Dena Lane-Bonds attended the first workshop. She decided to come after initially having trouble finding government data for her research project and found the workshop very informative. “I began to look at different education data that can actually tabulate the data for you instead of

AIM | Page 4

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

PHOTO BY COURTNEY VILLMERE | SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Analysis: Women’s basketball needs to win out page 11


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