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Thursday, September 15, 1994 NEWS Page 5 Grades, from Page 4 putermailbox. a C in the classif he pr she: Last semester, he replied to Sowhat are the requirements •Reads all appropriate mate- mort than 900 questions from of the contract? rial prior to lectures, students that landed in his com- Astudent will receive at least •Attendsallfccruresandlabs. Kenne! Bookstore Add a little spice to your documents with Kennel Copy Center's Full Color Copier / ■ W W\i per S1/2 X 11. un-edited original *■ KA Great for: XFIiers : /Posters /Handouts /Brochures /Photographs /Transparencies Open Mon.-Thurs. 7:45 a.m.-7:00 p.m. & Fri. 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Lower Level 278-3945 i [:> ieUotdyim The good ?*ews i& I 5 ? . \ I I I I . ! ,1 I Thebad NEWfe \$ym have' cm less reason to be late foryour* %m medieval philosophy class. •Studies the material nine hours per week. •Records all study time in a laboratory notebook.. •Transcribes a set of compre¬ hensive notes from the readings and the lecture into a bound note¬ book. •Cooperates with the study group. More than 80 percent of the students in Dougherty's class last semester i accepted the teens of the contract, including biochemistry major Bobby mattresses. Trie next day tney removed trte strew to dry and then made their beds once again that night. 14.99 Special Purchase. Don't oversleep or overpay inexpensive clock radio from Soundesign. Choose black, teal c y with this if or purple. Belanger says he finally real¬ ized the importance of daily study after meeting with Dougherty. "Cramming for exams may work in some classes," said Belanger. "But moi^anicchemistry,you need a sustained effort to grasp each concept because the material just keeps accumulat¬ ing." "* Even if students log all the hours outside the classroom, Dougherty insists that attend¬ ing lecture is still the most essen¬ tial aspect of his course. "Students sometimes turn in these perfect notebooks with me¬ ticulous notes, but one glance and you can tell they're all from N the book," he said. "The lectures are where the students are given examples and explanations that aretrt in the book "It is where students can make sense out of the material they may spend hours studying at home." -^ Dougherty says has contract system has received support from bpth students and faculty members. "Pm not changing the stan¬ dards, only the results," he says. More women lured to math, science fields College Press Service Growing up, Deborah Goodings recalls happily stand¬ ing next to her dad in what she describes as "a lot" of sewage treatment plant pumping halls, \ never doubting she'd follow in his footsteps as an environmen¬ tal engineer. Years later, as a civil engineer working in New York, Goodings remembers how gratified she felt by the immediate positive im¬ pact that her work could have on people's lives after a large em¬ bankment dam was built in Paki¬ stan by her firm. "I love science, and I love solv¬ ing real problems," she said. "I had lots of encouragement at home to pursue a career in engi¬ neering even though the field wr>s almost exclusively dominatedby men." Tj^iay, the associate professor of engineering at the University ofMaryland in College Park wor¬ ries about the gender gap that exists in the science and engi¬ neering fields. Goodings isstudy- ing the issue of. women who are still entering math and science careers at a much lower rate then men. Statistics are disheartening. The US. Department of Edu¬ cation reports women earned more than 52 percent of all bachelor's degrees but only 31 percent of the bachelor's degrees in the physical sciences and 14 See Wo men, Page 3 Back To School " Extended wear Soft Contact Lenses $69. contact lens exam included 22* ♦Price includes: Contact lens exam. Kit, I Pair Spherical extended wear soft contacts. Dr. Harold C. Sivas Optometrist phone for appointment •.•2Vy-7200 HOURS: Mori-Sat. 9:fj6am to 9:00pm offer valid to Sept 30 Buy Sell Trade MUSJC CDS Y 1 • iiriffc I I ▼ . ! - _■ Offer good while ifuanury bats Singh from $1.99 JudJenqtk from $7.99 BRE Software Clovis & Herndon 323-GAME (4263) FREE CD : , Biry 3 Mutlc CD» and get 1 of eoud oc lower v*ie FREE Good. ]***&££}££; Hmaj£?j££XX2!2.£!!L &L.1 .1 ; /-•• • . •/
Object Description
Title | 1994_09 The Daily Collegian September 1994 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1994 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | September 15, 1994, Page 5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1994 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | Thursday, September 15, 1994 NEWS Page 5 Grades, from Page 4 putermailbox. a C in the classif he pr she: Last semester, he replied to Sowhat are the requirements •Reads all appropriate mate- mort than 900 questions from of the contract? rial prior to lectures, students that landed in his com- Astudent will receive at least •Attendsallfccruresandlabs. Kenne! Bookstore Add a little spice to your documents with Kennel Copy Center's Full Color Copier / ■ W W\i per S1/2 X 11. un-edited original *■ KA Great for: XFIiers : /Posters /Handouts /Brochures /Photographs /Transparencies Open Mon.-Thurs. 7:45 a.m.-7:00 p.m. & Fri. 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Lower Level 278-3945 i [:> ieUotdyim The good ?*ews i& I 5 ? . \ I I I I . ! ,1 I Thebad NEWfe \$ym have' cm less reason to be late foryour* %m medieval philosophy class. •Studies the material nine hours per week. •Records all study time in a laboratory notebook.. •Transcribes a set of compre¬ hensive notes from the readings and the lecture into a bound note¬ book. •Cooperates with the study group. More than 80 percent of the students in Dougherty's class last semester i accepted the teens of the contract, including biochemistry major Bobby mattresses. Trie next day tney removed trte strew to dry and then made their beds once again that night. 14.99 Special Purchase. Don't oversleep or overpay inexpensive clock radio from Soundesign. Choose black, teal c y with this if or purple. Belanger says he finally real¬ ized the importance of daily study after meeting with Dougherty. "Cramming for exams may work in some classes," said Belanger. "But moi^anicchemistry,you need a sustained effort to grasp each concept because the material just keeps accumulat¬ ing." "* Even if students log all the hours outside the classroom, Dougherty insists that attend¬ ing lecture is still the most essen¬ tial aspect of his course. "Students sometimes turn in these perfect notebooks with me¬ ticulous notes, but one glance and you can tell they're all from N the book," he said. "The lectures are where the students are given examples and explanations that aretrt in the book "It is where students can make sense out of the material they may spend hours studying at home." -^ Dougherty says has contract system has received support from bpth students and faculty members. "Pm not changing the stan¬ dards, only the results," he says. More women lured to math, science fields College Press Service Growing up, Deborah Goodings recalls happily stand¬ ing next to her dad in what she describes as "a lot" of sewage treatment plant pumping halls, \ never doubting she'd follow in his footsteps as an environmen¬ tal engineer. Years later, as a civil engineer working in New York, Goodings remembers how gratified she felt by the immediate positive im¬ pact that her work could have on people's lives after a large em¬ bankment dam was built in Paki¬ stan by her firm. "I love science, and I love solv¬ ing real problems," she said. "I had lots of encouragement at home to pursue a career in engi¬ neering even though the field wr>s almost exclusively dominatedby men." Tj^iay, the associate professor of engineering at the University ofMaryland in College Park wor¬ ries about the gender gap that exists in the science and engi¬ neering fields. Goodings isstudy- ing the issue of. women who are still entering math and science careers at a much lower rate then men. Statistics are disheartening. The US. Department of Edu¬ cation reports women earned more than 52 percent of all bachelor's degrees but only 31 percent of the bachelor's degrees in the physical sciences and 14 See Wo men, Page 3 Back To School " Extended wear Soft Contact Lenses $69. contact lens exam included 22* ♦Price includes: Contact lens exam. Kit, I Pair Spherical extended wear soft contacts. Dr. Harold C. Sivas Optometrist phone for appointment •.•2Vy-7200 HOURS: Mori-Sat. 9:fj6am to 9:00pm offer valid to Sept 30 Buy Sell Trade MUSJC CDS Y 1 • iiriffc I I ▼ . ! - _■ Offer good while ifuanury bats Singh from $1.99 JudJenqtk from $7.99 BRE Software Clovis & Herndon 323-GAME (4263) FREE CD : , Biry 3 Mutlc CD» and get 1 of eoud oc lower v*ie FREE Good. ]***&££}££; Hmaj£?j££XX2!2.£!!L &L.1 .1 ; /-•• • . •/ |