Vassar Student Association

VSA News

Vassar's free shuttle begins spring semester service

Vassar's free Poughkeepsie Shuttle bus service has started up again for the spring semester and will continue until the last day of classes. Take the shuttle to restaurants, arts centers, riverfront Waryas Park, and the recently opened Walkway Over the Hudson (using the City Hall stop). Information is available at the College's Neighbors website.

E-mail questions, comments, praise, ideas, and suggestions to pokshuttle@vassar.edu.

VSA Council passes memorandum on curricular response to economic crisis

On Sunday, Nov. 29, the VSA Council unanimously passed a memorandum to explain and contextualize its earlier endorsement of a letter written by a campus group:

MEMORANDUM

From: The Vassar Student Association Council

To: The Board of Trustees and Students of Vassar College

Cc: President Catharine Hill, Dean of the Faculty Jonathan Chenette, Dean of Planning and Academic Affairs Rachel Kitzinger, Dean of the College Christopher Roellke, Vice President for Finance and Administration Elizabeth Eismeier, Vice President for Development Cathy Baer, Vice President for Computing and Information Services Bret Ingerman, Vice President for College Relations Susan DeKrey, Chair of the Faculty Policy and Conference Committee Steve Rock

Date: November 29, 2009

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________

We, the VSA Council, wish to elaborate on our 11.22.09 endorsement of the Campus Solidarity Working Group’s letter to the Board of Trustees. The letter, written by Adjunct Associate Professor of English Judy Nichols, was presented to Council by a group of five students. After a heated discussion of nearly four hours, Council voted 15-6 to endorse the document. We seek here to frame this endorsement in the context of our nuanced discussion.

Ms. Nichols’ letter—the second in a series of similar documents—criticized the reductions in tenure lines, adjunct and visiting faculty members, and course sections as a result of the financial crisis. The document demonstrated a clear concern for the long-term health of Vassar’s multidisciplinary curriculum, our flexible course offerings, and our retention of excellent scholars and teachers. The Council voted to endorse this letter because we believe these are core properties of a Vassar education that our constituents value deeply.

Our endorsement of this letter was, to some extent, a reflection of the mood of the student body. Council is comprised of 24 full-time students. We study in every academic department. We compete on varsity athletics teams. We do research with our professors, learn from the life experiences of our staff, and benefit from the multifaceted diversity within our own student body. Council’s views on Vassar parallels the views of our 2,450 constituents. Many Council members felt that they lacked accurate financial information; many felt unsure of the future of their department or their favorite professor; many felt annoyed that, while members of the Executive Board are routinely consulted on confidential financial planning, the broader student community is left in the dark until after decisions have been reached. These feelings, reflected by our 15-6 endorsement, are all reflective of broader concerns on campus.

We also respect the student contingent of the Solidarity Group who attended our meeting. We are their representatives, and it is our responsibility to channel their feelings to the College’s decision-making bodies. Even if we disagree on policy and approach, we applaud these students for caring about our College so deeply. Indeed, a consistent frustration among Council members is that surprisingly few constituents come to us with institutional concerns—unfortunate, in a financial climate inevitably filled with such concerns. We are often discouraged when students are apathetic about the state of the College, and do not seek information easily available through campus-wide e-mails, our VSA site, the Economy site, or The Miscellany News. We admire the commitment of the students in the Solidarity Group and appreciate their efforts to make Vassar a more conscientious, egalitarian institution.

Nevertheless, we harbor no unrealistic expectations that Vassar can remain unchanged. In this economic climate, the VSA Council is fully aware that the curriculum we all value must shrink. So too must our teaching staff. However, as members of the community, we cannot help but feel saddened when our teachers are let go. And as representatives of the student body, we cannot help but agree with the Solidarity Group’s sincere concern for the effect of the financial crisis on academic life and on the lives of community members.

Beyond these sentiments, which earned the support of the majority of Council, we feel it is our responsibility to acknowledge some of the many inaccuracies within Ms. Nichols’ letter. In its accusatory and hyperbolic tone, the document presents a problematic interpretation of Vassar’s careful financial planning. We seek to highlight just some of the instances where the letter marshals false or incomplete evidence to make its case.

The letter makes several inaccurate claims about the staffing and curricula of specific departments. Computer Science will actually be teaching four more course sections next fall compared to this year. Film too will be one course ahead of the level of staffing they requested for 2010-11 because a new tenure-track appointee would have had a reduced course load in the first year. As for the languages, the Dean of the Faculty office has indeed asked that tenure-line faculty members engage in teaching at the 100-level on a regular basis. Students at the 100-level deserve and benefit from contact with our tenured scholars, and our tenure-line faculty benefit from regular engagement with the challenges and rewards of teaching at that level. We disagree with the letter’s implication that this trend is negative. Further, we take issue with the letter’s baseless accusation that the administration has illegally forced faculty members to retire. While the College’s financial situation has no-doubt resulted in some retirement-age faculty feeling pressure to leave the institution, we have no reason to believe that the administration is the source of that pressure.

Most significantly, beyond these specific points, the letter conveys both implicitly and explicitly that decisions have been made by a small group of administrators without regard to community input. This is misleading. While our Senior Officers (most of whom are also teaching faculty) have directed financial planning, students and faculty also had direct input into decision-making. Two elected students—the VSA President and VSA Vice President for Operations—sit as full members on the Priorities and Planning Committee. The members of this group sit as equals, debating the College’s many noble aspirations alongside its financial restraints. The students, faculty, and administrators come together with optimism for what Vassar should be and realism for what Vassar can be. Through this committee, we have had (and continue to have) substantive and specific input into the financial decision-making process. On curricular issues, the VSA Vice President for Academics sits on the Advisory Group for the Allocation of Faculty Resources (AGAFR) and the Committee on Curricular Policies (CCP), and is a vocal advocate for multidisciplinary programs, the reduction of administrative course releases, and the general maintenance of our broad and diverse curriculum. The letter fails to acknowledge the substantive input that students have had into the current financial plan through their elected representatives.

Moreover, the letter implies that Vassar’s financial planning was reached haphazardly—that the senior administration hacked away at the budget without care for the curriculum or respect for the College’s employees. In fact, we recognize that the process was thoughtful and deliberative. Dean of the Faculty Jon Chenette has worked (and continues to work) with departments to ensure that we are making academic reductions in ways that will affect the broader curriculum as little as possible. We recognize that some members of the community, including some members of our own Council, object to staffing decisions in certain areas. However, the Senior Officers, CCP and AGAFR reached these decisions after long and careful consideration. This important work should not be dismissed.

We agree wholeheartedly with the document’s concern for the curriculum, and are pleased that since the Council’s endorsement, the most recent estimates suggest that the curriculum will lose only 10 course sections next fall, rather than the 30 previously estimated. It is important to realize that the damage done to the curriculum by these changes is not nearly as catastrophic as Ms. Nichols’ letter implies. By almost any measure, Vassar’s curriculum will remain flexible and diverse.

We would also like to clarify the conditions under which Council voted to endorse the letter. The members of the Solidarity Group told Council that Ms. Nichols planned to send her letter on Wednesday, November 25. As we later discovered, she did not plan to send it until Wednesday, December 2. This false date essentially prevented us from delaying the vote by one week to consider the motion in greater depth. While we do not believe that we were intentionally misled, this significant miscommunication put pressure on Council to act quickly. Many representatives saw this as a choice between “doing something” to advocate for the curriculum or “doing nothing.” Under this tight timeframe, the majority of Council elected to endorse the document. In some cases, this endorsement was more for the sentiments behind it than for the facts underlying it.

The feelings we express here are nuanced, but the issues facing the College are complex enough that such nuance is required. Unlike the Solidarity Group’s letter, we lack a unified thesis. We are instead left with competing and simultaneous thoughts—irreparable sadness for the loss of professors and staff, concern for our characteristically dynamic curriculum, profound respect for the College’s senior leadership, and a determination to mend our community and build an unshakable foundation for Vassar’s next 150 years.

Vassar Emergency Medical Services launches new Web site

Vassar College Emergency Medical Services (VCEMS) has launched a new Web site. VCEMS operates on weeknights from 5 p.m. until 8 a.m., and provides 24-hour coverage from Friday at 5 p.m. until Monday morning at 8 a.m. VCEMS also provides extra coverage during large-scale campus events.

Learn more about your department's majors committee

As the College responds to the global economic crisis, departments are finalizing their course offerings for Fall and Spring of the 2010-11 academic year within the next week. Department chairs and program directors have been negotiating with the Dean of the Faculty Office, and staffing plans are currently being determined.

The VSA Executive Board has been in constant conversation with the senior administration regarding the changes to the curriculum. We would like to encourage the student body to engage with their majors committees and department chairs to learn more about the changes to the curriculum in their respective areas. While students should rest assured that Vassar will continue to offer a broad and diverse curriculum, the changes will nonetheless be significant, and it is in the best interests of students to be well informed.

Student voice is essential to academic life at Vassar; our hope is that majors committees can channel that voice. Whether you are declared in a department or simply interested in it, you should be aware of and have a voice in the department's future course offerings. Majors committees, groups of student majors, are excellent resources for facilitating communication in departments and channeling that input to the faculty.

Contact information for all of the majors committees and department chairs is available here. If you have any concerns about your academic opportunities in the coming year, please engage with your majors committee and department. And please come talk to your VSA Executive Board—we are your advocates, and we want to be your resource.

Philaletheis, Vassarion launch new Web sites

Check out the new Vassarion site, the online home of Vassar's official yearbook. And then check out the new Philaletheis site, the oldest student organization at Vassar College (est. 1865).

Your Second Monthly Video Update

Each month, a member of the Vassar Student Association (VSA) Executive Board will deliver a brief video address about his or her recent projects. This new endeavor will increase transparency and allow you to see your elected leaders. If you have any questions, please stop by our office hours to begin a conversation. This video update features VSA Vice President for Academics Stephanie Damon-Moore.

Meet Me in Poughkeepsie brings over 1,000 students into the community

The Second Annual Meet Me in Poughkeepsie, which occurred on Oct. 10, brought more than 1,000 Vassar students into the Mid-Hudson Valley. Thirty activities, organized by Vassar student groups and offices, explored different facets of the area surrounding the College. Activities ranged from picnicking at the Vanderbilt Mansion, to apple picking at Wilklow Orchards, to sipping cappuccinos at the Aurora Pastry Shop. The day concluded with the Senior Class traveling to Mahoney's Irish Pub in downtown Poughkeepsie, where students danced the night away with the first (of many) bonding experiences during their final year of Vassar.

To learn more about the Meet Me in Poughkeepsie initiative, view this year's trips. And to find out more about the beauty of the Hudson Valley and its close relationship with Vassar, see Exploring the Hudson Valley.

Reminder: Open forum on the economy

Dear students,

I want to remind you all of an important opportunity. Tonight on October 6, the Senior Officers will be hosting an All-Campus Forum at 8 p.m. in Rockefeller Hall 300 to discuss the implications of the financial crisis at Vassar.

Hope to see you there. If you can't attend the forum but would like a chance to discuss the issues, I would be happy to meet with you during office hours or by appointment.

All my best,

Caitlin Ly
President, Vassar Student Association

Your First Monthly Video Update

Each month, a member of the Vassar Student Association (VSA) Executive Board will deliver a brief video address about his or her recent projects. This new endeavor will increase transparency and allow you to see your elected leaders. If you have any questions, please stop by our office hours to begin a conversation. This first video update features VSA President Caitlin Ly.

Executive Board updates from September

Once or twice each month, the Executive Board writes short reports about some of its current projects. These reports are in addition to oral reports delivered frequently within the VSA Council and longer written reports for the Board of Trustees. The following are updates from September 2009:

Caitlin Ly, VSA President, ’10, vsa@vassar.edu
Tuesday: 11 a.m. - 1 p.m., Thursday: 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.

This has been a busy start to the semester for the VSA Executive Board. We have made some great steps forward in a number of areas, and have held our ground in others amidst an environment where cuts in services are a main point of discussion on almost every agenda. Here are some of the highlights:

Academic Credit for Athletics: Having recognized the dedication required and benefits attained from playing a varsity sport, the Vassar Student Association (VSA), in collaboration with the Student Athletic Advisory Committee (SAAC), has passed a proposal that, if approved by the faculty, will allow athletes to receive up to two academic credits for participation on a varsity team to count toward graduation credits.

Composting in the Retreat: The VSA allocated $10,000 from the Great Works Fund to allow composting to take place for all pre- and post-consumer waste in the Retreat starting this year. Last year’s waste audit revealed that fully 72% of all waste could be composted if we had the system in place. We hope this new system will provide the Vassar community with the tools it needs to significantly reduce our carbon footprint and maintain its ideals of sustainable living moving forward.

Room Entry Policy: The VSA passed a proposal on the room entry policy, which will amend the Student Handbook and the Residential Life Guide pending a vote of the Committee on College Life. The room entry proposal gives Residential Life staff the right to inspect students’ rooms given 24 hours’ notice and specifies the conditions under which a security guard can enter and search a student’s room.

Common-sense proposals: While these proposals are less visible, we have continually advocated in meetings with senior officers and the Board of Trustees for a broader vision of where cuts will be made. One recent example is the unexpected cutting of library hours; we have made a counterproposal to return to normal library hours (we feel there aren’t enough to begin with) but to close the Circulation Desk at earlier hours, saving money but maintaining a core student service.

Feel free to email me with any questions, concerns or suggestions. You can also always stop by my office hours and we can chat in person.



Elizabeth Anderson, VP for Student Life, ’11, vsastudentlife@vassar.edu
Thursday: 12 p.m. - 3 p.m.

This semester, I've been focusing on two areas in particular: Campus Dining and Security. In both of these areas, students agree that there's quite a bit of room for improvement. The current meal plan isn't working for many students (seniors and off-campus students can't use ACDC, and most students seem to end each semester with excess meals.) So I've been meeting with the Chris Roelleke, Maureen King, the food committee (which will be meeting soon), FDIC and some administrators in our purchasing and accounting departments to see if we can design a better meal plan structure for next year. This is also something that the Student Life Committee will be working on, as well as the CCL.

I've also been working to improve relations with Security. This year, we were able to make Security a real presence during Orientation so that new students and house teams would get to know their officers. Many students have are concerned that Security policies are not as clear as they could be (like the policies surrounding room entry, and punishments). The VSA Council has passed the room entry policy, which the VSA has been working on for nearly two years. The hope is to adopt that into the Student Handbook and make it very clear to future students. I have also been working the DB Brown and Luis Inoa to improve the reslife guide to clarify these policies.

Additionally, the VSA Council recently passed the Athletic Proposal, which will soon be presented at CCP:
(http://vsa.vassar.edu/news/2009/09/07/council-endorses-granting-credit-v...
ty-athletes).

Please feel free to e-mail me or come to my office hours if there are other student life concerns you'd like to talk about.



Brian Farkas, VP for Operations, ’10, vsaoperations@vassar.edu
Monday: 9 a.m. - 10 a.m., Wednesday: 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Friday: 3 p.m. - 5 p.m.

After a summer of design, this fall saw the launch of a revamped VSA Web site (vsa.vassar.edu). The site now features regular updates on the work of the Council, as well as reorganized information for organization leaders and treasurers. One of my favorite features of the site is Exploring the Hudson Valley, a user-friendly database of local dining, shopping, cultural attractions, and natural attractions. Each location features a description written from a Vassar student's perspective. Through the Web, the VSA hopes to be as transparent and accessible as possible.

Rationalizing Vassar's committee structure is a long-term challenge that the Executive Board hopes to tackle this year. As the coordinator of student delegates to College committees, I have ensured that committee members are well-trained and can begin work with a thorough understanding of current issues. I am also researching redundancies and inefficiencies in our committee system. For example, three drug-and-alcohol-related groups were combined into a single task force with broader membership. These types of consolidations and collaborations save countless hours, and keep our system of shared governance moving smoothly.

I am working closely with the Alumnae and Alumni of Vassar College (AAVC), the Career Development Office, and the Development Office to better incorporate alumni into the life of the College. Our graduates are among our most valuable resources ‹ particularly in the current job market ‹ and I hope to streamline interactions between alumni and students. I am also doing fundraising work through Phonathon and the Friends of the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center. As the College faces unprecedented financial challenges, philanthropists are invaluable in supporting central aspects of the College. As the student liaison to Development, I am articulating student needs and
concerns as clearly as possible to donors.

Finally, I am working to establish a 24/7 study space in the Faculty Commons. We hope to equip the space with a VPrinter and possibly several public-access iMacs. More on this to come!



Stephanie Damon-Moore, VP for Academics, ''11, vsaacademics@vassar.edu
Monday: 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.

As the VSA VP for Academics, my job largely centers on developing long-term policy changes in academic areas such as the curriculum, advising, course evaluations, financial aide, etc. In that capacity, I sit on the Committee on Curricular Policy (CCP), the Advisory Group for the Allocation of Faculty Resources (AGAFR), the Library Committee, and the Committee on Admissions and Financial Aide (CAFA). I also chair the internal council committee on academics. This year, the academics committee and myself are working toward revising the Course Evaluation Questionnaires (CEQ's) and getting them online, improving advising by instituting a peer advising system, and invigorating the majors committees as sources of information for students in the department, advising bodies for the faculty, and resources for department and advisor evaluations. We're also considering supporting a social consciousness requirement, addressing scheduling and course availability issues, and examining major requirements and cross-listing options. It is my hope that through my work and the work of my colleagues on the council, we can preserve a strong curriculum, facilitate communication among administrators, faculty, and students, and provide more opportunities for student input to be heard by the Office of the Dean of the Faculty and by the department chairs. Please feel free to email me or come to my office hours if you have any questions, suggestions, or concerns regarding academics at Vassar.



Aaron Grober, VP for Activities, ’11, vsaactivities@vassar.edu
Monday: 12 p.m. - 1 p.m., Wednesday: 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.

A BIG HELLO to everyone from your VP for Activities, Aaron! I just wanted to send along a very brief update of what I’ve been up to throughout the summer and since the year started.

I spent most of the summer attempting to figure out how to do my job, a difficult task for anybody in such a high-turnover position like student government. I worked on a number of summer event approvals remotely with the office of Campus Activities to ensure that we could start-out the year with a BANG! One interesting piece of information about this summer’s festivities included the relatively last-minute news of the departure of Megan, the Assistant Director of Campus Activities. In light of this, Terry Quinn, the director of Campus Activities, myself, and the SARC interns have been attempting to cover the work that Megan used to do, for the time being until we’re able to find a replacement for her. The Fall Leadership conference at the very beginning of school was one of our most successful ever, despite its pitfalls. This was the first year we attempted to hold the conference off-campus, and that decision definitely had its detriments but also a huge amount of benefits. I’m really looking forward to looking at the feedback from the conference and working with the office of Campus Activities to make next year’s FLC AWESOME! The Activities fair, which took place earlier in the month, was also hugely successful. We had 120 organizations on-hand to represent their organizations and recruit new members. We had over 1000 attendees, and all of the org leaders walked away with an impressively grown list of members. One thing that I’m currently working on, and will continue to work on is how we offer continuing leadership opportunities beyond the fall and winter conferences. Also, I’ve been meeting twice weekly with the office of Campus Activities to get your event requests approved. We’re working on them! We get around 60 event requests a week, so don’t be too disappointed if it takes a few days or if your application gets turned down. There are only so many weekends in the semester, and everybody has so many incredible ideas for programming! I’m also extremely excited about the year for the activities committee, we have some ambitious goals, but we also have an incredible group of dedicated student leaders poised to tackle them. Last but not least, I’m looking closely at our campus culture and organization programming in trying to best gage how orgs can allocate their resources to create the most diverse and inclusive programming possible.

Please don’t hesitate to drop by during my office hours, Monday 12:00-1:30, or Wednesday 3:30-5:30 to talk about any activities related issues you have on your mind! Peace!



Scott Pascal, VP for Finance, ‘10
Monday: 12p.m. - 1:30p.m., Wednesday: 3p.m. - 4:30p.m., Thursday: 12p.m. - 1:15 p.m.

The VSA is in good financial health. I’ve made sure all the organization budgets are set up and have already started to field many special purpose fund requests. I have also been working on procedures for the new purchasing policy. Applications for both Capital budgeting and Supplemental budgeting have been sent out and are due the 29th and 27th of September, respectively. There is plenty of money available in both these funds and all the special purpose funds so I encourage all orgs to apply!

Meet the VSA

Find office hours, learn about executive positions, and read biographies of the six students serving on the VSA Executive Board.

Meet this year's Board »

Meet the VSA Council

Find your class and residential representatives and learn how to contact them with your comments and concerns. Also read about the various council committees and peruse agendas and minutes from the weekly VSA Council meetings.

Meet this year's Council »

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