News

HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.

News

Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend

News

What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?

News

MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal

News

Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options

Students Protest Jan. 20 Exams

Petition seeks make-up option for finals scheduled for inauguration day

By Anita B. Hofschneider, Contributing Writer

For Ryan D. Zampardo, a senior in Mather House, the first difficulty in attending the upcoming presidential inauguration is getting a ticket. A Democrat from Michigan, he has contacted his local representative in Congress but has not yet received a response.

But even if he succeeds, he will face a possibly more difficult situation than national politics: January 20, the day of the inauguration, is in the middle of the College’s final exam period, and Zampardo happens to have a test that day, one that counts for 40 percent of his grade for the class and may prevent him from witnessing a significant moment in American history.

The class?

Government 1540: “The American Presidency.”

Over 2,000 undergraduates are set to sit for exams on January 20 for almost 40 different classes. Several of them who hoped to go down to Washington, D.C. for the inauguration have had to make different plans.

For some, these different plans include resigning to remain on campus and watch the recaps later that night. For others, however, different plans means taking action.

On November 18, the day after he saw the final exam schedule, Jason Y. Shah ’11 formed the Facebook group “Petition for Make-Ups of Harvard College Exams on Inauguration Day 2009,” and within a week, the group grew to over 250 members. That day, working with Shah, Tanuj D. Parikh ’09 created an online petition of the same name. The petition now has almost 600 electronic signatures.

In addition to the Facebook group and the petition, Shah and Parikh have been collaborating with other students to speak with professors and work with the Undergraduate Council to resolve the issue favorably before winter break. Last night, the UC passed a position paper advocating that students who have proof that they are attending the inauguration should be eligible for make-up exams on the Sunday before the inauguration. It will be circulated to different administrators.

“Through our efforts, we hope to convince the administration and professors to offer students wishing to either travel to Washington, D.C. for the event or watch this historic presidential inauguration live the option for a make-up examination,” Shah said last week in an e-mailed statement. “We do not want to reschedule exams for entire classes.”

Professors do not have the authority to reschedule their exams to different days. That right is reserved for the Registrar’s office and other administrators.

When the head teaching fellow for Government 1368: “The Politics of American Education,” which has its exam on January 20, contacted the Registrar about rescheduling the exam, he received an e-mail detailing the policy, which he forwarded on to his students and which was obtained by The Crimson.

“FAS will be holding exams as scheduled. For individual student requests of this nature, the student would have to present their request to the Administrative Board via their Resident Dean,” wrote Jampa Ghapontsang, the assistant manager of exams for FAS. “We do know that a student without an invitation to the inauguration had petitioned the Ad Board last week and was denied.”

Shah said he is not asking the administration to make exceptions for students particularly for the Obama inauguration. He said he hopes it will become University policy to allow students to make up exams that fall on Inauguration Day.

“It is our position that every inauguration should be a day during which students are allowed to exercise their civic duty,” he said.

Once the College’s calendar changes next year, final exams will no longer fall in January. But for Shah, Parikh, and Zampardo—along with 2,000 others—that change might come a year too late.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags