THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL ARKANSAS’ STUDENT NEWSPAPER
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WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER11, 2020 Volume 116 — Issue 13
ucanews.live TODAY’S FORECAST CONWAY
Campus Life:
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New Release: ‘Holidate’ is a festive spin on ‘Friends with Benefits.’
Briana Trigg: Basketball player is not afraid of a challenge.
Sustainable Living: Honors Core III maintains community garden. 4 page 3
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UCA removes standardized testing requirements
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67/42 THE NEWSDESK FROM THE ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
I N T E R N AT I O N A L
Protests in Belarus persist from August
Over 500 people, including at least nine journalists, were arrested by police in Belarus Sunday after 90 consecutive day of protests in the capital. Demonstrators tried to enter the capital Minsk’s center, but riot officers and armored vehicles prevented protestors from forming in one single place. The protests began after the Aug. 9 election of Alexander Lukashenko, the first and only president of the country since 1994, who suppresses opposition and independent news.
By Mia Waddell Online Editor
UCA removed standardized testing requirements for fall 2020-2021 applications, scholarships and Honors College admissions due to COVID-19’s impact on student’s ability to take the AP and SAT tests. Associate Vice President for Enrollment Management Kevin Thomas said that the university will now use the weighted GPA from an applicant’s sixth or seventh semester of high school. The awarding of the Achievement, University and Future Leaders academic scholarships will use the applicant’s GPA. However, students qualifying for the Distinguished Scholarship will go through a
competitive-review process. “A committee will review student-submitted materials in order to determine a limited number of scholarships,” Thomas said. The new admission standards also changed the minimum GPA for a student to apply from 2.5 to 3.0. Thomas said the university looks at the success of previous incoming students to UCA based on their high school grade point average. “We feel confident that students that succeed at this level over four years of high school will be able to succeed academically at UCA,” Thomas said. In addition to the changes in admission and academic scholarships, the Schedler Honors College
will cease using standardized testing scores. Assistant Dean for the Schedler Honors College Patricia Smith said that “for the last 10 years, honors has placed very little value in the overall admissions rubric on the ACT. Only about six percent.” Smith said that like admissions, Honors College decisions will be made without standardized testing. According to Smith, Honors College will use weighted GPA as a fraction of its admissions process. “Test scores will not be required. While some students may choose to submit them, they will not be a factor in the rubric used to score students,” Smith said. The Honors College uses a holistic admission process
with variables such as “GPA, class rank, quantitative and qualitative information from two references, and scores on two different essays,” Smith said. These variables are used to narrow the pool of approximately 450 applicants to a group of 150 that is then invited to campus for the Honors College’s inform and interview day. Students complete an on-site essay and participate in smallgroup discussions. These final two items are also used to evaluate students. Honors and admissions will cease requiring standardized testing scores for fall 2020, spring 2021 and fall 2021. Admissions recently held a promotion of waiving
S T R AT E G I E S
N AT I O N A L Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine trials begin
Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine has been more than 90 percent effective at protecting people in comparison to a placebo shot according to its first analysis. The 44,000-person trial has had 94 positive cases of COVID-19, with less than nine of those among people who received the vaccine. Once the trial reaches its endpoint of 164 cases, the company will submit an application for emergency authorization from the Food and Drug Administration. The vaccine requires two doses given three weeks apart, and recorded side effects have been mild, including pain at injection site, fatigue, chills and fever.
Host loses battle with pancreatic cancer Alex Trebek, host of Jeopardy!, died at 80 on Nov. 8. He announced in March 2019 that he had been diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer, which has a survival rate of 18 percent. Trebek had hosted the show since 1984 and holds the title for most gameshow episodes hosted. He recorded shows up until Oct. 29, and new episodes hosted by Trebek will air through Christmas.
S TAT E
Police Chief resigns after violent post Marshall Police Chief Lang Holland was forced to resign Saturday after making terroristic posts targeting Democrats on the right-wing social network service Parler on Friday. Holland called for “death to all Marxist Democrats,” and encouraged people to give them no peace, show them no mercy. The city of Marshall condemned his actions, and Gov. Hutchinson criticized his actions, calling the posts dangerous. Holland had been the police chief for two years.
WHAT’S AHEAD
IN OUR NEXT ISSUE Multiple RSO’s come together for LoveFest.
G O V E R N O R ’ S TA S K F O R C E
Stansel serves as editor on Survey shows racial social media strategy guide disparity in policing by Megan Holder
By Megan Holder
“Fundamentals of Social Media Strategy: A Guide for College Campuses” by Liz Gross shares how campuses can purposefully and successfully use social media. The University of Central Arkansas Digital Media Specialist Jon-Stephen Stansel was a key contributor to the book. Gross said, “I wrote the book I wish I would have had when I was a campus social media manager, and knew it would be stronger if someone who’s currently in that role ensured the content and advice was accurate. JonStephen was the first person I thought of. His grasp of social media strategy is among the best in the industry.” When Stansel started workin in social media, he read Gross’s first book “Overtime, just being in the industry and conferences we were able to connect,” Stansel said. Gross said, “I wrote the book during the first nine months of 2020, and we all know this year didn’t turn out as expected. Each time I sat down to write, I’d share some tidbits on Twitter, or ask the professional community for input. The overwhelmingly positive feedback each time encouraged me to keep writing and to publish the book as soon as possible. That’s why we published the first half as volume one in October. Jon-Stephen is not only a key contributor, but one of the book’s most enthusiastic fans.” Stansel said the university’s social media managers, directors of marketing, media relations, president and vice president wanted to learn how to connect more with students on social media. Stansel said, as he was editing the book and reading through the first draft, he found that every paragraph had something “tweetable.”
Layla Holloway, chair of the community policing committee of the governor’s Task Force, conducted a survey about the community’s thoughts and experiences with law enforcement. The survey received over 2,000 responses. The Governor’s Task Force to Advance the State of Law Enforcement in Arkansas is composed of four committees: racial/implicit bias training and community relations, accountability and decertification, community policing and officer retainment and resiliency. Conway Community Leader Jimmy Warren said, “while the task force reflects the ideas and thoughts of the community, surveys like the one Ms. Holloway created are the grassroot perspectives of individuals with different life experiences, backgrounds and social economic status. It gives legitimacy and strengthens our recommendations by having first-hand experiences submitted and documented.” Holloway is a sophomore and double major in public relations and sociology at UCA. Holloway said, “for community policing we didn’t really have a whole lot about how the community felt about policing in Arkansas specifically.” Holloway said her mom and UCA professor, Dr. Yates, helped her edit her survey questions. “They helped me formulate questions and checked to make sure there was no bias,” Halloway said. The survey started on Sept. 25 and concluded Oct. 16. Holloway has not analyzed the whole survey yet but provided some data from it. One of the questions said, “Have you ever had a negative experience with law enforcement?” Holloway said, “only 20% of white
Social Media Editor
Social Media Editor
Photo courtesy of uca.edu
UCA Digital Media Specialist Jon-Stephen Stansel contributedd to Liz Gross’ new book. The book helps guide professors in strategy, research and the best practices for social media managers.
He said he felt as if there were things worthy to go on his personal Twitter account “There’s a really great chapter on crisis communications on social media. I think especially this year, that has been really important,” Stansel said. He said the chapter is directly toward university leadership. It is about what the president and vice president need to know about social media. The book helps guide professors in strategy, research and the best practices for social media managers. The campussonar.com stated, “It’s the definitive roadmap for social media strategy, whether campuses are building out a process and team or expanding their current program.” The book is broken down into four sections about how social media managers approach their work. Volume
one consists of sections one and two. Volume two consists of sections three and four. Section one is “Building and Articulating Your Core Strategy” which helps to develop the foundation of your social media program. Section two discusses “Content Foundations” to help you develop strategy and apply it to content creation and curation. Section three is the “Core Concepts of Social Media Management” which helps you develop frameworks and systems to help you approach the non-content aspects of your activities. Section four is titled “What Keeps Social Media Managers Up At Night” and addresses some of the recurring issues campus professionals continually seek advice about.
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application fees during Homecoming week. Thomas said that they are unsure if the promotion raised admissions just yet, but will know in the future. “We don’t know that but what we can say is that we had a record-setting week of applications submitted,” Thomas said. For the week of Oct. 2631, the university had 1,652 applications submitted. Taylor explained that due to COVID-19 limiting high school visits, college fairs and on-campus tours the university was “running a bit behind previous years in terms of applications, but after Homecoming week, we are glad to be slightly up compared to previous years.”
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people said yes whereas 40% of black people said yes.” She said a racial disparity was already showing from that one question, considering twice as many black people have had a negative experience with law enforcement as white people. Holloway said, “that’s the only question I have memorized. I can only think about how much worse it can get the more in depth the questions get.” She said Arkansas needs more surveys like this because not a lot of people know things like this. “I would try to look up statistics about it and couldn’t find anything. If they are out there, they’re very hidden,” Holloway said. “It was a really big deal to be able to participate in and create something like this, and have these results overwhelmingly show there’s an issue right here with policing.” Holloway said, “to be able to do this at 19 yearsold is pretty cool. It’s really exciting and the results are very eye opening.” There were also qualitative responses. One statement was “if you ever had a negative experiment with law enforcement, can you please elaborate.” One person discussed their dad being hit with a carjack while asleep when the police raided his home. Another discussed that their son was beat up in the emergency room. Someone was unlawfully detained while asking for directions to the police department. Someone was arrested on a charge and released five hours later with no charges. Holloway said, “there’s an issue right here with community relations. At this point it doesn’t really matter what someone says or thinks. We literally have data and actual facts of feelings and attitudes of Arkansans.”
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Spotify’s new service will stunt independent artists’ careers.
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