Ohio Wesleyanâs redesigned website is up, running and accessible to all your devices (including smartphones).
The website hasnât had a full redesign since 2006 or 2007, according to project manager Lindsay Mauter.
In that decade, how we access the Internet has changed dramatically.
âAll research points to the fact that students begin their college search online, on devices, so it’s important that this website is happening now,â Mauter said.
The Office of Communications collectively decided, along with President Rock Jones, to invest in a full redesign last November, said Will Kopp, OWUâs chief communications officer.
âThe new website will be more attractive, cleaner, better organized, completely compatible with any kind of device, and under one domain, rather than the 70 sub-domains we have now,â he said.
With enrollment on a steady decline, the new website aims to attract more prospective students.
âProspective students use university websites as a way to window shop,â Kopp said. âOur goal is to make them click… find something interesting about our school that makes them want to go deeper into the website.â
Fastspot, the company in charged of the redesign, interviewed students and faculty last January to discover why they think Ohio Wesleyan is unique. Their findings are emphasized in the design.
Photo galleries on the homepage highlight OWUâs abundance of double majors, study abroad opportunities and graduate success.
Each department page features photos of the faculty members and their classrooms.
âProspective students want to know who their faculty is going to be, what their classrooms are going to look like,â Kopp said.
A âfrom our perspectiveâ section displays opinions of faculty, students, and distinguished alumni alongside their photos. These will be updated regularly and faculty are already sending in quotes they want to publish, said Kopp.
Current students will find the same benefits as other users of the site, including easier navigation and better search capability, Mauter said.
Kopp said, âThe website will give current students more opportunity to interact and to be a bigger and more visible part of the community.â
The bottom of the website bares an Instagram feed, where students can have their pictures featured if they tag #OhWooo or #BattlingBishops.
Fastspot made many successful university websites in the past, including that of nearby Kenyon College, Kopp said.
He added that prior to launching, the company will conduct usability tests with people who are not familiar with the university website. They will use those results to fix any last-Âminute navigation issues.
The redesign gives the university more opportunities to grow, and puts us on a level playing field or a notch above our competition, Mauter said.
The communications office will work out any bugs that come up with the website, but encourages students to reach out if they need help or have questions or requests, Mauter and Kopp said.
Ohio Wesleyan Universityâs water polo club team had the opportunity to host the Womenâs State High School Water Polo Championships. Preliminaries were held on Friday, Oct.
23 and finals on Saturday, Oct. 24.
The OWU water polo club has hosted the event for the past three years at the Meek Aquatics Center to earn money for their water polo fund. Each year ten teams compete for the
title of Ohio High School Water Polo Champions.
The OWU water polo club was responsible for the setup and tear down of the facility, concessions and life-guarding. Concessions were open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. each day, with two
members of the team doing sales. All profits went to the water polo club team.
The OWU team also provided three lifeguards for every hour. Each lifeguard was paid $10 an hour, and all funds made by lifeguards went to the water polo club team.
âThe money will be used to help pay for entrance fees at tournaments, transportation, lodging, and the purchasing of new equipment this year,â said senior Bryce Uzzolino, head of the
OWU water polo club team.
Nicki Stanley, head of Meekâs facility and assistance coach, said that the water polo club did a fantastic job hosting the womenâs state championships.
âEverything went smoothly, there were not accidents and there were always multiple members of the team here to help. They will be hosting this event again next year to raise money
for the 2017 season,â said Stanley.
The water polo club team is going into its fourth year of competing at a division three level. The team has been small in size over the past three years because of low funds.
Uzzolino hopes that the money raised will help spread word about the club team and allow them to purchase the equipment they need to train properly for the season.
Uzzolino and Stanley will have a meeting in the upcoming weeks to discuss what the water polo club can purchase with the funds earned, to prepare for the upcoming season that
Students can expect one more change to Ohio Wesleyan’s food services this fall. At the Nov. 2 Wesleyan Council on Student Affairs (WCSA) meeting, senators learned that Dominos has become OWU’s off-campus pizza provider.
This means that students can use their off-campus food points for Dominos delivery and takeout.
Senior Jerry Lherisson, president of WCSA, told senators that “Dominos will be checking ID numbers and photos at the door when they are delivering.”
Lherisson went on to tell senators that WCSA has a budget surplus and needs to think of ways to spend the extra money.
“We have a great deal of rollover funds,” Lherisson explained. “When clubs ask for an amount of money and they don’t use it for whatever reason, we have extra cash. Right now we have a large amount of rollover funds.”
When asked about the exact surplus figure, Lherrison and senior Emma Drongowski, vice president of WCSA, said the number hasn’t been finalized, but that it is “substantive.”
Drongowski told senators that potential projects for the surplus budget are “things that are one time costs. It’s not like a long-term program that’s being set up because we don’t have the infrastructure to sustain that kind of thing. But we’re excited to spend this money that is from students, for students.”
Lherisson made it clear that WCSA is open to input from all sources.
“If you have any specific ideas please get comment cards in,” Lherisson said.
After senators took some time to remind students about the upcoming election via social media and email, the meeting adjourned.
The Ohio Wesleyan menâs and womenâs swimming and diving teams participated in the Kenyon Relays this Oct. 24 in Gambier, Ohio.
In the menâs meet, the Kenyon Lords won their annual home opener with 124 points. OWUÂ finished fifth with a total of 44 points.
The Denison Big Red won the womenâs meet, scoring 120 points. OWU finished with a total of 16 points, placing seventh.
Junior Greyson Goodwin, was a part of the fourth place 200 meter freestyle relay team. He said the teamâs hard practice week paid off.
“Our teams performance was representative of the amount of work we’ve put into our practices,â Goodwin said. âThe team defied the expectations we had, and managed to come together to have an exceptional meet.â
Freshman Shannon Berminghamâs introduction to collegiate competition did not disappoint.
Bermingham, from Orchard Park, New York, said the electrifying meet was of a caliber she had never experienced before.
“After the meet I was very tired, but it was a great feeling to have a team fully behind you and cheering you on,â she said. âI loved the atmosphere and I’ve never had support like this before. I thought we did really well as a team.â
Bermingham plans on giving this season her all. She will be happy, regardless of the results, “as long as I have my coach and my teammates by my side anything is possible, even the hardest of times.â
Despite only being in the water for around five weeks, the Battling Bishops were very impressed with their results, but agree that improvements can be made.
Freshman Alicia Margello, a member of the 400 medley relay team that finished eleventh, now knows what it’s like to finish at the end of the pack. She plans on “improving by working hard throughout the season during practice.”
With the first meet on the books, both the men and women look to improve their results for their upcoming home conference opener against Wittenberg College on Saturday, Oct. 31.
Miami Dolphins wide receiver Wes Welker kicked a field goal against the New England Patriots in 2004. An NFL wide receiver has not kicked a field goal since.
The Ohio Wesleyan football team has a wide receiver of their own who, unlike Welker, has been kicking field goals all season long.
Junior wide receiver Tim Shadoan has gone six for eight this year kicking field goals, including two from more than 40 yards and a game winner.
âI enjoy kicking for the team because it’s another challenge,â Shadoan said. âIt’s something that IÂ know my teammates trust me doing.â
His biggest kick of the year came in their conference matchup against Kenyon College a week ago. He converted on a 43Âyard kick in second overtime to give the Bishops the win.
âI didn’t think about much during the kick against Kenyon, I didn’t want the pressure to get to me so all I thought about was doing my job and that’s what I did,â Shadoan said.
Shadoan kicked his junior year of high school, but this is the first time he has for OWU. Mile Mackenzie, OWUâs allÂconference kicker graduated in 2015. Head Coach Tom Watts spent the off-Âseason looking for his replacement.
âWe went through the off-Âseason looking to see who his replacement would be,â Watts said.
âShadoan started to kick for us when we took our team to Italy, so we were able to see what he was able to do.â
âShadoan won the job being the most consistent,â Watts continued. âHe is an extremely talented athlete and a huge competitor.â
In addition to kicking, Shadoan is leading the team with 25 catches for 206 yards. He has also tallied two touchdowns, one receiving score and one off a kick return. OWU has a current record of 2Â4 and will play against Depauw University at Selby Stadium on Oct. 24.
Eleven countries and one city-state have health care systems shaped by an Ohio Wesleyan University graduate.
William Hsiao, class of 1959, returned to his alma mater this week to receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree for his work in designing health care reforms and universal health insurance programs.
âHsiao exemplifies the ideal of moral leadership in a global society,â President Rock Jones said.
Hsiao said â[he] was flabbergastedâ when informed about the honorary degree. âTo me, what I was doing [was]âŚwhat I found interesting and doing the best that I [could]. Many people do that.â
Hsiao, who received his doctorate in economics from Harvard University, shaped health system reforms and universal health insurance programs for China, Colombia, Cyprus, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Poland, South Africa, Sweden, Taiwan, Uganda, Vietnam and the United States.â
Robert Gitter, professor of economics at OWU, described him as a very humble person.
Hsiao, who graduated from OWU with degrees in mathematics and physics, said he ânever thought [he] would be a teacher and a researcher.â He applied to be an actuary for the federal government.
Gitter explained that â[Hsiao] realized as an actuary he wasnât really dealing with a lot of the big questions,â such as the impact specific economic decisions have on people and how they affect the economy overall.
Once Hsiao realized what he was missing, he went back to school. âIt [seemed] like economists are the ones wrestling with those big issues,â Hsiao said.
He credited OWU with developing his interest in the larger picture. He discovered âhow [ethics and moral principles] should guide our lives.â A liberal arts education â[opens] up your spirit, your mind and your interpersonal relations.â
That question guided discussion at the Oct. 19 faculty meeting, underlying many of the talking points on the agenda. With enrollment declining, departmental budgets have been cut, book orders for the library reduced, staff laid off, teaching positions remain unfilled, faculty and staff benefits changed and retiree benefits slashed.
President Rock Jones said he and the Board of Trustees discussed, earlier this month, ways to maintain OWUâs liberal arts core in the universityâs current economic climate.
âWe want to continue the conversation about the importance of our mission as a residential liberal arts institution and to discuss what strategies can help us fulfill that and whether those strategies are sustainable financially, in the 21st Century.â
âWe need to be careful,â Jones warned. âIf we were to have three or four years of classes that looked like the classes this fall, that would require dramatic action and would threaten our ability to fulfill our mission.â
Provost Charles Stinemetz followed Jones at the podium, and in theme. He told faculty he had been working on a project lately âto estimate the appropriate size of the faculty in relation to student enrollments.â
As hands began to raise, Stinemetz clarified, âThe question is, we have a decline in enrollment, how many faculty do we need to serve those students?â
Zach Long, associate professor of English, was the first to speak after this explanation. âWhereâd the idea of coming up with an appropriate number of faculty members come from? What was the origin of it?â
Long repeated the question when he wasnât satisfied with the answers he got from Stinemetz.
Chris Wolverton, chair of the University Governance Committee and a professor of botany-microbiology, tried to help Stinemetz.
âIt is the charge of the Governance Committee in the faculty handbook to look at the appropriate size of the faculty,â he said. âThis initiative was taken by the Governance Committee.â
Though the investigation is only just beginning, Stinemetz said, âWe are far away from having a final model or number. We have had some preliminary discussions with the committees involved, which have brought up some very good points.â
Those committees contributing are the Faculty Personnel Committee (FPC) and the Academic Policy Committee (APC). Suggestions or data generated by these bodies will eventually be reported back to the Governance Committee, Stinemetz said.
After the floor was turned over for committee reports, Wolverton elaborated on what Stinemetz introduced.
âThe Governance Committee is tasked with determining the appropriate size of the faculty and administration,â Wolverton said. âSo one measure taken was to assemble a working group.â
âThat group met and made the recommendation to freeze open faculty positions,â said Wolverton. âThat was the outcome. That was what we did.â
When asked by Randolph K. Quaye, associate professor of black world studies, if the hiring freeze is âtemporary or permanent,â Wolverton suggested that it remains to be seen.
âOne of the variables that has a strong impact is the size of the student body. Now we have several hundred fewer students in our student body.â But, Wolverton suggested, âI would argue that the freezing is going to be temporary.â
Wolverton stressed the importance of cooperation between committee members in making decisions about the number of faculty and administrators OWU can sustain.
âThe Governance Committee wants to see a representative of our committee and APC and FPCÂ get as many variables on the table as possible and to see how these variables interact.â
At this point, Wolverton moved to begin an executive session, a period in which all nonÂ-voting members of those present, including The Transcript and members of WCSA, had to leave the room. Wolverton said he wanted the closed meeting so faculty would feel comfortable talking about the economic issues facing the university without their views being made public. The vote to close the meeting was not unanimous.
The closed session ended in about 30 minutes.
When N. Kyle Smith, associate professor of psychology and chair of the APC took the podium, to have faculty vote on a new course and other measures, it was discovered not enough faculty were in attendance for a quorum. As a result, faculty could not vote.
Smith announced that at the facultyâs next meeting in November, he would move for a vote to make UC160, an 0.25 unit course, a requirement of all freshmen.
âOverall, UC160 has been shown to increase the retention rate, to make students more aware of possibilities available to them and to make students more engaged with the university,â Smith said.
But many professors did not seem to share this sentiment.
Karen Fryer, professor of geologyÂgeography, said that for high performing freshmen âwho hit the ground running, they simply donât need it.â
Carol Neuman De Vegvar, professor of fine arts, said that âbefore we even have a discussion about this, we need to be sent information about the class as it already exists. We donât really have a sense of the shape of it. This needs to be widespread knowledge before we are in a position to talk about this.â
Expanding UC160 to all freshmen would require a considerable expansion of the number of sections offered, which would mean adding to the faculty workload or hiring adjuncts to teach the sections. Given a tightening budget, faculty said they we were concerned about the added cost.
Earlier in the meeting, Jones said a current goal of his administration is to focus renovation efforts on University Hall. But assessments show that the initial estimate of $10 million for the work wonât be enough to foot the bill.
âWe need to put everything on the table,â Jones said. âWhat are the best uses of that building for the future and what is the cost of allowing that building to serve those purposes?â
Jones also announced that longÂtime supporters of the University, Phillip J. and Nancy Meek, both members of the class of 1959, recently pledged $10 million to added to the $10 million the Meek family has already donated to the University.
The sign over the Jay Walk says it all. â#1 in Ohio, #17 in America!â
Shortly after being ranked No. 17 in the nation among âAmericaâs Most Entrepreneurial Colleges 2015â by Forbes magazine, Ohio Wesleyan University announced that the department of economics will add a business administration major in fall 2016.
OWU has offered business related courses since 1921, but a businessÂ-specific major has never existed. Barbara A. MacLeod, chair of the economics department and professor of management, believes this change will make a difference.
âProspective students donât understand the management economics major has some business,â she said. âThis business administration major is more clear, not just in the name, but in content itâs a full business major.â
According to admissions data, many prospective students show interest in having the word âbusinessâ in their majorâs name.
OWUâs business administration major will encompass coursework in management theory, human resources management and behavior, marketing and strategic decisionÂ-making.
Along with the business coursework, the new major will work with other departments within OWU to establish related speakers, projects and ideas that can span across many academic fields.
âOur students will not only be taking the other distribution courses, but we hope to be doing a lot of cooperating with other departments on speakers, ideas and projects,â MacLeod said. âThe key aspects of a liberal arts are ideas like critical thinking, analysis, the ability to think effectively and write effectively and those are all under the program that we have proposed.â
MacLeod sees more schools like OWU heading in the same direction in their near future.
âSince it has been approved, I have heard from other schools in our area, in the North Coast Athletic Conference and Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference that they are also looking into how to expand into business,â she said. âI think in 10Â15 years weâre going to see a very different landscape of all the liberal arts colleges in Ohio.â
Nick Norman, a junior on the economics board, agrees with MacLeod.
âI think it will help with marketing for the school and especially help increase enrollment in the next few years,â Norman said. âI think a lot of students choose to go to schools with a business school or major.â
Freshman Anna Day was in that position not long ago.
âIt was a little unclear coming in as a prospective student if there was exactly a business major,â Day said. âI know a lot of my friends are interested about business and are happy that they can focus on what they want to do.â
Piper Kerman, author of âOrange is the New Black,â is set to speak about her new book and her campaigns for prison and criminal justice reform in Ohio Wesleyanâs Gray Chapel on Jan. 20.
âOrange is the New Black: My Year in a Womenâs Prison,â published in 2010, is a memoir chronicling Kermanâs time spent in Federal prison.
According to Kermanâs website, she spent â13 months in the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Connecticut,â due to âa brief dalliance with drug trafficking while she was in her early twenties.â
Kermanâs memoir was created into an award-Âwinning Netflix series in 2013. The fourth season is under production.
The talk is being sponsored by the Delaware County District Library (DCDL). DCDL is âa non-profit, all-Âvolunteer group that supports the mission, services and needs of the Delaware library system,â said Amy Chapman, a library employee.
Chapman also said, âPiper Kerman is currently living in Central Ohio and gave a well-Âreceived talk at Westerville Library, so we contacted her about her speaking rates and availability.â
Piper will speak for approximately 45 minutes followed by a 15 minute Q&A. Starting Oct. 1, tickets can be purchased for students and staff at www.piperkermanÂauthorvisit.eventbrite.com.
A limited amount of discount tickets will be available before the tickets become available for the public.
âWhen prompted to enter a promotional code, enter âOWUâ to access these tickets,â said Chapman. âThe discounted student tickets are $20. The faculty and staff tickets are $25. As of Nov. 1, tickets will go on sale to the public at www.eventbrite.com.â
âFundamentals Bookstore [next to Bunâs Restaurant] will have the book âOrange is the New Blackâ on sale the evening of the event,â said Chapman.
Books purchased at Fundamentals will be the only books that can be signed at the event with proof of purchase.
The leaves were falling as the Bishop Band played to a gathering crowd of students, alumni, faculty and Board of Trustees members.
The whole spectrum of OWU’s community was assembled on Oct. 1 to celebrate the opening of the newly renovated Edward’s Gym and recently completed Simpson Querrey Fitness Center.
The dedication was held in front of the buildingsâ fresh facades, alongside Sandusky Street. President Rock Jones took the podium early in the ceremony to explain that the school had been in talks “for more than a decade about the need for a fitness center.”
“Students need the ability to maintain good physical health,” Jones said.
But Jones also stressed how important modern athletic facilities are for OWU’s recruitment efforts. “The new Edward’s Gym and Simpson Querrey Center are a tremendous boost to the Battling Bishopsâ athletics and to our ability to attract and retain the best of the best student athletes.”
Rock went on to introduce Louis A. Simpson, class of 1958, and Kimberly K. Querrey, the husband and wife team who financed the $8 million building projects.
According to an event pamphlet, Simpson majored in economics and accounting at OWU, and received a Master’s degree in economics from Princeton University, “where he has served on the faculty.”
Querrey holds a degree in mathematics, physical education and safety from West Virginia Institute of Technology and “is a member of The Woltemade Center advisory board,” according to the same document.
In his speech, Jones mentioned the campaign developed by OWU to revitalize their sports facilities and said that it was “Lou and Kim who stepped forward with their incredible commitment to allow us to move forward immediately.”
Wrapping up his speech, Jones said that Simpson and Querrey were “inspired by the opportunity to help students to live longer, more productive lives.”
When Simpson and Querrey took the stage, they reiterated much of what Jones had said. Querrey told the crowd that the modern student needs a healthy outlet now more than ever.
“We live in a society where stress is a part of life,â Querrey said. âI was told at another school that 35 percent of kids were dealing with disorders of some sort, mostly stress related. This center was built to help you learn to cope with life and issues. Hopefully you will develop some habits that help you be a productive member of society.”
The event pamphlet reports that the Simpson Querrey Fitness Center “features a 4,350 Âsquare-foot fitness center…with cardiovascular equipment and free weights”; “a 2,425 square-Âfoot dance studio with spectator seating”; and a new department of health and human kinetics studio for “students learning how to teach health and fitnessÂrelated activities.”
The renovated Edward’s Gym hosts “six faculty and 35 coaches’ offices with reception areas”; “a restored secondÂfloor basketball court, red tile roof, and skylight”; and “new locker rooms, restrooms, fireÂprotection systems, and elevator,” according to the same pamphlet.
Jerry Lherisson and Emma Drongowski, both seniors and the president and vice president of the Wesleyan Council on Student Affairs, respectively, took the stage at the end of the ceremony to thank all those who had made the facilities possible.
Quoting an article from The Transcript, written on Feb. 28, 1906, about the original opening of Edwardâs Gym, Lherisson exclaimed, “A great day, the gym at last.”
Drongowski used a more recent memory to frame her speech. She said, “Never did I think, when I was moving into my freshman residence hall, that we would have a fabulous new gym and fitness center by my senior year.”
When Jones retook the podium, he had scissors in hand. Smiling at the crowd, he said, “We have in front of me the largest ribbon I have ever seen.”
Flanked by Simpson and Querrey, Thomas Tritton, class of 1969 and chair of the board, and others, Rock helped to cut the banner reading âMind. Body. Spirit.â
And as the ribbon fell, the alma mater rang out from the Bishop Bandâs instruments.