THE
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
N E W S PA P E R
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 41
tuftsdaily.com
Monday, December 6, 2021
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
For undergraduate teaching assistants, Tufts Medical Center adjusts procedures after compensation varies among wrongfully assuming departments Black stroke victim was intoxicated by Ethan Steinberg Associate Editor
Widespread disparities in compensation and workload exist among undergraduate teaching assistants in the Schools of Arts and Sciences and Engineering. Some undergraduate TAs are compensated through semester-hour units, while others are compensated through pay stipends and still others through hourly pay. Miranda Feinberg, an undergraduate teaching assistant for the film and media studies program, said in an interview with
the Daily that she is not paid for her work. Feinberg, a senior who TAs FMS30, a hands-on, introductory film practice course, said that she is compensated instead through semester-hour units. She was asked as part of her teaching assistant job to sign up for FMS98, a course designed specifically for filmmaking TAs, through which she receives two credits. The course does not meet formally. As a TA, Feinberg is responsible for attending a 2.5-hour lecture on Tuesdays and running a 2.5-hour lab along with her co-TA on Thursdays. The lecture focus-
es on theoretical elements of filmmaking, while the lab is practical. Feinberg said she typically spends part of the lab teaching — usually expanding on a concept introduced in the lecture — and the other part answering questions and monitoring students as they work on assignments. Feinberg also spends one to two hours each week outside the lecture and lab on preparation and, occasionally, grading. “It is a big time commitment, and I think that if I were to be in a position where I needed to get a see TA COMPENSATION, page 2
SCIENCE
What’s different about COVID-19 transmission rates on college campuses? Experts weigh in.
NICOLE GARAY / THE TUFTS DAILY
The Medford/Somerville campus COVID-19 testing site is pictured on Sept. 20. by Sarah Sandlow
Executive Copy Editor
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact communities around the United States and the world, certain trends have emerged surrounding infection rates and their link with prevention measures including surveillance testing, masking and vaccine mandates. Experts agree that, especially on college
campuses, these measures are essential in curbing the spread of COVID-19. The number of college COVID-19 infections was at its worst in Massachusetts as college students returned to campus after winter break in early 2021, according to Mary Hopkins, an infectious disease physician at Tufts Medical Center. “In summer 2020, we had a honeymoon period before the
delta variant arrived,” Hopkins said. “We had the worst of our infections in the spring of 2020. People started to mask up, people started to socially distance and the delta variant wasn’t here. And so as students came back in [summer] 2020, yes, there was a surge of cases, but not quite as bad as when they came back from winter break, January 2021 see SCIENCE, page 3
NICHOLAS PFOSI / THE TUFTS DAILY ARCHIVES
Tufts Medical Center is pictured on Aug. 28, 2014. by Skyler Goldberg Contributing Writer
The Tufts Medical Center has implemented a number of drastic procedural changes following an incident of racial bias in 2019 that led to the mistreatment of a Black man who had suffered a stroke. The incident resurfaced in the media recently after the City of Boston reached a $1.3 million settlement with the victim, Al Copeland. Copeland was held at a Boston police station for several hours by law enforcement officials in April 2019 after he suffered a stroke that left him “barely conscious,” while driving on Massachusetts Avenue at night. Copeland, 64, was found outside the Berklee College of Music, where he managed to park his car after experiencing the stroke while driving, and was arrested by Boston police officers who believed he was drunk. Police called an ambulance only after the victim vomited in a holding cell at the police station. The ambulance took Copeland to the Tufts Medical Center Emergency Room, where he remained for several hours before receiving treatment because the staff assumed he was intoxicated.
SPORTS / back
FEATURES / page 4
EDITORIAL / page 13
Cummings’ resilience inspires Tufts football team
Alumni reflect on studies, career post-graduation
Tufts must extend reading period
Tufts Medical Center is associated with Tufts University through an affiliation with the Tufts University School of Medicine. All doctors at the medical center are full-time faculty at the medical school. Jeremy Lechan, media relations manager for Tufts Medical Center, apologized on behalf of the hospital that health care professionals had assumed Copeland was drunk. Lechan told the Daily that patient privacy laws prohibit his office from commenting on specifics of the incident involving Copeland, but said that Tufts Medical Center has made changes — some ongoing, some directly in response to this incident — to prevent similar cases in the future. “We have developed and implemented [programs and initiatives] over the past several years to prevent this type of error from happening again,” Lechan wrote in an email to the Daily. Tufts Medical Center has revised the intake process for patients who cannot communicate. A social worker will now speak with family, friends and other contacts to determine why the patient is unable to comsee MEDICAL, page 2 NEWS
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FEATURES
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ARTS & POP CULTURE
9
FUN & GAMES
12
OPINION
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