Showing posts with label sarah lawrence college. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sarah lawrence college. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Community Conversation - Strategic Plan

The following are unedited notes taken by Walker of the Community Conversation - Strategic Plan.  For those who weren't there, read up on student concerns and admin responses.  Also e-mail tblum@sarahlawrencecollege.edu with your own concerns (top 3 preferably). 


Community Conversation – Strategic Plan

Microphones available in audience.

Panel: Mary Porter, Kristen Sands, Leah Olsen, Vera Kelsey Watts, Al Green, Daniel Licht, Tom Blume

 

 

Past Tuesday: document (explaining cornerstones)

 

Why are we here?: College last created a long-term strategic plan more than ten years ago.  Environment changed an awful lot since 1996-97.  Reassessing priorities, setting out goals to carry for the next few years.  Last large fundraising campaign was 04-05.

 

Objectives: inviting audience reflections, recommendations, sense of priorities

 

Three general areas: Building of a coherent course of study, priorities for development of curriculum going forward, ways to assist students who are graduating/career/etc.

 

What are our wants?  What are our needs?

 

Strategic coordinating committee has responsibility for day-to-day action.

 

Conducted series of surveys dating back to Spring ’08.  Amassed a lot of data, some quantitative, some qualitative.

 

Cornerstones: things that absolutely have to be addressed for the college

 

Pedagogy

Size of college

Financial equilibrium (one thing can be said absolutely not achieved since ’96)

Working at SLC (faculty, staffed)

Living/learning at SLC

Marketing, visibility

 

 

-----

 

 

MARY: "We all love this institution, it is important to recognize what we have and move forward."

 

Notes are being taken.  Video being made.  Information from this meeting being taken into constructive meetings.  Welcome input.

 

-Building program of study with don (30 min).  What do you like?  What's working?  What would you like to see?  What things do you think you need to have that happen (skills, money, organization)?

 

-Content of Curriculum (15 min).

 

-Being prepared for life beyond SLC (15 min).

 

 

BUILDING PROGRAM OF STUDY WITH DON:

 

Alexis Gordon: dealing with requirements, especially lecture requirements.  Upper-class keep getting bumped from lectures, while we have requirements.  What works?  Don is always pushing in direction of things you wouldn't necessarily think of, stepping outside of comfort zone, and often fits perfectly.  Want to see happen?  Even just being clearer about lecture requirements as first year.  

 

Elizabeth [Row] (senior): Does not agree with Alexis, feels all that was clear.  Her issue: what about students that have gone over requirements and fulfilled, then get to their senior year and have a course they've been waiting to take and are bumped.  Seems to be a disconnect between don-student and registrar office.  How do you form a relationship so that doesn't happen.

 

(Resp:) Important that have open curriculum.  Many were talking about priority of seniors and juniors, question is how does that mesh with open curriculum.  

 

Hana Denson (senior): Love curriculum!  Happy with transfer.  Issue: been very frustrating to come as a junior and not feel that have any priority.  Don't think that priority would be against "egalitarian concept that's going on."  Could be things in place like having juniors/seniors register first.  Giving priority list more weight.  

 

Daniel Licht (response): Don't hear much from lower class about whether upper class should get priority.  Open curriculum is not predictable.  "Last chance class" could happen in sophomore year, not just in senior year.  So not as cut and dry.  Also: if more traditionally oriented to giving priority, what does composition of classes become.  Are we comfortable with classes that are exclusively or primarily seniors?  Is that in keeping with history of college?  These questions ought to be considered.

 

Al Green (response): Question: does priority take out faculty flexible in terms of the way they think about teaching and how they want to build the class.

 

Danny Young (senior): Interviews work very well.  Encourage dons to speak with students about how to maximize that.  Critique/question: how do we go about labeling what counts as intermediate, advanced, etc.  Often presumed knowledge in open classes, or "easy" intermediate classes.

 

Eliza Snelling (senior): props to doc about how registration works.

 

Joe [Lizowskis]: Good experience with don.  Process of selecting don.  When here, suggested to take first year studies in something you haven't taken yet.  What does that imply for your college life.  Priority list vague.  

 

Leah: over priorities: how many seniors actually get bumped?  need more data [ed: prolonging when you already hear students have problem?].  trying to move to two-year design of courses.  flexibility is at risk if they must plan too far in advance.  always trade-offs.

 

Kristen: labeling courses a simple problem--go back to facutly, compare syllabi, educate on how to clarify what constitutes int. adv., etc.

 

Leah: disagree a little, some diff. between what they think., sometimes it's not knowledge you need, but a certain way of learning and being able to approach studies.

 

Mary: Often not possible to know what people will want later; don can often help figure things out outside of focus area

 

Angelina (senior): re: adv. etc., advantages to crystallization--in advanced it's mostly seniors, first years intimidated.  often first years can do fine.  sometimes just scare tactics.  also: don is head of dance, Ang. does Theology.  Is there a way (workshop?) to better explain what things like conference work are?

 

Lucy (senior): Different experiences in terms of don advising.  Great disparity between different proffessors and donning philosophies.  Some just want to sign forms.  A lot of dons also have many seniors, this is unacceptable.

 

Jesse (sophomore): thing that works: diversity and dynamism of faculty.  science faculty so enthusiastic about area of study.  classes that are very base level and needed as prerequisites: very easy to be bumped, in event that higher level classes aren't offered.  Bio huge field, but general bio can only have 15.  Don single most important faculty member.  WRONG THAT THAT'S THE ONE PERSON YOU NEVER INTERVIEW.  FYS needs polishing.

 

Tate (senior): awesome students, faculty, staff.  discrepancy when it comes to people knowing what they want to study and those that don't.  desire for people to come and do what they want to do--get to point where they've taken same teacher for many semesters, gets problematic because they can't take any more credits in that field.

 

Lindsey (first year): process of registering very difficult, had FYS, wanted to be theatre third, got bumped twice from third class.  if seniors and juniors have priority, getting bumped early on is better because you can look forward to seniority

 

Andy [Drachenburg]: All elements of theatre (e.g.) is not the same, to limit them, you cannot get full exposure to your chosen field.  Abroad programs through theatre 

 

Sara Aonan: came to SLC with a plan with several requirements, but has been bumped from biology every single year--core requirement for premed.  internships (that might sub for credits) have requirements as well.

 

Sarah Weiss: similar predicament, being able to try different things, able to discover passion through that.  now has been bumped from psychology.  is there a way to let college know that you have a specific drive.

 

 

 

 

CONTENT OF ACADEMIC CURRICULUM: 

 

 

George (first year): wants there to be more film classes, esp. hands-on like film-making that are not just fys.

 

Bacchus: important to remember diversity of why we're here.  build into phil. that there is a diversity.  Don't make assumptions about any categories.  Allow for agency within system to achieve own goals.  During registration, you can list whether something is your passion, etc.

 

Mary: would you actually say you didn't want a class?

 

YES!

 

Two words: Chinese, Arabic

 

: semester-long visual arts courses, not many art history courses second semester, language: No ASL (HAS STARTED EXTRA CURRICULAR CLASS)

 

Diana [Shawns]: not able to receive credit if you've taken something on your own time.

 

Kristen Sands: policy is changing, because there's a lot of difficulty working with other institutions and the quality of the program.  past attempts have not worked out, so SLC is stopping.  language studies a high priority for the college.  

 

Al Green: when you make a decision to go to college, you've made a choice--sometimes to a place that can't satisfy everyone's needs.  choices have to be made.  hard when a small liberal arts college.

 

Lauren [Plotzman]: Not enough artistic classes.  given number of art-related students, only one faculty in each discipline.  supporter of open curriculum, but have found frustrating doing higher-level advance studies when it's people's first course in a discipline.  in classes with people who consider art a hobby.

 

Mali Irvin (senior): Matriculation--maybe with workshops, talking about what SLC grads experience.  

 

Roland Dollinger (German): not enough opportunities as senior to study as senior.  SLC used to have senior seminars, he thinks they worked very well.  created by faculty members, program died.  would take incentive from dean's office to push these kinds of courses.  would be wonderful for students and teachers.  could fulfill a lot of wishes.  shifting ratio between semester-long and year-long courses.  many more one-semester courses recently, in attempt to offer more courses.  needs to be addressed.

 

Mary: more semester-long classes means more opportunity to be bumped

 

Neil (senior): conference work sole reason came to SLC.  all gripes with classes that this is only half of what we do.  dissappointed that we do amazing projects that stay on hard drives and we forget about them.  if we could encourage more practical use of conf work...why don't we have more evidence of where work can get published.  sense of community could be solved if we knew more about what people were doing.

 

: most enriching classes--service learning.  need to emphasize applying things.  independent study should be emphasized.  prioritize.

 

Claudia Martinez (senior): transfer.  encourage survey course in art history.  program a mess.  friend took a course with someone asked to leave.  should be established appeals process in regards to evaluations.  many in a course not given credit deserved.

 

 

 

PREPARING FOR AFTER COLLEGE:

 

: career counseling not as effective as it might be.  resorted to friends writing apps to grad school.  

 

Mike (senior): support of being published, but don't force. good to be in space where you don't need to be worried about being published.

 

: step up offering art of teaching, undergrad and masters in five years.

 

William Forber: economic problems.  since been student, experienced rise in tuition.  how are you intending to represent needs?

 

Scott Calvin (Physics): good job of giving core, marketable skills; don't do a good job of letting students know that they have skills.  sometimes average student at SLC gives you huge advantage over state schools.

 

Tyler [Mayo] (sophomore): often don't talk about applicability of skills--even now.  important for people to know how people can make money with your life

 

(senior): lucky to have career part along with school part.  we can't be expected to be handed something on a silver platter.  but if you really need help, you can get it.

 

India Nicholas (senior): only complaint--lack of information about getting internships getting pre-approved.  didn't get credit for unpaid internship.

 

: SLC core values are those of grad school.  why award a bachelor's and masters in five years, but not MFA in five years?

 

: we're directed to the list that career counseling has for jobs (short list), but we need to be made more aware of other resources.  have low-level, not just professionals, come back to speak.

 

Grace (senior): a few things about becoming a senior.  being abroad, felt real disconnect, lost advantages.  seniors shouldn't get bumped as often.

 

Bacchus: taboo against talking about conference work.  we should appreciate each other a lot more.  don't value how-to knowledge.  nexus between practical and artistic is out-valued.  comunication.  communication.  communication.

 

Eliza: more communication between special programs office.

 

Emily (senior): taken science internships here two summers, amazing.  might not exist any more for economic reasons

 

Vera:  EMAIL US!  ADDRESSES AT SADIELOU.NET .

 

 

 

 

 

tblum@sarahlawrence.edu

 

e-mail 3 most important things you heard.

 

BLUM SUMMARY: 

 

-appears that snaps are coming back

-student in audience thinks there's still capitalist economy in u.s.

 

for real:

-donning is working, curriculum working

-some inconsistancy in labeling of courses (int., adv. etc)

-maybe more mentoring with donning

-access

-exploring possibility for system of letting admin know that a course is very imp. to student

 

-chinese, arabic

-think through pressures of small lib arts

-film, film making

-value of conference work and importance of making students aware of peer work

 

-workshops in grad school, career.

-advising from dons

-need for workshops for practical skills

 

MORE TO COME!  BE AGENTS ON-CAMPUS!  SPREAD THE WORD!

 

 

 

AFTER-PARTY:

 

John Y.: people don't have time to do things, John is proposing global calendar--planned inter-disciplinarily.  different groups/disciplines can collaborate and plan events together

 

Bacchus: create atmosphere of participation and you get participation.

 

Walker: music tuesdays, gaps should be filled by student stuff.

 

Ghost of Sarah Lawrence: WOKWOKBBABABSWOKKWOKK

 

Bacchus: plenty of fun things to do when you don't need funding.  Amy doing sing-alongs.  

 


Read on...

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Liberate Sex from Drama & Fear

(mama / sex / rides / books / events / names / suggestions )

This is the new thread for anything sex related in LorAnon. We're beginning to branch, for the benefit of people who would like to follow one topic (like slide and ski-lift building) without being turned off by another one (i.e. sex and porn). This isn't saying either topic is more legitimate. It's just proposing more than one forum, while retaining accountability to at least the larger anonymous Lor community.

Part of what went wrong with slcanon is that the posts were so fragmented, few people knew what was really going on entirely. Let's all make ourselves comfortable in this common space, take some clothes off, stay a while. It's our legal right of association.

But we should still report back to the larger group, quote our own hilariousness, flash our virtual anonymous boobies.



&&&&&&&&

some earlier posts:

"You Know Who said...

we met around the overhead projecter doing shadow art. you wrote down the time for meerkat day instead of my number on your wrist. we swept the old papers away and prepared our hands to be faces, admired each other's names, then promptly our naughty shadow faces went for each other faster than our faces could. "i knew that was going to happen" you said, but i wondered how. you began thumbing the condensation from your winecup on the projector's glass surface. the little bubbles glistened on the wall. there was only so much water to manipulate. i spat on my corner and sent tentacles of spittle across the glass. you spat on your corner and streaked spirals. soon the wall was full of salivashadows. our spit grew close. "do you have mono?" i asked. "no," he laughed. i bridged the waters. "yours is sticky," i said. "wine" you said. (it's the revelry, really, not the vino, but i did go and search for some and ensnarled myself in sarala, returned with earsful and some white box wine). so i poured a sip into my section, then poured a sip into my mouth. "my friends are leaving" you said and touseled my hair and every inch of my shadow. and there it was. you were gone, transporting the ball to yr court. so. did you lose it? i have a feeling neither of us is very sporty. perhaps it's riding the Bates Hill escalator, while I cradle its pimpled orange shadow in my fingerprints thinking of other dribblings, other slam dunks. cart before horse cart before horse cart before horse cart before horse. line?

where have you been these two and a half long days? are you as into me as your shadow was into my shadow?

sometimes my phone number is essentially meerkat day. i'm trying to reclaim the self i sponged out into Lor. it's tough as nails. we're in each other's bloodstreams she and I, in the green of my armcharm in the fat of my beard. dayeinu.

i can't help but smerick at every line of my imaginary play. your shadow is the star and you are the understudy. and i am a supporting actor for once, a model to absorb your paint and your clay. it's so hard for a builder to wait for the bricks, like Lois Lane waiting for a telegram to beep through time's wires.

Anonymous said...

This (all this) is the reason that I think I might actually enjoy SLC. I only wish I wasn't so shy and were able to actually go out there and meet you great people, and thus...enjoy this place.

Anonymous said...

V FOR VAGINA

Blue Moon? said...

I've never cooked clams but if it weren't for that term I'd never have thought of baking them. Does anyone have any clam tips? Clam recipes? I'm getting a craving.

(No, not a metaphor. . . really)

Anonymous said...

Blue Moon-

Allergic to clams, but here's some advice:

1. Start slow
2. Find the clit
3. Relax your tongue
4. Use your hands
5. Get down to business

Anonymous said...

Who knew that bastardized film titles could turn a girl on like that. Guess it's all that repitition of one message. No wonder the advertizing companies have got it made.

Anonymous said... Facts about marsupials
-they have two sets of genitalia
-they only have one nostril
-they're cute and cuddly
-they make great socks
-they're pregnant in their pocket
-opossoms and gabe are the only marsupials in north america

Anonymous said...

Make love in this pub?

Anonymous said...

whoever posted "make love in this pub?" could possibly hook up with me in the library OR the pub.

Anonymous said...

Hahah I posted "make love in this pub" but I'm kinda scared to make myself non-anon.

Anonymous said...

Why did the chicken cross Kimball Avenue?

Anonymous said...

To get called a filthy hippie dyke?

Anonymous said...

There weren't enough roosters.

Anonymous said...

November 14, 2008

Jake Schneider
Sarah Lawrence College

Dear Jake:

On Tuesday, November 4, 2008 you and an unidentified female student were observed naked while running around the outside of the Election Night Party tent on the south lawn. This was witnessed by me and two Public Safety Officers. Later in the evening you asked the Westlands Desk staff if you had “made it in the log?”

This letter serves as an official warning that your actions were in violation of Yonkers law regarding nudity which states that at least your genitals must be covered while in public. Please note that failure to comply with this law in the future could result in disciplinary action, including restricted access to campus.

Sincerely,

Mary J. Spellman
Dean of Student Affairs

cc: Allen Green, Dean of Student Affairs
Matthea Harvey, Faculty Don
Student File

Anonymous said...

Our conclusions on campus nudity, based on that letter:
-First of all, Salaco is private property. They don't have to enforce laws like that if they don't want to.
-My friend, alias Anastasia, wasn't identified because she keeps a low profile.
-The real rule: your face or your junk must be covered at all times.

Anonymous said...

I just heard that mary spellman said student senate has been talking about the same things for three years

Anonymous said...

I just vagina that vagina said that vagina has been talking about vagina for three vaginas

Anonymous said...

You mean... "has been talking about the same vagina." I mean, well, they're flowers. There's plenty to talk about.

Anonymous said...

I still want to make love in this pub.

Anonymous said...

@ Sascha Fierce

desafortunadamente, you had me until straight. i am female. :(

Anonymous said...

my current favorite lingo is silicone chalice. I want to make tender love with whoever coined that.

Anonymous said...

I just woke up and no one has posted since last night?

C'mon, interested party! Let's be the first loranon success story. I'm heading down to Bates after I have my pub brunch. Hopefully you'll be there?

Anonymous said...

who wants to make sweet love to me? i'm the queen of diva cup and my chalice is beckoning. come to common ground. i'll be here till 4

Anonymous said...

i'm cuming

(in a diva cup)


[the username and password for beautiful agony, an alt porn site that only shows self-filmed subjects' faces, now removed because beautiful agony threatened to cancel the account]

Anonymous said...

that agony site looks pretty hot, but I can barely admit to myself that I buy alcohol, let alone buy porn :P

Anonymous said...

Hey Anonymous, I gave you the password. You don't have to pay for it. Enjoy.

Anonymous said...

Oh, WORD?!
I don't have to upload anything to use the account, do I?

Anonymous said...

thank you thank you thank you thank you for posting a username and pw for beautiful agony. I've been filling myself with the free previews for quite a while. You've made a lot of my dreams come true.
-K

Anonymous said...

There's talk of starting something similar for campus. Sexually liberate ourselves from objectified bodies and devalued personalities. I've already made some fun liberated porn of myself in Photo Booth.
-purposefully ugly porn (see octopus/febricity on page 1)
-mirror image porn
-face porn (like beautiful agony)
-shadow porn (like that flash fiction piece the other day)

It's all pretty artsy and ridiculous. I kind of want to share it but I don't know how.

Anonymous said...

BTW anonymous, you should upload something if you end up using the site alot. they pay you $200 and you only have to show your face--then you can pass a little of that back to the separatists for building slides and other community-friendly silliness.

no pressure, of course, but i bet you make some sexy faces

Anonymous said...

Hey I was just on the site, and was poking around and saw this warning message

"!! Your account has been used from several locations. Is your password secure?
Accounts which show shared passwords may be suspended or cancelled."

=[.

-K


Anonymous said...
C - Cocksuck!
O - Oh
N - No
F - Fair.
E - Everyone
R - Really
E - Emits
N - Nasty
C - Crotchety
E - Emotions

Oh yeah, and re: awkward porn, I'm sure febricity would just find it amusing.

9.12.08
Anonymous said...
Alright folks if you're logged in download whatever looks the most intriguing. Then please log out and make some hot liberated anonymous porn we can share with each other, or come over to my place and use the password on my computer to watch incredible ecstatic faces. You could always get your own account for $15, but don't forget to check out their sexy sister sites and make sure you like Beautiful Agony the best.

9.12.08
Anonymous said...
P.S. To reiterate, Photo Booth's video effects are the shit if you treat them right.

9.12.08
Anonymous said...
There once was a technician named Urban,
Who had an affair with a turbine.
"It's much nicer," he said,
"Than a woman in bed,
And it's sure as hell cheaper than bourbon!"

9.12.08
Anonymous said...
There once was a newspaper vendor;
a person of dubious gender
For a quarter or two,
ze would charge you to view
hir remarkable double pudenda.
9.12.08

[emphasis added]

Let's keep going. Now we need not interrupt the schemes of the other Anonomi.

(mama / sex / rides / books / events / names / suggestions )
Read on...

Monday, December 8, 2008

------Sorry to interrupt this beauty with a moment of dire seriousness--------------

(LorAnon comment #194)

Listen folks, Senate's meeting Tuesday from 1:30-3:30 in the Bates Meeting Room to talk about SLC Anon among other things.

The administration is likely to use Slcanon's excesses as an excuse to invade our collective privacy and track down IP addresses to expel the authors of certain comments. I heard this from a senate member who was in favor of it. And once that right to privacy has been popped--the fun don't stop. Remember the Patriot Act? Wiretapping? The triumph of free trade? We're not too far away. A crisis is always used to justify an agenda people already had.

I agree that the comments made about Michal were tasteless, frightening, scary, violent, objectifying, inhuman--and they have rightfully made many women feel unsafe here. (Particularly awful examples include: ‘someone just kill her,’ ‘smack her with a dick,’ ‘I'll pay a $100000 to the first dude who fucks her and brings me evidence,’ ‘I would rather fuck her in the ass first… Then you can kill her if you want,’ ‘Just sell her into the sex trade to Africa. She will probably get Aids and die anyway,’ and ‘Just put your hand over her mouth and suffocate her while fucking her.’) And the people who wrote those things should hold themselves accountable to the highest extent including any atonement asked of them including leaving--but accountable TO MICHAL as the victim, not to our fucking overlords. The poor girl is of course saying yes to anything that might alleviate the pain she's in on top of her very first conference week. Ruining even more lives doesn't help build this as a community where objectification and threats of violence are off the table. The entire slcanon community should hold itself accountable as well, as a community. Whoever put it up should take it down quickly and without comment, providing no more fuel for the fire. Refugees who still want an anonymous post now have somewhere else to go. We can accommodate them, can't we?

All that said, let's not get so caught up in the problem that we forget our solution. This site. We have proven in two days that we as a community are mature enough to handle anonymity if it's framed right, if the tone is right. The worst of the worst in SLC students comes out on slcanon half the time. But that's its reputation, that's what people think about it, that's what its for to people. It's a place to trash all the sensitivity you've ever learned in this community and revert to something deeply base, mean, and selfish. There are other more harmless strains, but we've tried to import them and their authors here.

LorAnon was founded yesterday to be funny, witty, cute, and silly, and I think it's done a great job. We can moderate, but we've only had to delete posts the mistakenly non-anon authors were already trying to remove. 193 posts now and counting, two days in. Let's pat ourselves on the back.

But back to the troubling issue of our anonymous black sheep of a cousin. How about we meet at the Black Squirrel at 1 o'clock to discuss it and choose a course of action. Then, at 1:30, one of us (noses!) can enter the senate meeting and sit through bureaucracy while we hang out and collage. When it's time to go in, z/s/he'll text us and we can storm the meeting with dramatic readings of anonymous joy and harmlessness. Or whatever we decide to do when we have our 1 o'clock huddle in the Black Squirrel.

&&&&&&&&&&

Senate's email to the community:

"Dear Friends,

This Tuesday, December 9th at 1:30pm in the Bates Meeting Room, Student Senate will
have our final meeting of the semester. During this meeting we will discuss two
incredibly important topics that effect us all both as individuals and members of
our community.

I. We will first discuss the SLC Anonymous Livejournal, and it's impact on students,
faculty and staff here at Sarah Lawrence. There has been much discussion on campus
over the content and tone of SLCanon, and this week we will address these issues and
share our thoughts on the role of this blog in our community.

II. The second topic on our agenda is student involvement in Strategic Planning.
Strategic Planning plays a significant role in defining both academic and
non-academic life here at Sarah Lawrence. As students of this institution I believe
we have an inherent obligation to participate in this critical process. Strategic
Planning ultimately outlines the core values of our college, and in such times where
the future of our institution is uncertain, it is essential we collaborate to
preserve the culture and pedagogy of Sarah Lawrence. Our meeting this Tuesday
provides an opportunity to discuss these issues and establish the role of students
in this incredibly important process.

In order to ensure student participation in Strategic Planning, Student Senate has
also formed a taskforce called the Student Economic Adaptability Committee (SEAC).
This taskforce is comprised of both senators and other members of the student body.
These taskforce meetings are open to the community and all are welcome to attend.
Within the next few days you will receive an email with the official date and
meeting time of SEAC.

Again, I would like to encourage you to attend our meeting this Tuesday, December
9th at 1:30pm in the Bates Meeting Room. Student Senate meetings are open to the
entire community. If you have any questions, comments or concerns, or would like to
suggest a topic for discussion for future meetings, please email
studentsenate@gm.slc.edu.

I would also like to remind you of the meeting on Thursday, December 11th at 4pm in
Resinger. This meeting, called by the Strategic Planning Committee, is a wonderful
opportunity for student input. It is a time for students to share their thoughts and
voice their concerns. I hope to see you there.


always,

Michelle Lewin
Student Senate Chair
Class of 2009"

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

And this is an editorial on the subject by someone who didn't know about LorAnon (apologies for not asking the author's consent to post it, though she did give me the op-ed in person, and I'm sure she doesn't mind the extra readership):


Editorial: Thoughts on Harassment on SLCANON2008
Dani Young

An Open Letter to the Student Body

Comrades,
The SLCANON tradition has clearly gotten out of hand. Although I don’t know what the College can do institutionally, I believe it is essential for the students to act collectively to demonstrate their rejection of this hateful speech and malicious behavior. Conversations I have seen thus far have been about the difficulty of knowing who is responsible and concerns about Administration policing our ‘private’ lives. These conversations are unnecessarily confined to the conventional juridical paradigm: locate the objectionable act, identify the perpetrators, and punish them. But a narrow punitive paradigm presumes that punishment is sufficient to correct the situation, and makes it easy for us to disclaim responsibility for both the act itself and its resolution. I want to see a new paradigm for how we respond to wrongs against the members of our community based on student-level engagement and dialogue. We need to recognize that the harassment on livejournal represents the crystallization of existing attitudes on our campus. The purported distinction between theory and practice needs demystifying: we spend our time studying sexism, classism, racism, Othering, etc. Why aren’t people angrier when we see it manifested among and against our peers?

There are three different perspectives from which to evaluate the nature of the harassment. First, the perpetrators. It might be argued that collective action by the students or institutional action by the College is unwarranted unless the perpetrators deliberately acted maliciously. Second, the perspective of the victim(s). It might be argued that student or College action is only justified if the victim is upset and wants to see some kind of adjudication. But the third perspective is the most relevant, and trumps any arguments based on the first two: the substance of the harassment. In my opinion, regardless of the intent of the perpetrators or the feelings of the victim, the substance of the harassment itself is sufficiently malicious and offensive to warrant collective student action and possibly institutional action by the College. I think it is valuable to publicize what exactly was written so that we are clear. Particularly awful examples include: ‘someone just kill her,’ ‘smack her with a dick,’ ‘I'll pay a $100000 to the first dude who fucks her and brings me evidence,’ ‘I would rather fuck her in the ass first… Then you can kill her if you want,’ ‘Just sell her into the sex trade to Africa. She will probably get Aids and die anyway,’ and ‘Just put your hand over her mouth and suffocate her while fucking her.’

These comments are not ‘just words.’ These comments encourage murder, joke about disability, trivialize rape and prostitution, and completely objectify and dehumanize the victim. One cannot claim as a defense that the incitement to violence was ‘casual’ or ‘only joking.’ This kind of violent and misogynistic language cannot be accepted under any conditions. I will not bother noting the culturally problematic aspects of calling someone Pocahontas or using Africa as a threat. We go to Sarah Lawrence; we understand the special insensitivity of this language. That individuals in our community harbor such insensitivity, anger and malevolence is truly disturbing. We absolutely must respond against it.

This is not a private issue confined to the isolated acts of a few individuals; it is relevant to our public space and our public discourse because it happened here. What happens in private (if you want to consider the internet private) is informed by the nature of public norms and attitudes.

I want to reiterate that I am not conceiving of necessary student or institutional reaction in purely punitive terms. This is not about whether or not we can identify the perpetrators, or whether or not the school has any authority to take action. Whether the perpetrators will be or should be ‘punished’ is only one aspect of this issue. We have the opportunity to make a collective gesture against violent, misogynistic harassment. Whether or not the College responds formally, I hope students can take steps to demonstrate our rejection of this behavior, and do whatever is possible to heal and to prevent this situation from happening again. To do nothing would confirm the supposed insensitivity of our peers and our College.

What would collective student action look like? This is an opportunity to apply our studies and our talents. Some of our ideas include an all-campus anti-oppression workshop, a teach-in on hate speech and sexual harassment, and an art show through which to reflect on systems of oppression we see present in our lives. I will be leading a campaign in the spring, and I forward to a range of creative ideas for addressing this situation. We have the opportunity to reject not only the offenses of a few individuals, but also the bizarre air of hostility that tends to haunt our campus.

in solidarity,

Dani
Read on...

Sunday, December 7, 2008

LorAnon Mama Thread

So we all know about [the late] slc anon [RIP] and its various havocs. Our main qualms are that the following:
  • We're all stressed out (except maybe Bacchus).
  • We have that in common and that's finally something we could own and agree on (see Primal Scream).
  • It's so hard to get good information these days about where the fun is.
  • There is no anonymous+creative on campus.
  • So many students deserve praise.
So please, if you have:
  • daydreams about a change you'd love to see,
  • fantasies for future revelry,
  • images of what a place on campus could look like redecorated or pimped,
  • made-up words,
  • silly confessions,
  • advice sought or offered,
  • useful tips,
  • things (but not people) on campus that bug you,
  • announcements,
  • jokes,
  • puns,
  • secret crushes,
  • loveletters,
  • or you just want to praise someone and not get shot down for it,
this is the place.

Let's not waste energy bashing each other--Westlands and Bates are happy and stress-free, shopping for their families' presents while we type and procrastinate.

How about some anonymity that's empowering and liberating instead of everyone-for-herself second grade taunting, which builds bad blood when we're already bleeding.

Let's say it's a new spin-off tradition. (Plus--the Georgian Separatists actually try to fix things. If folks agree something's broken, we'll get on that.)

The format's different so we can feel like we're in an integrated conversation. When one part of the conversation seems to take over to the potential discomfort/alienation of other readers, we spin it off into a new thread. All the blog posts on this site can be seen as potential conversation starters--no need to comment directly on the content of the post.

Threads:
*mama thead
*sex thread
*ride board
*book swap
*community events
*separatist names
*suggestions? georgianseparatists@gmail.com copy all the previous posts that belong in the new thread and write a little intro, & we'll post it all

So go.
Read on...