THENORTHERNLIGHT FEATURES
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UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
february 18, 2014
A&E
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Unsung heroes of the civil rights movement
eerickson@thenorthernlight.org
The idea that all people should be given the opportunity to educate themselves and not be denied access to knowledge based on an inability to pay is an American notion that goes back centuries with the advent of public libraries. With the Internet, the concept of open educational resources, or OER, has exploded into a global context. A 2001 announcement by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to offer all of its undergraduate and graduate-level courses online for free helped spur an OER movement that today comprises countless free learning resources and touches every corner of the planet. In 2007, Apple got involved by launching iTunes U, a free service that hosts course materials for thousands of private and public educational institutions,
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‘Happiest 5K’ returns to Anchorage in 2014
UAA to try out iTunes U By Evan Erickson
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from UC Berkeley to Kyoto University to the Springfield Public School District. As of 2013, Apple claims iTunes U content downloads have exceeded one billion, with Stanford and Britain’s Open University both surpassing 60 million content downloads each. The University of Alaska has maintained an iTunes U account for over six years, but it wasn’t until last December that UAA began to post its own original content. The push to get UAA involved came from Academic Innovations and eLearning team member Sarah Frick, who personally worked with an Apple representative for more than a year to create access. Frick, who is a stern believer in open educational resources, cites multiple potential benefits of iTunes U at UAA.
SEE iTunes u
‘Wolves move up in WCHA
photo by Adam Eberhardt
Freshman forward Hudson Friesen skates by a Bowling Green defender Feb.14 in the Sullivan Arena.
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What’s happening on campus this week? Tuesday, Feb. 18
7:30 a.m. “1964 Artifacts of Good Friday
Saturday Feb. 22
9:30 a.m. Rondy Frostbite Footrace and
Earthquake” Exhibition, paintings by Theodore Kincaid (Arc Gallery, UAA/APU Consortium Library, First Floor)
Costume Fun Run (Fifth Ave. Skywalk at the Egan Center)
10:00 a.m. Fur Rondy Amateur Photo Contest
9:00 a.m. Tanaina Child Development Center Supply Drive (Tanaina Child Development
(The Mall at Sears)
7:30 p.m. Symphony of Sounds (Fine Arts
Center, UAA Student Union)
11:30 a.m. University of the Arctic Conversation with the Provost (UAA/APU Consortium Library, Room 307)
5:00 p.m. The Student Union Gallery presents ‘Notions of Time’ Opening Reception (UAA Student Union Gallery)
Wednesday, Feb. 19
Building, Recital Hall)
Sunday Feb. 23
9:00 a.m.Fur Rondy State of Alaska Hide and Horn Auction Preview (Third Ave. & E St.)
9:00 a.m. Rondy Snowshoe Softball (Kosinski Field. E 16th Ave. & Cordova Ave.)
10:00 a.m. Ice Bolwing (The New Peanut Farm, 5227 Old Seward Hwy)
5:00 p.m. ‘Readings, Writings and Passages’ with Sean Schubert, David Brown, David Onofrychuk and Bethany Maile (UAA Campus Bookstore)
7:00 p.m. Movie and discussion: ‘Inequality For All’ (UAA Rasmuson Hall, Room 101)
Thursday, Feb. 20
4:00 p.m. Symphony of Sounds (Fine Arts Building, Recital Hall)
Monday Feb. 24
3:00 p.m. High Country Kennels Dog Sled Rides (Delaney Park Strip, 10th Ave. & E St.)
6:00 p.m. ‘Archaeology of the PleistoceneHolocene Transition in the Northern Baikalian Siberia, Russia’ with Aleksei Tetenkin (UAA/APU Consortium Library,
10:00 a.m. Alaska Native Scholarship and Internship Fair (UAA Student Union)
11:30 a.m. Think Tank: ‘How do we serve the homeless?’ with Catholic Social Services
Room 307)
7:00 p.m. Native Musicale (ChangePoint
(UAA/APU Consortium Library, Room 307)
7:30 p.m. Wil Haygood presents ‘The Butler’ (UAA Wendy Williamson Auditorium)
Friday Feb. 21
Auditorium, 6689 Changepoint Dr.)
Tuesday Feb. 25
10:00 a.m. Open Art Display (Anchorage Senior Activity Center, 1300 E. 19th Ave.)
10:00 a.m. Fur Rondy GCI Snow Sculpture
5:30 p.m. Oyster Shucking Contest (Sea
Competition (Ship Creek Ave.)
12:00 p.m. Fur Rondy World Championship Sled Dog Race Day 1 (Fourth Ave. & D St.) 1:00 p.m. Fur Rondy Carnival (Third Ave. & E St.) 3:00 p.m. Friday Student Recitals (Fine Arts
Galley, 4101 Credit Union drive)
6:00 p.m. Fourth annual Beard and ‘Stache
Building, Room 150)
SEE WCHa
Competition (UAA Student Union)
UAA’s Winterfest 2014 is Feb. 21 through March 1
University enrollment down, funds decrease By Suhaila Brunelle
news@thenorthernlight.org The University of Alaska system is experiencing a period of low enrollment this spring. Lower enrollment means the university has less money from student tuition to cover operational costs. Eric Pedersen, associate vice chancellor for Enrollment Services, said enrollment across the entire university system is down about 4 percent, with UAA’s decline hovering around 3.5 percent. This is not the first semester enrollment has been down at UAA. In 2010 and 2011, enrollment was up, but it quickly dropped. In order to understand why enrollment suddenly spiked then dropped off, the university hired an independent research group to look at the numbers. The results paralleled almost directly with the population growth in Anchorage and the Matanuska-Susitna Valley and the number of high school graduates in the area. The number of projected high school graduates has flattened out recently and is not expected to increase until around 2028. In response to the research, the university created a new division within the Student Affairs Office called the Student Access, Advising and Transition program, or SAAT.
The division’s goal is to recruit local high school students and support nontraditional students in their educational goals. “The program helps facilitate and transition first-year students into their second year and is available for all students,” said Lacy Karpilo, associate vice chancellor for SAAT. Karpilo said the staff at UAA is dedicated to and passionate about student success, and there are many ways students can get help if they are having trouble transitioning into college. Since the rate of high school graduates in Alaska has dropped, the university is strategizing ways to balance out the effects of that lowered rate on enrollment. “The university can put some more effort into recruiting transfer students. We also need to build university budgets based on the fact that enrollment might be down, and we may need to adjust things slightly,” Pedersen said. Though overall headcount is down, more students are enrolled in upper-division classes than lower-division classes, and students are taking more credit hours on average than in previous semesters. The university is now focusing on how to absorb the cost of lower enrollment for Fiscal Year 2015, which begins July 1, but does not want to cut any programs directly related to student success.
Remembering the career of Philip Seymour Hoffman By Jacob Holley-Kline arts2@thenorthernlight.org
Photo courtesy of Miller Mobley
facebook.com/northernlightuaa
Philip Seymour Hoffman, the consummate character actor who has starred in movies such as “Capote,” “Synechdoche, New York” and “The Master,” was found dead by police in his New York City apartment Feb. 2 from an apparent drug overdose. He was 46. In a career spanning two decades, Hoffman displayed a profound empathy for his subjects. From the lovelorn masturbator Allen in “Happiness” to the gay boom operator Scotty J. in “Boogie Nights,” he brought humanity to isolated characters with a characteristic verisimilitude. Hoffman was born in Fairport, N.Y., in 1967 and began acting in high school. After receiving his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in drama from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, he achieved fame with a 1991 guest spot on “Law & Order.” Soon after, Hoffman picked up small roles in “Scent of a Woman” and “Hard
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Eight.” Mainstream success eluded him until his 1998 appearances in six movies including “Nobody’s Fool” and “Twister.” But it was his Oscar-winning turn as Truman Capote in 2007’s “Capote” that elevated him to ecstatic heights. He would earn three more nominations for supporting roles in “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “Doubt” and “The Master.” But perhaps his best performance is as the tortured playwright Caden Cotard in Charlie Kaufman’s “Synechdoche, New York.” It’s a towering display of Hoffman’s knack for depicting the damaged. His two final movies, “A Most Wanted Man” and “God’s Pocket,” screened at Sundance and will be released later this year. Since he died before filming his final scenes in “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 2,” a computer generated image recreation of the late actor will appear in the final scene. He is survived by his wife, Mimi O’Donnell, and three children.
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