You are currently browsing the category archive for the ‘Students’ category.
Sarah McBride won election as American University’s student government president as Tim McBride. She served for a year as Tim McBride. But two weeks ago, as she stepped down from the office, she set the record straight:
As SG President, I realized that as great as it is to work on issues of fairness, it only highlighted my own struggles. It didn’t bring the completeness that I sought. By mid-fall, it had gotten to the point where I was living in my own head. With everything I did, from the mundane to the exciting, the only way I was able to enjoy it was if I re-imagined doing it as a girl. My life was passing me by, and I was done wasting it as someone I wasn’t.
I told my family and some of my closest friends over winter break. My brothers and parents greeted me with immediate support and unconditional love. This was the first time that my parents have had to worry about my safety, my job prospects and my acceptance. This story is my experience and my experience alone. There is no one-size-fits-all narrative; everyone’s path winds in different ways.
The experience highlights my own privilege. I grew up in an upper-income household, in an accepting environment and with incredible educational opportunities. I never worried about my family’s reaction.
But those worries are all too common for most. For far too many trans individuals, the reality is far bleaker; coming out oftentimes means getting kicked out of your home. I say this not to diminish my own experience, but to acknowledge the privilege and opportunities which have been afforded to me.
Today is the next day of the life I’ve already had, but at the same time, the first day of the life I always knew I wanted to lead. Starting on Saturday, I will present as my true self. Going forward, I ask that you use female pronouns (she/her) and my chosen name, Sarah.
Congrats, Sarah, and good luck.
The Council of University of California Faculty Associations is saying there’s a deal in the works between Governor Jerry Brown and UC President Mark Yudof to “loosen the most important ties between the university and the state.”
Under the terms of the reported deal, UC will be freed up to raise tuition, increase out-of-state enrollment, and divert state funds to construction projects. And crucially, it will no longer have to make the specifics of these arrangements public.
UC’s out-of-state enrollment has been skyrocketing in recent years, as has out-of-state tuition. Just a few years ago, non-Californians represented just 10% of UC Berkeley enrollment, for instance, but now they make up nearly a third of the Berkeley student body — and they’re paying rates higher than Harvard’s.
Let’s underscore that: A third of UC Berkeley students are from out-of-state, and they’re being charged private university fees.
This is the future of the UC system, if CUCFA’s analysis is accurate.
And it should be noted as well that UC’s student body isn’t expected to get bigger, at least not at rates that would be necessary to keep rates of in-state enrollment stable. As CUCFA notes, UC is likely to “dump a larger number of eligible Californians onto the CSU and Community Colleges, which will in turn pass on their overflow to for-profit schools” if this plan goes through.
This represents nothing less than the privatization of the UC system, once the greatest public university in the nation.
With Quebec’s three-month student strike continuing after a massive student rejection of a government proposal on tuition policy, police have been called to at least two of the province’s campuses this morning to enforce court orders that the colleges re-open.
At Collège de Rosemont in Montreal, several hundred student demonstrators were pepper-sprayed by police early this morning. Meanwhile, riot police are reported to be on standby at Collège Lionel Groulx in Blainville.
At least thirty injunctions calling for campuses to re-open for classes have been issued so far. To date, nearly all of them have been ignored.
Noon update | Classes have been canceled for the day at Collège Lionel Groulx.
In all the conversation around Barack Obama’s announcement that he now supports same-sex marriage, one thing is often forgotten: just how quickly public opinion is shifting on this issue.
It’s often been reported, for instance, that black Americans oppose same-sex marriage by a 49-39 margin. What’s less often mentioned is that that figure, from April of this year, represents a 27-point tightening from 2008, when 63% of blacks opposed same-sex marriage, and only 26% supported it. At that rate of change, same-sex marriage will reach plurality support late next year and majority support sometime in 2015. To put it another way, black views on same-sex marriage today are exactly where whites’ positions stood just four years ago.
And if you look at charts of public opinion on the issue, it’s clear that views aren’t just changing quickly, the rate of change is accelerating. We’ve reached a tipping point on the question, and we may reach something approaching consensus far sooner than we think.
Don’t believe me? Check this out:
That’s right. Same-sex marriage is more popular in the United States in 2012 than interracial marriage was just eighteen years ago. And as with same-sex marriage, polling results on interracial marriage show a long period of slow change followed by a dramatic, rapid shift.
In 1968, only 20% of Americans approved of interracial marriage. Support grew at a rate of about one point a year over the next quarter century, and actually slowed in the eighties and early nineties. But then the dam broke, and support shot up 38 points in the next 18 years. Today, support for interracial marriage stands well above 90% for all but the oldest Americans.
Students in the Canadian province of Quebec have overwhelmingly rejected the government’s proposal to end their three-month strike.
Amid concerns that the offer did little to keep tuition rates down and claims by student negotiators that the government altered the plan without their consent, students at campus after campus have rejected the deal, leaving the provincial government and the student unions back at square one and putting the spring semester in peril.
Anti-strike students at one college obtained a court injunction on Wednesday calling on their school to re-open, but when they arrived this morning to enforce the ruling, the campus entrance had been barricaded by a group of some two hundred students and professors. Administrators attempted to negotiate with the protesters, but announced after an hour of discussion that the campus would remain closed.
Yesterday morning the entire Montreal subway system was shut down for an hour and a half after smoke bombs were set off in at least five stations. No person or group took credit for the shutdown, and speculation mounted during the day as to whether it was connected to the student strike.

Recent Comments