4 - Friday, April 1, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4- Friday, April 11, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCD6NALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Celebrating mental wellness The University should help CAPS expand its event offerings Monday, the Michigan Theater hosted the concert, "We Can All Change the Story: A Celebration of Hope." The suicide- prevention awareness showcase was the product of significant planning and collaboration between the Counseling and Psychological Services Student Advisory board and the Central Student Government. The event provided wristbands and free pizza while promoting an end for student suicide on campus and informing students of the services available to them. It also featured several prominent speakers who talked about their own experiences with mental illnesses. CAPS has helped make a positive change in the community and encouraged discussion of a difficult topic with this event. The University should continue to promote and strengthen CAPS events in order to maximize their ability to affect Sorry to burst your bubble The other day, I was called "pretentious" by one of my students. He's a great kid, and usually pretty polite, so I wasn't offended by the comment so much as taken aback. (The comment came absolutely out of nowhere. It seemed as KATIE natural to him asSTEEN commenting on the weather.) "Pretentious?" I said, feeling suddenly flustered. "No I'm not! What! Pretentious?" "It's not necessarily a bad thing," he said. "Come on," he nodded his head as if we were both in on a little secret. "This is Ann Arbor. We're all a little pretentious here." I still don't think he knows the meaning of pretentious (for instance, he asked me if I listen to Neutral Milk Hotel in attempt to prove his point). But his comment stuck with me - "This is Ann Arbor." what did he mean by that? I've felt simultaneously frustrated and in love with Ann Arbor for some time now, not because there's anything blatantly wrong with it - quite the contrary, because it's just so good. Too good. Too cute. Too green. Too locally-made. Too grassroots. Too academic. Too "politically correct." Too leaders and the best. Too proud. Too active, too passionate, too happy. We really do have it all in this little college bubble. Except, it's not ... real. Ann Arbor isn't flawless - hell, I complain about Ann Arbor biweekly in this column. Just like pretty much everywhere else in the world, Ann Arbor has problems with sexism and rape culture and all the other shit I write about pretty much nonstop. But at the same time, Ann Arbor is somewhat of a liberal haven - a place many young twenty-somethings wish they (we) could hold onto forever. And maybe we can. There are lots of bubbles in the U.S. and in the world. I myself have lived my whole life in a series of bubbles - sometimes one inside another. I grew up in Grosse Pointe, a more conservative-minded bubble I never quit fit in, but a safe, beautiful little bubble with a lake nonetheless. (It's a bubble with strong, fear-based walls, I might add - both figurative and literal walls, like the one built out of snow this winter on Kercheval Avenue, cutting off GP from Detroit. Then I moved to South Quad in Ann Arbor - a nine-story bubble where I was surrounded by a bunch of socially awkward nerds like myself and fattened on a cushy meal plan. Scattered around the halls were advertisements for all sorts of cultural events, posters advocating for depression awareness and notifications of "bias incidents" that occurred in the dorm. Overseeing everything was our benevolent R.A., a sweet girl with an affinity for Bananagrams. After South Quad came the co-ops, where we have regular meetings in which we're encouraged to feel "empowered" to speak our opinion, where we can have SAPAC and IGR come to our living room and lead discussions and workshops. "Safe space" is something of a buzzword here. And currently, I'm student teaching at a high school that my field instructor likes to call "magic high school." It's a small community of kids - many of them professors' kids, I've begun to realize, and many of whom are intimidatingly passionate - about learning, about social justice, about expressing their identities, their creativity, about finding what it is they care about in the world and jumping in head first. We all have our bubbles. But most of us, at some point will leave the safety and comfort of our bubbles - for many of us, our exit is coming sooner than later (May 3, actually). And that, I think, is for the better. The unfortunate truth is, the world isn't safe, and it's not a bubble - it's a hungry beast that you can battle or avoid behind closed doors. We can create little bubbles of our ideal realities, but they are not the norm. Many of the people reading this article will be graduating and moving out of good ol' A-squared at some point, and you're probably going to feel at least a little lonely and unprepared and scared. "Real Life" will finally arrive, and it will probably seem kind of shitty at first compared to your last four years. But I'm asking you to take everything you've learned in your college years and beyond, and apply it to Real Life - to make Real Life a better world for everyone. Don't feel afraid when you leave your safe space; feel empowered. We all have our beasts to battle, our-isms and our anxieties. Don't shut them out - go after them. P.S. I'm not pretentious! - Katie Steen can be reached at katheliz@umich.edu. change and reach out to students. CAPS shouldbecommendedforhostingthis event, as should CSG for its support. Together they created a showcase that addressed and raised awareness for a challenging subject that is a serious issue both on campus and around the world. The University has the potential to be a stressful environment for many students, which worsens the problem of mental health issues. Stress and anxiety can cause and perpetuate mental health issues and lead to suicide. A study conducted by the American Public Health Association, which was based on data from 157 colleges, found that suicide accounts for 6.18 deaths in 100,000 college students, which is higher than the amount alcohol-related deaths - 4.86 deaths per 100,000 college students. A study from the American Psychological Association found that 15 percent of graduate and 18 percent of undergraduate students have seriously contemplated suicide in their lifetimes. It's clear that suicide is a major problem around collegecampuses, but the stigma around the topic, as well as many other mental health topics,makes seekinghelp and creatingdialogue a problem. Events such as "A Celebration of Hope" help to break the stigma and promote discussion, and are thus critical to the goal of having students seek help. Students can receive help at CAPS, as it provides confidential psychological and psychiatric services for enrolled graduate and undergraduate students at the University. Some of their services include individual counseling, group opportunities, urgent/crisis services, psychiatric evaluations and medication management, and screenings and support for ADHD, eating patterns and substance abuse. In addition, CAPS is involved in outreach and education and works to battle mental health issues in many different ways. This event in particular was focused on suicide prevention, but their efforts promote mental health wellness in general. The importance of such an organization on this campus can't be emphasized enough. The showcase was developed and executed in an effective way that helped to address the social stigma that surrounds mental disorders and make students less intimidated to seek help from CAPS. Their use of high profile speakers such as former Michigan football player Will Heininger, Miss Michigan Haley Williams and radio host John Bommarito was an important way to break the barriers of the stigma around suicide and mental disorders because they talked about how mental health issues have affected their lives. Having prominent and successful people discuss their experience with mental disorders helps normalize the issue. It's the responsibility of the University to promote, fund and support CAPS in its efforts to improve mental health wellness. The more events, and the more transparent and accessible to students these events are, the more power CAPS has to break social stigmas and address issues surrounding mental issues. "We Can All Change the Story: A Celebration of Hope" was a successful event engineered by CSG and CAPS that worked to promote an end for suicide on campus and educated students about the services available to them. However, the University should make more events like this possible by increasing their support and funding for CAPS. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Edvinas Berzanskis, David Harris, Rachel John, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Meher Walia, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM In response to 'Prioritizing Indeed, a study published this week in minors' health' JAMA Internal Medicine, a respected peer- reviewed journal, followed 949 smokers' behaviors over a year, and found that there TO THE DAILY: was no difference in quit rates between The recent editorial, "Prioritizing minors' smokers who used e-cigarettes and smokers health," takes a wrongheaded approach to who did not. uncertainty in public health research. While it While a single study does not conclusively correctly acknowledges that more research is demonstrate that e-cigarettes do not help needed on the long-termhealth effects of e-cig- quitters, it does show that policymakers arettes, it wrongly asserts that e-cigarettes can should proceed with caution. Nicotine is an end dependence on tobacco. addictive product, and its use can impact ado- In reality, the public health community is lescentbrain development. Makers of tobacco divided on the issue. Some hypothesize that by and nicotine products have historically dis- switching to e-cigarettes, smokers can indeed missed concerns about their harmful effects end their dependence on conventional ciga- - which has led to a devastating death toll. rettes. But quitting is more complicated than E-cigarette makers do not claim that their that. E-cigarettes could actually discourage products help with quitting - if they did, they quitting by giving smokers a source of nicotine would be subject to federal regulation as a drug. they use throughout the day rather than forcing Let's not jump the gun on their behalf. breaks. The growing popularity of e-cigarettes could also make the act of smoking normal Tiffany J. Huang again - which again, discourages quitting. Master ofPublic Health Candidate BRANISLAV RADEUIC| Acade] Branislav Radeljic is an associate professor in international politics at the School of Law and Social Sciences, University of East London. In2013,he was avisitingscholar at the European Union Center of Excellence, University of California at Berkeley, and is currently Telluride faculty fellow, hosted by the University of Michigan's Department. He is the author of Europe and the Collapse of Yugoslavia: , The Role of Non-State Actors and European Diplomacy, and editor of Europe and the Post-Yugoslav Space and DebatingEuropean Identity: Bright Ideas,DimProspects. It is truly interesting to observe the differences that characterize the approaches to doctoral research in politics in America and Britain. To begin with, while the former perceives the readiness to argue, challenge, debate and offer contrasting standpoints as an opportunity to deepen academic links, the latter is very careful about such aspects of academic upbringing as if they could eventually generate animosity. Of course, it should be noted that on various occasions, the American idea about freedom of the academic mind could easily lead to Q&A sessions that have nothingto do with the presented topics. But, this is still less worrisome, as sometimes-irrelevantquestions can serve as a basis for some new, relevant ones. Thus, while British approach can teach us to be more judgmental about the speaker and their talk, American approach can teach us to be more creative and flexible vis-A-vis the academic scholarship. Flexibility of mind and options, in general, can also be problematic, especially when thinking about practical issues: it is generally much quicker (not necessarily easier, as sometimes imagined) to obtain a Ph.D in the UK than in the US. While American graduate students are bombarded with all sorts of literature and, more importantly, expected to prove a detailed familiarity with aspects of often-questionable usefulness, UK doctoral candidates are expected to know primarily about aspects closely related to their research puzzle (everything else seems to be a luxury). But, this is what doing a Ph.D is supposed to be, isn't it? This kind of discrepancy can be attributed to the overall approach to doctoral studies as well as to the role playedby advisors (US) or supervisors (UK). In fact, it seems that even these two words suggest two different roles: whileinAmerica,theroleofanadvisor is to advise doctoral students by providing them with additional ideas, numerous questions and possible directions to consider, in Britain, the role of a supervisor is to supervise, meaning to guide and tell the students what to do (in a polite way, of course) and if not doing it the supervisor- expected way, to correct them. This somehow indicates that supervisors are often expected to be experts in the field (or at least the leading supervisor), whereas advisors are not - an important aspect suggesting that advisors can also learn a lot from their doctoral candidates. Such an exchange of knowledge could lead to joint publications - something that, generally speaking, seems to happen more often in the US than in the UK. The advising approach is lesgthier and usually a couple ofyeatsarmgone before clear-cut research question(s) and main argument(s) are established. On the other hand,the Europeans tend to have their research design before theyeven apply for doctoral programs, as applications are judged based on the overall quality of the submitted research proposal. The preparation American doctoral students must go through is intended to help them to consolidate their arguments and often to defend them in a more convincing way (including conferences and workshops where they present early stagesoftheirresearch),whereastheir European colleagues tend to modify their originally presented proposals or evencompletelyabandonthem. withregardtotheresearchmethods employed in most social science areas, what seems quite striking is the obsession with dependent and independent variables and the power of numbers and percentages amongst American doctoral candidates. In fact, it seems that it has become impossible to present a good research prospectus in the US without having the two variables and some idea about what they are likely to show. This could haveto dowiththe whole post-Second World War number mania when polls, percentages and accompanying predictions came to occupy an important place in social sciences. In May 2012, I was invited to serve as a discussantattheWesternUSGraduate Student Research Workshop on the European Union, hosted by the EU Center of Excellence at the University of California at Berkeley, and I was amazed to hear that every single presentation had the two variables and, in fact, proudly insisted on their relevance. According to one of the presented papers,numbers are enough (sometimes 100 interviewees out of over 500 million inhabitants of the EU) to tell us how the Union exactly works,how it is likely to respond to the present and future crises, whether the concept of European identity is a valid one and so on. But, is it credible to say that the two variables can explain almost any EU-related research topic or should the students be allowed to be a bit more flexible when conducting research? Perhaps, the issue is that numbers - and, more relevantly, percentages - have consolidated their position really well, to the extent that they are often used as the only accurate source of information and thus no junior researcher is really willing to challenge their power. Interestingly, when recently asked aboutherexperienceas avisitingfellow at a top ranked American university, a colleague ofmine describeditas akind of Disneyland for academics. While "playing" with available resources, peers and, most importantly, new ideas, academics tend to produce some new, cutting-edge scholarship and this is where the US seems to be ahead any other country or region. Apart from explaining some sectionsof the rankings, this could probably explain the US-based university presses' right to be extremely picky when it comes to scholarship they want to consider and possibly publish. Another colleague of mine has recently had the following experience: after approaching an American university press and sending in the whole manuscript, a set of constructive comments was provided by the reviewers who said that the submitted work was good and that they themselves would be very happy to use it and cite it, but still required some (substantial) changes. However, the publisher kept the right to say and actually warnthe submitter that even after all the changes have been made, the reviewers might still decide to reject the manuscript in which case the whole process would terminate there. Needless to say how frustrating such a response for an ambitious junior scholar mustbe! As already noted, the rankings show that the world's best universities are mostly US-based. Although we can argue that rankings often tend to be defined by parameters that should not really matter to prospective researchers, there are many aspects that cannot be ignored and here I primarily refer to the funding available to conduct (post)graduate study in politics. In this respect, Americans can afford to finance their PhD candidates to sit and go through both relevant and irrelevant methods and scholarship, whereas the UK-based researchers are often conditioned by tight deadlines to complete, submit and defend their PhDs.Still,in both cases, a good PhD is a finished PhD and it is actually here where the real fight for a permanent position in academia begins. Indeed, the question of the job market is the one that remains the most pressing, both in the system that rushes through and the one that seems to be significantly slower. Given the disappointing numbers of new jobs in academia at the moment, contrasted with the growing numbers of available PhD holders, one could potentially find it easier to opt for a longer, American version of conducting a doctoral study and thus enjoy as many aspects of research as possible. Some others would rather do it the quick, British way, and then consider all sorts of jobs, including the idea that they will not be back in academia at any time soon. Branislav Radeljic is a visiting faculty fellow for the Department of History and the Telluride Association. mia across the pond What this means now is that Paul [Schaffer] and I can be married. - David Letterman said in jest as he announced his retirement during last week's episode of the "Late Show with David Letterman".