JUNE 18 - JULY 1 2019
FEATURES
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
A&E
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UAA gears up for summer
THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG
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Discover the spirit within the UAA eSports team
Safety starts with knowledge By Jason Herr
layout@thenorthernlight.org
Sirens wail and lights flash as an emergency vehicle races west along Providence Drive, past the University of Alaska Anchorage. Several times a day, the sirens and lights are urgent and daily reminders that safety is important for students. Safety awareness goes beyond the sirens, as UAA and the University Police Department reinforce this reminder with a variety of events and programs to aid students in growing that awareness. The UAA campus is nestled in the middle of the metropolitan cityscape that is Anchorage, but when it comes to crime and safety, there are definite differences between the two. One major aspect of campus safety is informing students about the Clery Act, which requires colleges and universities to disclose campus crime and security information to the public. Accessing these reports is one way that prospective students can gauge their campus based on crime and safety specific statistics. The U.S. Department of Education, or USDOE, provides an online tool that can be used to access the Clery Act information. It also allows the viewer to compare different schools within the same browser window. The tool can help future students to decide on their destination for higher education, ac-
cording to Michael Votava, the assistant dean of students and director of student conduct and ethical development at UAA. “I think it’s a great tool because students are able to look up information about any college across the country, and they can look at the information and look for trends to make informed decisions,” Votava said. These conclusions can help students to decide on attending a specific school, or to predict possible precautions for attending that school. For example, a student concerned about campus alcohol violations could use this information to decide if they need to ask for a dormitory that is substance free, according to Votava. Aside from the tool run by the USDOE, UAA discloses this information in their own annual Security and Fire Safety report. Currently, the report provides data for 2015-2017 on Clery Act crimes at UAA. “We’ve been providing information to new students about the Clery Act for probably about four to five years at this point. We take time during every new student orientation presentation to show crime statistics from the most recent calendar year that we have available,” Votava said. Votava also explained that when a prospective student requests information from UAA, there is a disclaimer on the material provided that directs the individual to the online report offered by the university. “We provide a notice to stu-
PHOTO BY JASON HERR
UPD vehicles line the parking lot outside of Eugene Short Hall.
dents once a year about the availability of the annual security report, and we do that by Oct. 1,” Votava said. “We always send it about four days before the deadline.” After releasing the information, Votava follows up with UAA community campuses, as well as personally checks in with students on the main UAA campus to make sure that the notice was received. “Another tool that goes along with Clery, if you want to know about your community that your college is in, that your university is in, are the UCR reports,” Interim Police Chief Michael Beckner of the University Police Department said. The UCR, or Uniform Crime Reporting Program, can be used to examine crime statistics or
trends within a community. “It’s not always a reflection of what is going on in the college, but it is a reflection of what is going on in the city,” Beckner said. The UCR can be accessed online and is prepared annually by the FBI. Population is also key, as the UAA community decreases in the summer months. “The current climate is that we’re in summer session, so our crime rate actually goes down during the summer as Anchorage’s goes up,” Beckner said. Becker also attributes differences in campus crime to the University Police Department having a visible presence around the campus. “Overall, we’re a reflection of the city. We don’t have the
violent crime that the city has in different places because we’re so heavily patrolled by the University PD,” Beckner said. Other tools available to the public are the various programs offered by UPD, such as Operation ID, RAD training and the UAA SAFE app that was released last year. “Look at your local media, read the newspaper. They tend to cover local crime trends,” Beckner said. Through programs such as the Clery Act, reports prepared by UAA and programs available through UPD, students can take steps to learn more about safety. For UAA students, safety awareness doesn’t end after the sirens and lights have passed.
Title IX training reboot for University of Alaska By Mary Ryan
content@thenorthernlight.org
GRAPHIC BY MICHAELINE COLLINS
thenorthernlight.org
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The University of Alaska will have its own version of the mandatory online Title IX training. The new format will be more accessible, applicable and relatable for the UA community. Prevention education coordinator Bridget Coffou and other UA staff responded to survey feedback from the past two years by replacing the Haven training hosted by Everfi with UA’s own Title IX online training on Blackboard. They first started writing the script for the Alaska and UA centered training in October of 2018. The new online training will be approximately half an hour long, as opposed to the previous length of an hour to an hour and a half. It will also be complet@tnl_updates
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ed in one part rather than two, featuring statistics and images from UA campuses. The script will be written on the screen with a voice-over option rather than displayed through video. However, it will still have the same basic content and multiplechoice question format. “A lot of the feedback that we got the last two years that we have required the training is that it just feels very impersonal and that it didn’t resonate with really anyone,” Coffou said. “Some of the [scenarios] that they were talking about [in the training] and even the images were just not things that happen here or just isn’t how our university looks.” The former Title IX training offered by UA presented sexual violence statistics on a national scale. Now, it will include data from the UA Justice Center’s youtube.com/tnlnews
survey of UA campuses. A lack of relatable content is the main reason why the university is making its own Title IX training. “That’s probably the biggest way we are very much so narrowing in to our university,” Coffou said. The inclusion of photos of people and places at UA campuses are also meant to make the Title IX training more personal and relatable for UA community members. Another issue students came forward with is that the videos in the training were not easily accessible under poor wifi connections or limited bandwidth. “People on our campus, it
SEE TITLE IX REBOOT
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