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LOYOLAN
EST. 1921
p A West African film
Ka9eb comes to LMU.
Page 8
VOLUME 92 I ISSUE 09
Grades inflate to B+ average
LMU Grade Trends
1
1
f
1
>
Мз
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Before 1989
1989
NOW
GPA Trends Nationwide
According to Renee Rorshoim.
/
Dean. Undergraduate erocyams
Academic Year
1991-1992
1996-1997
2001 -2002
2006-2007
All Schools
Private Schools
Accorrtng to gradinfiation.com
Information compiled by Sonja Bistranin, asst. News editor; Graphic: Sydney Franz | Loyolan
In the past two decades, average GPAs have risen at both public and private four-year universities. LMU is no different, with
its average GPA rising from a C to a B+ in 20 years. This national trend is a hot topic in higher education circles both around
the United States and in the LMU community. To read Asst. News Editor Sonja Bistranin’s full article, see Page 3.
Students
advocate
cultural
dialogue
For the second year,
inter cultural facilitators
encourage ethnic equality.
Carly Barnhill
Copy Editor
@carlybarnhill
This year marks the second year for
the Ethnic and Intercultural Service’s
Intercultural Facilitator (IF) Program, which
is made up of LMU students dedicated to
student support. The student facilitators are
in charge of campus -wide discussions and
workshops regarding diversity, culture and
various other topics.
There are currently 25 facilitators involved
in the program, with a waiting list of students
interested in getting involved. According to
the Student Affairs Division section on the
LMU website, IFs “are open, friendly and
supportive individuals who are genuinely
interestedin helping students become actively
involved in issues related to the intercultural
community.”
This semester, approximately 350 students
have been present at seminars, workshops and
dialogues with these facilitators, according
to Henry Ward, the Director of the Office of
Intercultural Affairs. If it is hard for students
to attend a meeting or a session, the IFs make
time to reach out to the students themselves.
Rather than holding these discussions and
workshops as formal meetings and hoping
that students come, the facilitators meet the
students in other places such as residence
halls, Ward said.
See Intercultural | Page 2
News editor tries 12-
hour tech blackout
In this first-person news
analysis, Croley describes the
paradox of stress and peace.
Allison Croley
News Editor
@allisoncroley
College newspapers around the country
are reporting on students’ addiction
to technology. University of Alabama’s
The Crimson White reported in July that
technology is contributing to student sleep
deprivation. CSU Fullerton’s The Daily
Titan similarly reported in September that
technology is suppressing student success.
In 2011, Hufimgton Post blogger Susan
Moeller summarized a study of worldwide
college students who turned off every form
of technology for one day - phones, laptops,
Playstations, televisions - and the responses
of students participating in the study were
quite inline with the issues college newspapers
have been reporting.
Most students in the study reported feeling
like an addict when they unplugged. In
feet, many of them showed actual signs of
withdrawal.
Frankly, I found this interesting but not
sh ocking.Thesedays, we allrelyon technology
to communicate with people and do our work
whether it’s school or job-related. I began to
wonder how I w'ould react to a technology
blackout, let alone be able to do it without
getting fired or failing out of school.
So I tried it.
No messages, no social media, no email, no
television. For 12 hours, I put my phone on
airplane mode, kept my laptop off and put a
sheet over the television. What happened?
The whole government shut down.
But that might not have been because I
unplugged.
In all seriousness, my stress went through
the roof, but life felt simpler. It was a weird
paradox of hating myself for taking on the
challenge and loving myself for sticking with
it. Did I experience withdrawal? Not really.
Was it possible ? Yes, but only for a day.
I started at 9 a.m. I chose a Monday because
nothing big usually happens on Mondays and
I’m in class for most of the day. Normally
I walk to each class and meetings texting
someone, looking at Facebook or checking my
email, but without my phone I was forced to
actually pay attention to what went on around
me.
I saw that the air was a little hazy, 1 smelled
See Tech Blackout | Page 4
Leslie Irwin | Loyolan
Foley Fountain purple for
Domestic Violence Awareness
November is Domestic Violence Awareness month, and Belles service organization,
whose social justice concentration is domestic violence, is observing in a number
of ways. One of these ways is coloring Foley Fountain water purple in order to
remind passerbys of the women and children who have suffered from domestic
abuse, according to Belles member McKenzie Cochran, a junior dance major.