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SFU end OCU’s win streak

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Clan impressive at Harry Geris Memorial Duels

By Clay Gray

The women’s wrestling team travelled to London, Ontario on Nov. 16, to compete at the Harry Geris Memorial Duels. They were met by many of the top university teams in North America including Oklahoma City University, who were on a 75-duel win streak, and also had only one tie in their last 91 duels heading into the tournament. As with many duel tournaments, the day began with pool rounds, followed by cross overs, and then a championship round.

SFU was swimming in deep waters early as they drew Lakehead, Missouri, McMaster, and Oklahoma City. The Clan clouted the first three opponents, toppling Lakehead 29–1, manhandling Missouri 26–5, and blanking McMasters 25–0. In the final round of pool play the Clan came up against the Oklahoma City University Stars. OCU offered some resistance for SFU, but the Clan proved to be more than the Stars could handle and handed the four-time defending national Champions its first loss in four years, 21–10. Head coach Mike Jones said, “As a team, we’ve lost to them for four straight years, so it was a very good performance from our girls.” SFU continued their dominance in the crossover round, trouncing Alberta 27–5 and securing a berth in the championship round.

The finals duel was a rematch between SFU and OCU, but the Stars fielded a slightly revamped line-up in an attempt to get their win streak started again. The duel started off with SFU’s Victoria Anthony scoring a technical fall over Emily Webster giving the Clan a 4–0 lead. The next weight pitted three-time defending national champion, Joey Miller, against Nikki Brar. While Brar had beat Miller in the first duel, she would fall short the second time around getting pinned in the first period, giving the Stars a one-point lead. Senior Laura Wilson snatched a three-round decision over Rachel McFarland and taking back the lead, 7–6. Laura Gordon grappled two-time All-American Audrey Morehouse in a two round decision with Morehouse being victorious the Stars jumped back into the lead at the halfway point, 9–7.

SFU fielded Sidney Morrison in the 63-kilo weight class against Stephanie Geltmacher, with Morrison Clawing out a two-round decision over the two-time All-American snatching back the lead, 10–9. Danielle Lappage kept the Clan rolling by pinning Kayla Aggio in a mere 27 seconds, Clan leads 15–9. Junior Justina DiStasio battled to a three-round decision win over Brittney Roberts, which guaranteed the Clan a victory regardless of the final match’s outcome, 18–10 for the Clan. In a reversal of the earlier duel’s outcome Jenna McLatchy fought to a three-round decision victory over returning All-American Heather O’Connor. The final score was 21–11. Former world junior champion Victoria Anthony said, “OCU hadn’t actually lost [in the last four years] so it was a really big deal. The team is inspired, we plan to continue our success and win nationals.”

Men’s wrestling: matches and medals

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Clan travel to Idaho and Washington to compete on the road

By Clay Gray


Men’s wrestling recently hit the road in a tour of the Northwest as they traveled to Couer d’Alene, Idaho for duals against the University of Great Falls and North Idaho College. The Clan’s came up with a win in their first dual of the year as they defeated against the University of Great Falls, 31–17.

SFU got off to a strong start with a decision win from Skylor Davis at 125 lbs followed by a third round pin from Sukhan Chalhal at 133 lbs. the Clan lead 9–0. 141-pounder Dillon Hume lost a highly contested decision in the final second of the third round, 9–3. Senior Alex Stemer got the Clan back on track with a third period technical fall to extend the lead to 14–3. However, SFU would lose the next three weight classes via one pin, one technical fall, and one decision.  The slide gave UGF a momentary three-point lead, 17–14. Manvir Sahota put on a true display of technical superiority by tucking his opponent away early in the second period via a technical fall, which thrust SFU back into the lead, 19–17. Ryan Yewchin graced the mats to accept a victory by default and guaranteeing a Clan victory at 197 pounds, 25–17 Clan. The last match of the duel saw freshman heavyweight Sunny Dhinsa secure yet another first round pin; the final score was 31–17.

The second dual of the day gave the Clan their first dual loss of the year. The host school, North Idaho College, defeated SFU 25–15. The Clansmen’s points came from decision victories from Sukhan Chalhal over Blake Adams, Brock Lamb over Connor Pelzel, and Manvir Sahota over Caleb Rivera. The Clan’s only pin came from freshman heavyweight Sunny Dhinsa. The fall was called with 11 seconds left in the second round.

The road trip didn’t end in Idaho, as the Clan rolled into Spokane, Washington looking for matches and medals. The standout performance came from Skylor Davis, who placed third. In Davis’s medal round match he faced off and bested the wrestler responsible for knocking him out of the front side, Aaron LaFarge of Montana State Northern. Brock Lamb, 165 pounds, scrapped his way to the finals with two minor and one major decision. The 285-pound weight class was an all Clan final with showdown between Senior Gurjoot Kooner and Freshman Sunny Dhinsa. The bout ended with Dhinsa getting his hand raised. Head coach Justin Abdou said, “I’m happy with a lot of things we have done, but I am not satisfied.  I see a lot of potential in this group.”

Women’s basketball lose, rebound with win

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Women’s basketball lose, rebound with fourth win of the season

By Bryan Scott

After starting the season with three wins, the Simon Fraser women’s basketball team were looking for continued success when they traveled to Saint George, Utah to compete in the Dixie State Tournament. They played two games over the weekend, winning one and losing one.

Their first opponent was the Colorado Mesa University Mavericks. The Clan scored the first point of the game but they quickly fell behind after that. They managed to tie the game at 14 in the first half, but they never regained the lead.  At half-time they trailed 29–26. Clan forward Nayo Raincock-Ekunwe led all Clan scorers with six points and three rebounds in the half.

Katie Lowen picked up her game in the second half to help out the Clan offense, but her seven points were not enough to help them avoid their first loss of the season. The final score was 62–45 for the Mavericks. Raincock-Ekunwe finished with a team high 14 points and was one rebound shy of another double-double on the season.

Their second game of the tournament was against the host, Dixie State Red Storm. The Clan were determined to win this game to make up for the previous one. “We had a lot more energy to start the game today,” said head coach Bruce Langford, even though the team fell behind early on, the Clan exploded to take a 10 point lead, 32–22 into half-time.

The second half was much of the same, as the Clan continued to pad their lead. Erin Chambers led the way this time for SFU racking up 17 points, and seven rebounds. Other Clan players to break the double-digit mark were Chelsea Reist and Kia van Laare, who had 13 and 12 points, respectively. They were impressive on the defense side of the ball, with 15 steals and 20 points off turnovers in the game. “We were strong defensively and while we didn’t shoot the ball great as a team, we improved from yesterday,” continued Langford.

With the two wins, SFU was ranked number 17 in the initial USA Today Sports Division II top 25 coaches poll. The Clan’s record is 4–1 after five games this season.

SFU women’s hockey splits games

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Women’s hockey is fun way to deal with the NHL lockout blues

By Vaikunthe Banerjee
Photos by Vaikunthe Banerjee


Have you heard of the SFU Women’s Hockey Team? It is an SFU club that plays in the South Coast Female Amateur Hockey League (SCFAHL). The league began in the 1983–84 season as the BC Girls Ice Hockey Association, and the SFU team has been playing in it since the 2010–11 season. The team is recognized as a club and not a varsity team. They are a student-run organization with self-administered executives. Their coaching staff recognizes the team’s potential, and voluntarily spend countless hours to train the team. Their games have 15-minute periods and usually go on for about an hour and 15 minutes.
The team has played several games this season. On Nov. 9, they played against the Trinity Western University Titans and swept the ice with them to win 4–0. The game started with two goals scored by Sheralie Taylor with 12:28 remaining in the first period and another scored soon after Nicole Oud with 9:55 remaining in the period. The two-goal lead in the first period left the other team demoralized. Just 12 seconds into the period, Aly van Nieuwkerk scored for SFU. It looked like the team was unstoppable as they kept getting shots on net and broke down the Titan’s defense, leading to Laura Wiggins scoring in the third period to give SFU a decisive win.
They played again on Nov. 16 against the Delta Jets, whom they had previously defeated 2–1. They lost 3–2, but put up a good fight until the very last seconds of the game. The first period was uneventful, with each team playing great defense. The Delta Jets scored the game’s first two with 12:54 and 8:21 remaining in the second period. SFU came back when Wiggins scored a goal with 5:56 remaining in the second period. Then, the Jets scored again in the second period with 3:14 remaining. The girls came back with a goal of their own which was scored by Nancy Lachimea in the third period. In the end, they lost a hard fought game, but being at the game was worth it. “I was so into the game, because I was so happy to see high-quality hockey during the lockout,” says Dylan Belvedere, a third-year SFU student.
If you miss hockey, show some school spirit and go see the SFU women’s team at the North Surrey Recreation Centre where they play. Check out their schedule at www.southcoastfemalehockey.com/schedule.

SFU to play Saginaw State in NCAA Final Four

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Clan make historic appearance in the NCAA Final Four 

By Bryan Scott

The Simon Fraser men’s soccer team was in action last week trying to nab a spot in the semifinals of the NCAA Championship. They faced the University of Incarnate Word Cardinals from San Antonio, Texas in their quarter-final match up.

The game, as expected, was a tight defensive battle that had its fair share of excitement. In the first half, Clan goaltender JD Blakley made two saves within a minute of each other to keep the game scoreless. To keep things exciting, Cardinal’s midfielder Alex de la Garza knocked a shot off the crossbar, but it did not make it past the goal line. The Cardinals outshot the Clan 5–4 in the first half, but neither team found the back of the net.

The second half started much like the first, with action going both ways and no goals being scored. It wasn’t until the 81st minute that the tie was broken. Clan midfielder Chris Bargholz crossed the ball over to an unlikely teammate, defender Marco Voegeli, for a timely first goal of the season. The Clan defense blocked several shots in the last few minutes of the game to seal the 1–0 victory. “It wasn’t our best performance tonight, and the game winner wasn’t the prettiest goal, but we’ll take it,” admitted head coach Alan Koch.

The win pushes the Clan’s record to 19–1–1 sends the Clan to Evans, Georgia to play some different Cardinals, these ones from Saginaw State University in Michigan. The Clan are the only team with a number one ranking left in the tournament. You can check out the Clan’s progress on the NCAA website.

Later in the week, Sports Information Directors across the region voted for the Daktronics West Region teams. SFU had the most athletes on the list with six. On the First All-Region Team was Michael Winter, Ryan Dhillon, Matt Besuschko, and Carlo Basso. The other two; Quante Abbott Hill Smith and Helge Neumann were named to the Second All-Region Team. On this year’s team,  Koch said, “We have athletes from different years and positions winning awards, which represents the depth we have this season.”

The Clan fail to close out the season with a win

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SFU volleyball ends the season with three loses

By Bryan Scott

The Simon Fraser volleyball team finished up their 2012 season last week. They played against the Douglas College Royals, the Montana State Billings Yellowjackets, and the Seattle Pacific University Falcons.

The Clan hosted the Royals for their final home game of the season to start the week off.  This match went the distance, and was a battle from start to finish. The Clan won the first set 25–18. SFU was down 16–14, but fought back by taking 11 of the next 13 points to win the set.  The next set belonged to the Royals; they opened up a six point early on and didn’t look back, tying the game at one set each with a 25–21 victory. The third set was back-and-forth until the end; the Clan were up 25–24 when Jessica Young finished the play for the Clan to give them the win. The Royals woke up for the fourth set, once again opening up a substantial lead early on and carrying it throughout the set. The Clan got within two points, but ultimately lost the set 25–23 setting up a fifth and final set for the match. The Royals took advantage of their momentum from the previous win, and took a 7–0 lead to start the final set.  The Clan could not overcome this deficit. They lost the set 15–13 and dropped the match 3–2.

The Clan hit the road after the loss for their last two games of the season. First they were in Billings, Montana to battle the Yellowjackets. The first set was going well, as the Clan had a 13–11 lead halfway through. However, the Yellowjackets went on a 14–3 run to close out the set 25–16.  The next set saw SFU dominated 25–12.  The Clan did not give upw they were up 17–12 in the third set, but they did not hold onto the lead. They were swept 3–0 in the match, with the 25–20 loss in the final set.  Young led the team in kills with eight, and Tamara Nipp helped out, adding 24 assists in the losing effort.

The Clan had one last chance to win their second conference game of the season when they arrived in Seattle, Washington. Their opponents from Seattle Pacific were not prepared to let the Clan win easily. The first set was of epic proportions. The Clan started out well with an early four-point lead. With help from Young and Keirsten Mend (11 kills each), the Clan built up a 17–12 lead. They had a chance to close out the set with a 24–21, but the Falcons tied the game at 26. After that, the teams traded points until the score was tied at 29. The Falcons won the next two points to take the set 31–29.  The Clan did not put up much of a fight in the second set, losing 25–18. They lost their final set of the season 25–22, ending a long season for SFU.

With the losses, the Clan finishes the season 4–22 overall and 1–18 in Great Northwest Athletic Conference.

Last Word ever?

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Top apocalypse predictions that obviously didn’t happen

By Ljudmila Petrovic

I’m sure we’re all eagerly awaiting the end of the world, what with all the John Cusack movies on the topic. While you bite your nails in expectance of the tidal waves and dramatic sprinting that we’ll all have to deal with soon, here’s some reading material to remind you that this isn’t the first — or the last — time that people will cry apocalypse.

Pretty much all the time in 1843 and 1844: “The Great Disappointment”

In 1818, a preacher named William Miller became convinced that his thorough research of the Bible had shown him that the world was going to end in 1843. He spent four years checking and re-checking his calculation. In 1822, he went public with his declaration that the world would end between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844. His following grew to thousands of people, with some even doing their own calculations. March 21, 1844 came and went with no incident, so Miller pushed the date to April 18, 1844. One of his followers calculated that the end of the world would actually be on October 22, 1844. Needless to say, none of those dates happened to bring the end of the world, and the “Millerism movement” fizzled and died.

March 10, 1982: The Jupiter Effect

This was the day in modern history when all the planets were on the same side of the sun. The theory began with the 1974 publication of the book The Jupiter Effect, written by John Gribbin, Ph.D., and Stephen Plagemann. This was supposed to cause earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis — pretty much all the natural disasters possible. It didn’t. In fact, in 1999, Dr. Gribbin published another book, The Little Book of Science, in which he admitted that he was embarrassed that his name had ever been attached to the Jupiter Effect

 

January 1, 2000: The Y2K Bug 

Most of us will remember this one. Before Facebook, Twitter, and adequate memory space, computer software used two digit codes to represent the year. This worked fine and dandy until software experts realized that “00” could be read as “1900,” instead of the “2000” it was meant to represent. The main industry to be affected by this would be the financial world, as calculations of the differences between years could end up being negatives. It was expected that everything would crash, and of course, when the banks are affected,  so is the world. Midnight struck on Jan. 1, 2000 and nothing happened. Nowadays, we know better; our more worldly generation would just tweet the shit out of #Y2Kbug.

 

June 6, 2006: The Antichrist 

The sixth day of the sixth month of 2006 is written out as 6/6/06, or the number of the Antichrist. A plethora of religious sects were convinced that the Antichrist would appear, and that the world as we know it would end. I don’t know if he — or she, for the sake of equality — showed up on June 6 and is just hanging tight somewhere, but the world still looks the same from here, so this must have been yet another false alarm.

May 21, 2011: “The Rapture”

Eighty-nine-year-old radio preacher Harold Camping announced to the world that this would be the date of the Rapture, or the Biblical ending where God visits Earth, smites the sinners, and saves the believers. The day came and went, with sinners and believers alike remaining untouched. Camping immediately came up with several theories as to why we were still standing, including that God was good and, not wanting us to suffer, was just going to drop by on Oct. 21 and efficiently do it all in one go, rather than dragging it out for several months as earlier theorized. From what I recall, Oct. 21, 2011 wasn’t that eventful either, so it seems like this was a fluke too.

 

December 21/23, 2012 

Yeah, we’ve all heard this one. Some of us scoff at it, some of us look at every conspiracy theorist forum out there, and some of us are skeptical but interested. The premise — for those inhabitants of Under a Rock — is that the Mayans made a Long Count calendar, and this was the last date on that calendar. Possible theories of opponents include that they ran out of space, or didn’t predict their own demise, so they thought they’d be having more publication opportunities for their calendar. But I digress. The whole Mayan phenomenon is aggravated by the prediction of several other events that seem apocalyptic — though in all likelihood, we won’t even notice them when they happen — and have given birth to further theories regarding the end of the world. These include a collision with Planet X (or Nibiru), and a geomagnetic reversal that will allegedly trigger a solar flare with the energy of 100 billion atomic bombs.

The year 3797

Michel de Nostredame (commonly known as “Nostradamus”) was a 16th century apothecary and seer who published collections of prophecies. His works have been interpreted to have foretold events such as Hitler’s rise to power, the dropping of the atomic bombs, and Princess Diana’s death. He once wrote to his son, however, that the Prophecies cover March 1, 1555 until the year 3797. The fact that this reputable prophet ends his writings at that point has led many to believe that this is the actual end of the world. This being said, most of us have trouble planning far enough in the future to not have to cram our essays in one night, let alone a time well out of our lifetimes; I, for one, am not too concerned about this prediction.

Spotlight on SFYou: The HeArt Project

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SFYou is a new addition to the features section. It aims to put a spotlight on SFU’s diverse population, including students, faculty, and groups across all the university’s campuses. Got somebody you think should be spotlighted? Email [email protected]!

By Ljudmila Petrovic
Photos by Vaikunthe Banerjee

 

 

The mural is currently hanging in the AQ.

 

More often than not, the effort put into class projects is simply in order to get a good grade. For a team of five students at SFU’s Beedie School of Business, however, a project management class project turned into an opportunity to go out of their comfort zone and make a difference in their city.

It started as a service-learning project, where students were put in groups in order to learn how to autonomously organize and manage projects; what it developed into, however, was The HeArt Project —a photomural designed to raise awareness about local homelessness. “It was really broad,” says Becky Ross, one of the students involved in the project. “[The professor] wanted us to have a lot of creative room about what we wanted to do, and the theme was just serving the community in some way.” One of the students in the group, Gwen, is an exchange student from France and was shocked with the homeless situation in the city. “The rest of us are born and raised in Vancouver, and it was only when she brought it up that we realized that we were kind of de-sensitized to this issue,” explains Ross. “Because we’ve seen it every day growing up in Vancouver, we’re used to it. We wanted to make some kind of an impact.” And so, while their classmates brainstormed networking events, this group of five thought of ways to provide the people of Vancouver with a reminder that homelessness is still a rampant issue in the city.

Another group member added the element of art into the business project by suggesting a project reminiscent of the work of JR — a French street artist and photographer — who had the idea to turn the world inside out through photographs. From this, The HeArt Project was born. “He had this idea of just posting photos of people’s faces with any expression they wanted, just to show a kind of diversity personality artwork,” explains Ross. “The faces are a mixture of people on the street, and of homeless people in Vancouver.” The hope of the group is to create a piece of artwork that would be accessible to the SFU student community, and that would inspire thought, awareness, and perhaps action. “The idea was to remind people about the issue. I’ve never really done too much to help. I know about the issue, but I don’t take a lot of action,” adds Ross. “Our idea is to hopefully remind other students of that . . . hopefully it inspires them to do something about it.”

The project got approval to hang their mural in the Applied Sciences building on the Burnaby campus, where it will hang until they are unable to renew the approval further. “Hopefully it will be up there until the beginning of next semester, so that new students can also see it,” says Ross. Part of the project also includes resources for those interested in getting involved; there will be links to social media websites, where interested individuals can go for information about local charities and organizations that they could reach out to if they wanted to donate or volunteer.

According to Ross, there has been talk of word-of-mouth fundraising to cover costs, with excess money going to donations for Downtown Eastside organizations. “The scope of it is mainly getting the artwork out there, though,” she says.

As for the mural, it will be available for viewing on the Burnaby campus, and its fate after it’s taken down will be decided based on the condition it’s in at that time.


Apathetic excuse

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By Mohammed Sheriffdeen
Photos by Vaikunthe Banerjee

Student apathy in our system of secondary and post-secondary education

I have been a TA in the biology faculty at SFU for the last year-and-a-half. In my time on the job, I have worked in both first- and third-year classes and, while I would hardly describe myself as a seasoned, veteran educator, I have nonetheless observed a worrying trend with my students. The capability of every student obviously varies (based on personal abilities, capacity for communication, willingness to seek help, or their work ethic), but an overarching disinterest and disregard for the material is almost palpable: it often appears as if the students quite simply do not care. They are not unconcerned with passing the course, but with fully comprehending the material? Understanding higher-order concepts and their application to other disciplines? Learning anything outside the realm of examinable? No, no and no.

It is difficult to set a finger on the exact point when this apathy kicks in, but it is there. I am not so far removed from being an undergraduate student that I am unable to relate to or recognize the syndrome myself. My first thought was that this attitude was limited to first-year students who had not become fully acclimated to the demands of university courses; however, I have observed this apathy remain in those in their third year. It would be easy to say that such nonchalance is unique to this generation, but it goes deeper than that. Instead of encouraging innovation or creative analysis, our passive secondary school system places an emphasis on standardized testing that evaluates recall. It is breeding a generation of students whose approach to education is compartmental and results-based. Students are conditioned to group knowledge into two categories: “What do I have to know to pass the exam?” and “Irrelevant.”

The Sage on the Stage

The classic method of lecturing has been documented for over 800 years, and persists despite being decried by progressives as archaic and non-functional. Why make instructors imprison students in a windowless classroom for or up to two hours while reciting a bunch of text off a slide? In his Time article “Why Long Lectures Are Ineffective”, Salman Khan of the Khan Academy asserts that students are only capable of paying attention for short bursts that decrease rapidly with time. So why continue with this system? Would it be more functional to engage students in a one-on-one manner? Most significantly, why do lectures have such staying power, and why are they present at virtually every level of education? Larry Cuban of the National Education Policy Center calls lectures a product of “historical inertia,” but justifies their existence as flexible and adaptable to teaching techniques. In a 2011 blog post, his discussion on the matter is hinged on the apparent success of the Initiation-Response-Evaluation (IRE) technique, wherein teachers quiz students on information as it is presented, and continually prod until they stumble upon the right answer (or break down in tears, presumably). Unsurprisingly, this effort has its drawbacks. It is virtually useless in a classroom packed with four hundred fidgety, bored, and nervous students. Furthermore, any TA or Professor in a smaller classroom knows that its success is not guaranteed. The classic set-up that separates and isolates a teacher from their students creates a hierarchy where the students are subjugates. The instructor has the ability to pick individuals and place them on a hot seat, thereby limiting the meaningful scope of interactions and potentially embarrassing individuals. The ultimate drawback is that students are more hesitant to independently join discussions and shrink into their shells where they are unchallenged. Each individual assumes themselves on the bottom of some mythical and imaginary totem pole, unable to stop the class to request clarification, lest they bring the whole thing to a grinding halt for everyone else. Self-starters thrive in this system, but not all students are equally accommodated. This growing divide, rooted in the lowest levels of education, slowly reaches tragicomic levels.

 

The Disconnect

Freelance artist Brian Cronin has a wonderful style of illustrating progress, using trees to separate characters at either end of a spectrum. The trunks, branches and leaves obscure the intermediate image while doubling as strict borders separating the old from the new; his images often look as though the panes of two separate comics have been spliced together. An illustration for a Technology Review article entitled “The Crisis in Higher Education” depicts the progress made in access to education over the last hundred years: an individual stands at the base of a towering evergreen, banging out mathematical equations on a chalkboard, whilst another is perched on a branch, at least a hundred feet up, tapping away on a laptop. But the man at the base of the tree, fervently scribbling on the chalkboard, could easily represent today’s educators, anxiously trying to reach through and engage their students whose heads are (in this image) literally aloft in the clouds. Unable to maintain focus on the task at hand and too nervous to raise a hand, these students drift away, lost to the educator. But what’s the biggest issue?

They are not engaged. They may be scared of it. They may not know how to do it, or they may lose interest completely.

This mindset rapidly manifests as apathy, and once this barrier is established, it is impenetrable. Students do not go to tutorials when they are not mandatory. They do not do homework assignments when they are not mandatory. They do not read book chapters that are not mandatory reading.  There is little interest in learning for the sake of learning, for refining and developing their intellect or expanding themselves. The same question has been asked consistently in every single tutorial and lab I have ever instructed: “Is this going to be on the exam?”  In the summer of 2011, I conducted a tutorial for a third-year class that was at 1:30 in the afternoon. On the first day of class, when I alerted my students that attendance not mandatory, 25 people showed up. Through the rest of the semester the average group size topped out at five. On three separate occasions, I cancelled tutorials when nobody came. I was a new TA at the time and initially took it as a damning reflection of my own teaching skills. What had I done wrong? I tried to make

the tutorials as interesting and informative as possible. I tried to make them fun. When I addressed my concerns with the instructor, she waved a dismissive hand. “It’s not your fault. That’s just how they are. And I guarantee you the ones who never came to class will be coming up at the end of the semester begging us to change their grade.” There’s the rub: students are trapped in a box that they don’t know exists, and they’re tragically indifferent to its presence.

 

Standardized Testing

Standardized testing is, to put it bluntly, a functionally useless evaluation of a student’s intelligence. Students who fail to hit upon a set of pre-determined points in their answers suffer, as the tests cannot holistically assess a student’s capacity for logical dissection, dissemination, and evaluation of material. Multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, and short-answer questions are made-to-order, rigidly evaluating a student’s ability to scribble down notes, memorize them with flashcards and coffee, and spew them back out on the page, leaving them behind as they walk out of the exam hall. The obsessive focus on grades eliminates cooperative learning, pitting students against one another to commit their textbooks to memory. It is a system born of convenience, but deleterious in two ways: it does not challenge students to think in broad spectrums, and it hurts students by assuming that all questions have answers. Not all questions have answers. Science is particularly maligned in this regard. Science is a beautiful, abstract field; the more we learn, the less we know. It requires just as much ingenuity as a creative writing class. But it is portrayed as a bunch of boring stuff in musty old books, discovered by a bunch of dudes who died hundreds of years ago.

 

 We have low standards

I like to think of a university as a factory: each student enters as a mess of pieces, tools, and oil in buckets, unfinished articles. Universities are by design breeding grounds for an exchange of ideas and the generation of higher functioning human beings. We should be chasing ideals and goals that are lofty and challenging instead of taking “easy” courses to boost our GPA.

That is what our contemporary system boils us down to: results-oriented people without goals, flipping to the end of the book to find out what happens without experiencing the peaks and valleys of the story. This false sense of expectation is engendered in students from their youth — they expect to be gifted a road map, compass, and directions, both in labs or lectures. They expect the material to be spoon-fed to them. However, as a TA, that is not my job. It is rare to come across a student who is engaged by the material and genuinely fascinated by it, by the rhythms and mystery of the universe we live in, the cultures and languages that divide us, the complexities of natural systems, and the human mind itself.

The way material is presented is not challenging: it is a compendium of unexciting facts and figures, definitions, and vague concepts that need to be neatly memorized in isolation. The curriculum fails to engage on an emotional or visceral level, and thus passes through a student undigested. Students might say, “It’s a bunch of useless crap I’ll never have to know again because I’ve already passed the course.”  If that is what education is, then what’s the point? Who cares if you know what the digestive system looks like if you are uninterested in using that information to enhance human perspective? Learning is not a job. It is a privilege, an opportunity for each individual to further the collective of human knowledge. But it is not portrayed as such by the vast majority. Most see it as an obstacle to overcome in pursuit of a piece of paper that reads: “This person has functional intelligence and is capable of rote memorization.”

Our standards are too low. Getting straight Cs is not a challenge. It barely requires an effort. Of course, that may not be the case. Your GPA may be a 4.0, a 3.67, or a 2.48. But what does it really say about you? It does not make a distinction between the gifted, hyper-analytical, and exciting minds of the future, and those simply capable of successful cramming. It is a devalued blanket statement that, in our hypercompetitive global job market, is essentially useless.

 

Fine-tuning the system/ “Education is overrated”

Graduate courses benefit from smaller class sizes, seminars, open-air discussions, and groupthink, which are refreshing and stimulating. They encourage the sharing, processing, evaluation and argumentation of disparate viewpoints. This is a student-based teaching model, one that lower levels of education are sorely lacking. A shift towards electronic teaching and student-run seminars at the secondary level may elevate students’ interest, focus, and comfort within large groups, fostering co-operative learning at a young age. Understandably, this system may not be useful to university classes of mammoth sizes. A lovely idea floated by the Khan Academy suggests to deliver of lecture material outside the classroom by making it freely available to students (which it already is) and spending class time re-enforcing ideas within small groups split amongst numerous instructors (or an instructor and multiple TAs). In adjunction to discussions, students could be encouraged to dissect the material with their peers in an equal-opportunity environment, while working on case studies or problem sets relevant to the curriculum.

The emphasis on grades must be relaxed, removing the fear factor from education and the resulting slant towards compartmentalized studying. I have been told by multiple professors that grad school grades are irrelevant; what really defines an individual is the quality of their work, their ability to construct and phrase arguments and troubleshoot situations while generating novel solutions. A few have taken this stance further. One of my instructors made a rather stunning point to me, which I aim to paraphrase as accurately as possible. “Education itself is overrated. Nothing separates a PhD student from one who has taken his Masters. All it means to me is that you’ve spent a few more years studying some esoteric thing you may never apply in your professional life,” he said. “What I’m after is a mind: a mind that challenges what is presented, a mind that is analytical and actively seeks problems, a mind that does not look at a bunch of facts and takes it as gospel. Life is not a test. You do not get a job simply because you pass a test.”

Whose land is it anyway?

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By Matthew Hiltermann
Photos by Mark Burnham

CALGARY (The Gauntlet) — With all the debate around Enbridge’s Northern Gateway pipeline, competing interests fail to question the ownership of the land on which it is projected to be built. One look at a map would suggest that the land is well within the generally accepted boundaries of Canada, however, a closer look says otherwise.
As it stands, treaties have not been established in most of British Columbia, except for Vancouver Island, 2,000 square kilometers in northwest BC and the northeast corner of the province. Therefore, the land on which the pipeline will be built does not technically belong to Canada.

English Common Law, which is the foundation of Canada’s legal system, establishes four bases on which land can be acquired: by military conquest, where one nation takes over another during war; by cession or formal transfer, where a treaty is signed between two sovereign parties, wherein one of them relinquishes sovereignty to the other; by annexation, where one nation unilaterally declares its sovereignty over the other without military action or treaty; and through the settlement of “no man’s land,” a place where no one lives and that no one claims, also known as terra nullius. Canada relied on the fourth premise, terra nullius, to justify its occupation of BC. To deal with the obvious contradiction between the presence of Aboriginal Peoples in BC — like the Dene, Okanagan and Sekani — and the requisite of terra nullius that the land be unoccupied, it has been stipulated that land was unoccupied unless the peoples living there had a concept of land tenure. Research done in recent years demonstrates that the Aboriginal Peoples of BC have a very complex and deeply entrenched concept of land tenure.

As it turns out, the third premise, annexation or assentation of sovereignty, can’t be taken when dealing with Aboriginal Peoples in Canada. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 explicitly states that the “Nations or tribes of Indians, with whom we are connected . . . should not be molested or disturbed in the possession of such parts of our dominions and territories as not having been ceded to or purchased by us . . . Any lands whatever, which not having been ceded to or purchased by us as aforesaid, are reserved to the said Indians.”
Section 25 of the Constitution Act of 1982 affirms the rights and promises made by the Royal Proclamation of 1763. This means that sovereignty can’t be asserted over Aboriginal Peoples through military means, annexation or assentation of sovereignty. Aboriginal land, and therefore sovereignty, must be formally surrendered through treaty under Canadian law.[pullquote]The land on which the pipeline will be built does not technically belong to Canada[/pullquote]
Most of the land in BC, with the exception of the territory covered by Treaty 8, the Nisga’a Final Agreement and the Douglas Treaties, does not belong to the Canadian government. This creates problems for Enbridge, since a considerable part of the Northern Gateway’s proposed plan transverses this land. Furthermore, according to the Royal Proclamation, the Canadian government is constitutionally obliged to prevent the exploitation of lands that have not been given up through treaty. It follows, then, that the Northern Gateway project would be in direct violation of both Canadian law and aboriginal rights, according to both the Royal Proclamation and the Constitution. Because Aboriginal Peoples have retained sovereignty over their land, we are not dealing with an issue of majority rules. If so much as a single nation along the route is opposed to the construction of the pipeline, the entire process will be stopped in its tracks.

As it stands, Enbridge can’t build the pipeline, nor can the federal government unilaterally give the go-ahead to build unless treaties are established or each individual nation agrees to the process. In the meantime, the Northern Gateway pipeline will remain a pipe dream.