Program improves By James Rhoades Of The Print ¿st week’s snow storm gave many a chance to partake in an old sport, inner-tubinS- [urn to pg. 11 for more photos. Photo by Duffy Coffman. The student nursing forum, held last October,,• has led to improvements in several areas for the nursing students on camDUS. The meeting was for learning about students’ concerns and their suggestions regarding the College nursing program. Recommendations from a committee formed for this pur­ pose were sent to John Hakan- son, College president. One of the major concerns brought up at the meeting was' the insufficient counseling for the students. Other concerns were that the program be main­ tained at a high level and proper information distributed to potential students. Course content and following pre­ requisites were also concerns. “The committee did send a written report to each student and that’s a plus,”, said Nancy Menath, nursing student representative.. “They also have a counselor available at Clairmont a half day Tuesdays and Thursdays, and we can see - her on an appointment or drop-in basis. She’s there to specifically help nursing students. That is a definite outgrowth of that meeting.” “We asked about the possibility of lockers, but there is a financial problem. In the memo it said they are working on a larger student lounge .and one with smoking and non­ smoking sections, perhaps with better ventilation. The one we have now is much too small,” Menath said. Another major complaint brought up at the meeting was a better clarification of requirements. Gloria Gostneil, assistant to the dean of instruc tion, said, “At this point the recommendations have been approved and the implemen­ tation of them will be done in time. Most of the problems have already been addressed. The nursing department has begun to take care of the in­ formation problem.” CLACKAMAS CO . ARC Wednesday, January 16, 1980 ¿rade inflation hard to find but it’s here j Sandy Carter IThe Print A look at grade inflation here other community illgge is like searching for the toverbial needle in the aystack. We know it’s there by spainful jab, but it blends in so ¡II with the scenery that listing it and finding out who topped it there are complex isks._______________________ t at any First in a series_____ Chuck Adams, CCC director I admissions and records, tints to several facts that implicate consideration of the fee’s 3.1 overall grade at average, which is up from ¡liter of 1970-71’s 2.96. C’ is still considered an ierage grade,” he says, “but tais and what should be are to different things. All the flhdrawls, no-passes, drops Haudits don’t calculate.” “Idon't know,” he ponders, ha tough one. I sometimes hk we do a student a disser- iceby sending him out of here lha3.9 and having him get tya 2.6 on his upper division irk somewhere, else. But ?lbe. he adds, “if he’d gone sight there from high school, a only have gotten a 2.1. fee’s a seasoning process fl goes on here that’s very liable.” ideed, the community ‘W system as it works at «amas may be seen as a toning and sifting, process, to CCC accepts any and all iters, with or without diploma, even with “D” averages. Says Shirley Cressler, scien­ ce instructor, “Anybody can take a class, but poor students tend to just quit. We in general science-ftthe 100 level—get a lower level of student, mostly P.E. majors and education majors who nave to take eitner a math or science sequence. We don’t have many at the 200 level: they go on to four-year schools.” In general, she says, “lower level students drop, withdraw or take an incomplete if they’re doing badly, which tends to raise the average grade among the remaining students.” John Hooley, division chair­ person of the humanities and social science departments, echoes this complaint. “It’s been the custom here for the last 11 or 12 years since the board set the policy, that a student could drop right up to the final exam time.” Admitting the existence of grade inflation in his division, Hooley says, “Certainly we’re keeping up. But we wouldn’t want to let it get ridiculous. We don’t want to give an ‘A’ simply because somebody shows up,” he adds. “But in some of the non-transfer areas, the instruc­ tors, who often come from non-traditional, non-academic backgrounds such as industry, have a different attitude toward grading. And as far as they’re non-transfer, it doesn’t really matter what those students awful lot of ‘A’s running around get,” he says, “but it does raise on campus,” he says. “We in the (College’s) overall G.P-A. English tend to think that Besides the case of the grades are sometimes inflated disapperaing “D”s and ‘ F s, where there’s a lot of student­ Hooley sees the unique teacher interaction,” he says. strengths of older students, the “It’s a lot harder to give a smaller class size, and the in­ formal atmosphere at CCC as student a ‘D’ when he’s been contributing factors to grade in­ coming to you for help with his flation. In a school with an paper.” average class size of 20 and an Another opinion on grade average student age of 25 to 27 inflation and its causes comes years, he says, “small classes from Don Epstein, history in­ and more accessible instructors structor, who says that grades work against the deper­ at all community collges are too sonalization often encountered high. “Many of the vocational at four-year schools,” which he courses give out too many “A’s says makes grading simpler for and ‘B’s,” he says. “The range instructors there. of students here is so great that Dick Andrews, English in­ we tend to be grateful for any structor, agrees. “We have an work at all.” Placing a strong emphasis on writing skills, Epstein tests sub­ jectively. “I hardly ever give a ‘D’ or an ‘F’,” he says, “because the student nearly always drops, withdraws or takes an incomplete. We allow students to repeat a course for a better grade if he gets le§s than a ‘C’ the first time.” In light ' of the testimony , CCC students would seem to receive every consideration, as their “B-plus” average bears out. Yet according to many campus sources, grading is a sensitive, emotion-laden problem for students and teachers alike. Next: Is there a solution? McCoy steps up to position The new face in the Associated Student Gover­ nment office these days isn’t exactly a new face after all. her first day back at school and on the new job. “Don (Porter, ASG president) talked me into it.” Hobbies? Beamihg, she ad­ mitted she won the winter-term Jack White “Ladies’ Billiards” competition, earning a new cue Terri McCoy, a 25-yeàr-old Santa Rosa, Calif., transplant, is merely stepping up from her one and a half years of general office experience in the student government offices into the of­ ficial position of ASG secretary recently vacated by Beth Thompson. Her new duties will include minutes, agendas, club files, receptionist work, typing, duplicating and taking roll at ASG meetings. stick and trophy, then added bowling, macrame, and volleyball as her lesser in­ terests. “I was the only one who ap­ plied for the position,” she said ruefully in an interview Jan. 2, A sophomore accounting major who plans to work after graduation in June, McCoy has her hands full with a 15-hour schedule, the new ASG duties, and the responsibilities of being a single parent with two young boys. A little nervous her first day on the job, McCoy still looked ahead optimistically. “I have an extra advantage,” said the at­ tractive brunette, “because I already know all the people I’ll work with.”