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American Medical Women’s Association supports pre-med students

By providing members with community service opportunities and career development mentors, the AMWA hopes it can help support students hoping to become medical professionals. | Photo courtesy of AMWA

The American Medical Women’s Association at UH is an organization dedicated to empowering women in the medical field. By providing members with community service opportunities and career development mentors, the AMWA aims to help support students along their journey toward becoming medical professionals. 

Since its founding in 2014, the AMWA has provided countless students with the necessary resources to overcome the academic challenges of being a pre-med student. AMWA co-president and biomedical engineering major Anaga Ajoy said AMWA has helped develop a collaborative environment among pre-med students. 

“I know pre-med has like a reputation for being very like cutthroat and competitive,” Ajoy said. “I feel like this organization is much different than that; we’re all always trying to help each other out. It’s very much a community.” 

In addition to catering to students studying medicine, AMWA also prioritizes women’s advocacy. The organization maintains a subcommittee dedicated to advocating on behalf of female students.  

“In my junior year, I became the Women’s Advocacy Committee Chair, which is basically a committee within AMWA, where I was focused on helping women’s issues specifically, and not just like medical issues,” Ajoy said. 

AMWA is a relatively large organization with around 140-150 members. In such a large organization, making time for every member can be challenging, but it’s something Ajoy strives for. 

“So that means that it’s really hard to be very personal with every single person just because of the sheer size,” Ajoy said. “With that being said, we’re not grouped up by ourselves or anything. We make an effort to talk to everyone.” 

Ajoy is a senior in her last semester at UH. With graduation just a few months away, Ajoy took time to reflect on her involvement with AMWA. Aside from her own personal growth, Ajoy said seeing the impact AMWA has had on its members continues to be a point of pride. 

“As a freshman, I was very overwhelmed with everything I could do to graduate and basically go into medical school and things like that,” Ajoy said. “But AMWA definitely gave me a very clear-cut path. Watching the members grow and become more accomplished and more successful is very rewarding.” 

Ajoy, nearing the end of her journey with AMWA, said all that’s left now is to give back however she can. 

“I gave a lot of my college undergraduate years to this org. And it’s one of the biggest impacts that it has had on my life, so I really appreciate it,” Ajoy said. “I want to give back in every way possible.” 

news@thedailycougar.com


American Medical Women’s Association supports pre-med students” was originally posted on The Cougar

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Candidates stump on The Plaza as ASCSU presidential race starts

The two-week election race for president and vice president of Associated Students of Colorado State University began Monday as candidates handed out flyers, posted on social media and gave speeches to win student support.

Three campaigns took to The Plaza to kick off the 2023-24 election season. The slate of candidates includes Nicholas DeSalvo and Alex Silverhart, Rithik Correa and Jessica Laffey and Mia Ritter and Sammy Trout.

The campaign begins amid a series of controversies inside ASCSU, with inside sources claiming the Senate has become a “hostile environment” that has misused student funds in anonymous letters to The Collegian.

Each campaign is focused on rebuking that image in their own way, with candidates announcing plans to increase student engagement with ASCSU, lower student fees, abolish U+2 and increase availability of affordable housing.

“We handle $1.3 million in funding in ASCSU — and that’s a lot of money. We want to be able to tangibly make sure that all of those fees are being used responsibly.” –Mia Ritter, Budgetary Affairs Committee chair

DeSalvo and Silverhart announced their candidacy for president and vice president in a set of speeches from atop The Stump. DeSalvo is ASCSU’s current speaker of the senate, and Silverhart is ASCSU’s director of health and wellness.

In front of a crowd of 20-odd students, DeSalvo and Silverhart touted their experience with ASCSU and set affordable housing as their top priority.

“The City of Fort Collins has never been so anti-U+2 before, and we have the opportunity to show up and take it down,” DeSalvo said. “My promise to you is that I will continue to fight for housing affordability, and when Alex (Silverhart) and I assume the oath of office, U+2 is in jeopardy.”

Candidates Correa and Laffey began their campaign by handing out flyers to hundreds of students over the afternoon. Correa and Laffey are both senators of ASCSU, representing the Office of International Programs and the College of Liberal Arts, respectively.

Correa said transportation is his campaign’s primary focus, and he wants ASCSU to work with outside organizations to tackle the issue. Additionally, he plans to reduce the cost of parking permits by decreasing demand for on-campus parking. By expanding bus routes and partnering with car-sharing company Zipcar, Correa said his plans could solve the parking issue for good.

“What ASCSU can do is sign deals with Zipcar or other organizations that say, ‘Hey, we’ll provide you this money, we’ll provide you parking’ (and) get more cars … from Zipcar more students sign up, less cars on campus,” Correa said. “It serves both the population of students that don’t have cars and students that have cars.”

Ritter and Trout also took to The Plaza to hand out flyers for their campaign. Ritter and Trout are both chairs of ASCSU senate committees, overseeing the Budgetary Affairs and University Affairs committees, respectively.

Ritter said their campaign is focused on lowering student fees and increasing transparency within ASCSU and the university’s administration.

“We handle $1.3 million in funding in ASCSU — and that’s a lot of money,” Ritter said. “We want to be able to tangibly make sure that all of those fees are being used responsibly.”

Ritter said she wants to mobilize ASCSU against the university’s proposed tuition increase next year and make students a bigger part of the university administration’s decision-making process.

“We want to make sure that we’re transparent in terms of what’s happening internally at CSU,” Ritter said.

The flurry of campaign announcements stands in stark contrast to last year’s ASCSU elections, which saw Robert Long and Elijah Sandoval run unopposed on the official ballot in an election with a record-low voter turnout of only 6.17%.

Reach Dylan Tusinski at news@collegian.com or on Twitter @dylantusinski.

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Post-Oscars Recap: History is Made at the Oscars … Again

 

The 95th Academy Awards premiered on Sunday, March 12 with a champagne carpet rather than a red one and even more history being made in the film industry. After an outburst of physical violence at the 94th ceremony and the disaster that was the 93rd, fans were hoping for a normal — but entertaining — show. Luckily, that’s exactly what they got. There were no apparent technical difficulties, no fistfights and the Best Picture award was announced correctly on the first try — unlike in 2017. Here is a recap of the most important details from the ceremony.

Third Time’s the Charm

Given that Jimmy Kimmel has now hosted the Oscars three times, one might expect people to tire of him. However, after the trainwreck that was Regina Hall, Amy Schumer and Wanda Sykes’ hosting performance last year, Kimmel’s wit and stage presence was a welcome change. Sykes, Schumer and Hall made a number of jokes that referenced the Academy’s history of pushing women out of the limelight, but each felt forced and scripted. However, Kimmel did the same much more naturally. He scattered the digs across classic roasts that focused on specific celebrities as well as other jokes regarding the lack of diversity in the Academy Awards, and none of it felt like it was out of obligation or pushed on him by the producers of the show.

It’s well known that everyone who spent more than an hour on the internet after the 94th Oscars grew tired of the “Will Smith Slap” memes after their first time seeing it. The jokes were tired, the memes were dry and yet no one could let go of it. Kimmel somehow managed to freshen up the joke and it didn’t feel nearly as played out as it did last year, and I don’t think I have ever laughed so hard at the end of the over three-hour-long show as I did when Kimmel went backstage to flip a counter saying “Number of Oscars Telecasts Without Incident” to 001.

Predictions Made True

Moving past the emcee, most of the predictions made by the major sources were correct. From here on out, a spoiler alert is in order for the winners of these prestigious awards.

Everything Everywhere All At Once” was the top pick for most people for Best Picture, Best Actress and Actor in a Leading Role, Best Actress and Actor in a Supporting Role, and even Best Director. The film was nominated for 10 awards, 11 times (twice for Best Actress in a Supporting Role), and it won seven of them, giving it the titles of Best Picture, most awards nominated and most awards won.

Brendan Fraser was the obvious pick to win Best Actor from seemingly everyone that watched “The Whale.” The film was heart-wrenching and overall difficult to watch thanks to Fraser’s incredible performance that really made people feel his pain.

After a decade of Disney/Pixar movies reigning supreme over the Animated Feature Films category, Guillermo del Toro’s “Pinocchio” beat out the fierce contender that was “Puss In Boots: The Last Wish.” According to the official Netflix website, this win makes del Toro the first person in history to win Best Picture (“The Shape of Water,” 2017), Best Director (“The Shape of Water,” 2017) and now, Best Animated Feature Film. He expressed in his acceptance speech that “animation is ready to be taken to the next step. We are all ready for it. Please help us keep animation in the conversation.”

Controversial Turned Conversational

It is no secret that the Academy Awards have come under heavy fire in the past for a severe lack of diversity in the nominations across every category. Both gender and race discrimination have played a significant role in past nominations and wins; so much so that we continue to celebrate the first woman to win this or the first person of color to win that, when these people should have been noticed and appreciated much more a long time ago.

“It was some year for diversity and inclusion,” Kimmel said in his opening speech. “We’ve got nominees from every corner of Dublin [Ireland].”

This year, there were four categories with zero female nominees (not including the obvious Best Actor in a Leading Role and Best Actor in a Supporting Role): Visual Effects, Original Score, Best Director and Original Screenplay. There is a common theme to be devised here. Only three women have ever won Best Director, only two have won Visual Effects, nine have won Original Screenplay — although four of them were partnered with men — and only four have won Best Original Score.

Despite the continued controversy surrounding the Oscars and the lack of diversity in years past, there was some history made. “Naatu Naatu” became the first nominee and winner for an Indian film in the Best Original Song category. Michelle Yeoh became the first Asian woman to both be nominated and win the title of Best Actress, and a record-making four Asian actors received nominations thanks to “Everything Everywhere All At Once.” Ke Huy Quan, who won Best Actor in a Supporting Role, is the first Asian man to win the award in 38 years after Haing S. Ngor for “The Killing Fields,” and he’s also the first Vietnam-born actor to win an Oscar. He stopped acting after his standout roles in the “Indiana Jones” films and “The Goonies” because of how difficult it was for Asian actors to find work, and there was not a dry eye in the crowd as he tearfully embraced Harrison Ford onstage after Best Picture was announced.

“Please keep your dreams alive,” he said in his acceptance speech.

There will always be decisions to nitpick, filmmakers snubbed and actors that go unrecognized at the Academy Awards. At the end of the day, however, it’s becoming clear that the Academy is beginning to be committed to making its awards inclusive, diverse and accepting of all cinema. 

 

audrey.hall@dailyutahchronicle.com

@audrey_h_chrony

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NASCAR Cup Series season update

*Results of Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 not reflected in this article

It’s mid-March, and four NASCAR Cup Series races are already in the books. In typical NASCAR fashion, this season has already been full of chaos, with three different race winners and multiple headlines which have shaken the sport.

Most notably, NASCAR darling Chase Elliott is currently on the sidelines for six weeks, recovering from a leg injury sustained in a snowboarding accident that he suffered on March 3. Chase is the son of NASCAR legend Bill Elliott and has been voted NASCAR’s most popular driver for five years in a row. 

Ironically, Elliott’s misfortune could save him in the long run, as his teammates and fill-in driver at Hendrick Motorsports were penalized at Phoenix for unapproved adjustments to the car during practice. Each team faced a $100,000 fine and was docked 100 regular season points and ten playoff points.

While this is a huge penalty, it has barely put a scratch on Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron’s championship hopes. Byron was the race winner at both the Pennzoil 400 in Las Vegas, and the Ruoff Mortgage 500 in Phoenix. He is already locked into a playoff spot due to NASCAR’s win-and-in format. 

Two other drivers have already secured their spots in the playoff. NASCAR legend Kyle Busch was the victor at Auto Club Speedway, proving he can thrive independently of Joe Gibbs Racing, the team he won two series championships with. 

In his new number eight car with Richard Childress Racing, Busch sits at fifth in the points standings and has spent plenty of time running in the top five this season. It’s only a matter of time before NASCAR’s favorite villain-turned-hero strikes again for another win. 

At this year’s first crown jewel racing event, the Daytona 500, underdog Ricky Stenhouse Jr. emerged from the pack to secure a very memorable victory. Stenhouse breaks an incredible winless streak of 199 races to secure his third career victory on the biggest of NASCAR stages. 

Stenhouse has officially locked himself into the playoffs for the first time since 2017. He currently sits in 11th place in the points standings. 

At the top of the standings currently is 47-year-old Kevin Harvick. In his final season of competition, Harvick is one of the last remaining titans from one of NASCAR’s most memorable eras. Harvick has secured one Cup Series championship, but looks to contend for one more this year before his driving days are done. 

As a sport battling for viewers’ eyes, NASCAR has been trying desperately to increase viewership. Track changes, schedule shifts and new-generation racecars show that NASCAR has gone all-in on cementing itself as a major force in the sporting world. 

So far, this season’s races have been mostly engaging and entertaining according to most fans on social media. However, some criticisms remain, mostly about NASCAR’s overuse of the “cookie cutter” racetracks that comprise so much of NASCAR’s regular-season schedule.

There’s a long season ahead for the NASCAR fan community, and a lot of exciting storylines that are worth following going forward.

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CFA Institute Rolls Out CFA Program Enhancements to Support Future Investment Professionals

Global designation evolves to shape today’s investment profession and the professionals who operate within it Charlottesville, Virginia — 20 March, 2023: CFA Institute, the global association of investment professionals, announces significant enhancements to the CFA Program as part of its continual efforts to evolve the Program. These changes address the way today’s candidates learn and […]

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Ericson: The persistence of a conspiracy cult

“To say that Lyndon was slightly paranoid would be like saying the Titanic had a bit of a leak.”

This is what disgraced televangelist Jim Bakker wrote about the man with whom he shared a cell in a Minnesota federal prison. Both Bakker and the conspiracy theorist Lyndon LaRouche had been convicted of defrauding their followers. Bakker is somehow still broadcasting, but LaRouche died in 2019.

Before his death, LaRouche, who ran for president 8 times, earned an image as a consummate conspiracy-monger. He was referenced on the Simpsons, and fellow disgraced politician Al Franken played him on SNL.

While he never achieved real mainstream power, LaRouche did manage to gain mastery of a profitable — and abusive — subculture. He started off his political career as a follower of the early Soviet leader Leon Trotsky. His group split off from the leftist group Students for a Democratic Society, calling itself the Caucus of Labor Committees.

Over the decades, however, his politics became much more syncretic. In addition to adopting some right-wing views, LaRouche became infamous for his increasingly bizarre ideas. For instance, that Queen Elizabeth II was a drug trafficker or that opera singers are using the wrong pitch.

LaRouche’s ideology was also notable for its antisemitism. He was an aficionado of conspiracy theories about the Jewish Hungarian financier and philanthropist George Soros. He even denied the Holocaust. In 2004, a British Jewish student named Jeremiah Duggan died mysteriously after attending a LaRouche protest and conference in Germany.

That protest was ostensibly about opposing the Iraq War. Carl Beijer, who writes under a pen name, is a left-wing journalist who said he first encountered LaRouche’s followers around the same time, as a young anti-war protester in grad school.

At George Mason University during the Iraq War, “we had a large LaRouche presence on campus,” Beijer said. “They’re doing the same things that they’re doing now, where they would try to, sort of, infiltrate the anti-war movement.”

In a 2004 article about Duggan’s death, the Washington Post reported some of LaRouche’s followers had been with him since they were students protesting the war in Vietnam. And this pattern continues today. Beijer pointed to a recent D.C.-area rally called “Rage Against the War Machine,” at which Lyndon’s widow Helga Zepp LaRouche spoke on video.

That rally’s other listed speakers included names you’ve probably heard before, like Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters and former members of Congress Ron Paul, Tulsi Gabbard and Dennis Kucinich. LaRouchite Senate candidate Diane Sare addressed the rally, as did the pugilistic influencer Jackson Hinkle, who has 140,000 Twitter followers and once appeared on Tucker Carlson. Hinkle is also an erstwhile proponent of “MAGA Communism,” a political slogan that may as well have been designed to alienate as many normal people as possible.

Far from being anti-war, Hinkle vehemently supports Russian imperialism. He has also expressed support for LaRouche on social media, and spoke at a LaRouche event last October.

That event, in typical LaRouchite gobbledegook, was billed as “Build the New Paradigm, Defeat Green Fascism.” Beijer said he watched a six-hour livestream. “You have to read between the lines a little bit, but what’s going on is that they are very, very conscious of how the anti-war stuff is bringing in people into their movements,” he said.

Beijer pointed to comments that Helga Zepp LaRouche made at that ev​​ent about how publicity stunts were driving traffic to LaRouche media.

“She was talking about how their publicity stunts, where they show up at town halls and rail against AOC and stuff like that, how that was bringing eyes and clicks and web traffic,” Beijer said. “They were also very conscious of the social media actors who were promoting them.”

Using one fringe belief — in this case, opposition to U.S. military aid to Ukraine, or opposition to the Iraq and Vietnam wars — to bring people into a broader conspiratorial worldview is a common phenomenon.

Javier Granados Samayoa is a social psychologist and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania. He and his colleagues have found belief in conspiracy theories related to COVID-19 was associated with adopting other conspiracy theories later.

“What you saw was belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories at the earlier time point led to an increase in these generic conspiracy ideas over a six-month period, suggesting that it’s sort of migrating them down that conspiracy theory rabbit hole,” he said.

I’m not trying to suggest being anti-war is the same as being a conspiracy theorist. While I do support arming Ukraine against Russian aggression, I generally consider myself to be very anti-war. The danger is the LaRouche movement is trying to use anti-war sentiment as a way to bring people into a broadly conspiratorial and dangerous worldview.

The danger of LaRouchism is not just ideological. LaRouche wrote that recruiters should try to strip people of their egos, and ex-members have accused the group of psychological abuse. In 1973 and 1974, LaRouche carried out a violent campaign called Operation Mop-Up in which his followers physically attacked members of rival left-wing groups. A LaRouche newspaper accused the Communist Party of being allied with Richard Nixon.

It’s this violent history that makes Beijer reluctant to attend LaRouche events. “You don’t actually want to go to their meetings,” Beijer said. “They can be dangerous.”

Karl Marx famously said, in history, great people and events show up twice: first as tragedy, and then as farce. Lyndon LaRouche’s life and influence managed to be farcical and tragic all at once. I don’t know if his followers’ current activities are the last gasps of a dying movement, or a sign that they’re here to stay. We can only hope it’s the former.

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Soapy Shayna: the BU student behind the OnlyFans pseudonym

A freshman in the Questrom School of Business, Shayna said she hopes to change the narrative surrounding OnlyFans models.

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Latinx Mental Health Workshop Brings Students Together To Discuss Anger as a BIPOC Student

 

The University of Utah’s Latinx community and University Counseling Center held its most recent workshop on anger in a series about mental health in the Latinx community.

The Anger We Carry was a roundtable conversation about anger, where it comes from, why it is there and the differences in anger for Latinx people.

Fabi Madrigal and Nicole Puertas Sanchez of the BIPOC Student Support Group All the Feels moderated the discussion. Students and attendees from a diverse range of backgrounds were asked to consider their anger and question not only their emotions but how institutions inform that anger. 

The Latinx Mental Health Workshop series is an initiative to provide students an opportunity to discuss the unseen frustration of stigmatization, generational trauma and cultural expectations from their families and society. 

Nathalie Ramirez-Ortiz and Adriana Leon, both U students, expressed the anger stemming from a lack of compassion from their parents as first-generation students, gender roles in Latin culture and a lack of diversity on campus.

“For the Latinx community mental health is not really a thing in the culture,” said Ramirez-Ortiz, a second-year social work student. “Having a mental health workshop for the Latinx community can help people in the community see the other side rather than what they are supposed to feel culturally.” 

Many students hailing from countries like Argentina, Chile, Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico all shared a common feeling of resentment from previous generations for the opportunity to live and go to college in the U.S. Some students were first-generation Americans whose parents escaped violence, poverty and discrimination.

“A lot of us have immigrant parents,” said Leon, a first-year student in computer science. “They’ve crossed borders, they had so many obstacles and then they look at us and say, ‘Why can’t you handle college?’ or ‘Why are you so stressed?’” 

Leon added that parents, documented or not, along with some students do not understand the difficulties in accessing resources for opportunities as an undocumented student. Student organizations at the U like Somos Dreamers advocate for undocumented students.

The Latinx Student Union works to create a community and resources for students living with the particular emotional challenges of being first-generation while creating a culturally familiar space for students. 

The event coordinator for the Latinx Student Union, Jasmine Aguilar Lopez, said, “We have parents who have gone through violence crossing the border, many of us are first generation, some of us are undocumented and our parents are like, ‘Well you have it so much easier.’” 

Therapy is expensive and many Hispanic youth in Utah are traditionally underserved. “Not a lot of people know about counseling resources on campus,” Aguilar Lopez said. “So we’re trying to help bridge that gap so students know and can have access to therapy.”

The U’s Hispanic enrollment sits at 13%, a distant second to Salt Lake Community College’s 21%, according to KSL.  However, initiatives like institutional recruiting, student clubs and mental health counseling are part of a wider Utah initiative to grow and retain Hispanic students in higher education.  

Christina Kelly LeCluyse, an outreach coordinator with the University Counseling Center, said that the UCC and Center for Equity and Student Belonging have embedded therapists, like Madrigal and Puertas from All the Feels, who work to make counseling more accessible and relatable for students of color.  

For many Latinx students being on a predominantly white campus means fewer opportunities to be seen by their community and even fewer opportunities to meet with a therapist who understands the Latinx experience.

Students at the roundtable talked about the anger that is a result of stigmas like that of the “spicy Latina,” or machismo masculinity and the “forever foreigner trope” that confines people to a status of perpetually foreign due to their status as foreign.

In the discussion, students agreed that seeing other students who look like them was crucial to finding a community of like-minded individuals.

“Knowing my therapist is also a person of color makes me feel like they will be able to understand my point of view,” Aguilar Lopez said.

“I sit here and I see people who look like me and are going through the same struggles and it makes me feel better, like I am not alone and I have someone to relate to,” Ramirez-Ortiz said.

The U’s counseling center is currently working with the Center for Equity and Student Belonging to provide more access to therapy for students along with community workshops to encourage students to utilize resources on campus to discuss their hidden struggles and find other students who can relate. 

“These events are allowing us to build a community where all of us are letting ourselves be vulnerable, where we’re not allowed to be vulnerable, like at home or on campus,” said Netza Cuyuch Jaimes, a biology and finance major at the U.

The Latinx Mental Health workshop series will pick up its next meeting on March 30 at 4 p.m. in the Unity Lounge to come together with SOMOS Dreamers to discuss being an undocumented student in Utah. 



j.duffy@dailyutahchronicle.com

@JakeDuffyChrony

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CFA Institute Rolls Out CFA Program Enhancements to Support Future Investment Professionals

Global designation evolves to shape today’s investment profession and the professionals who operate within it

Charlottesville, Virginia 20 March, 2023: CFA Institute, the global association of investment professionals, announces significant enhancements to the CFA Program as part of its continual efforts to evolve the Program. These changes address the way today’s candidates learn and prepare them for successful careers as investment professionals, while also supplying the industry with the well-trained, ethical professionals it so requires.

Margaret Franklin, CFA, President and CEO, CFA Institute, commented:

“These enhancements represent an important milestone for our candidates and employers in the industry. In fact, they constitute the most significant changes we have ever made to the CFA Program since its inception in 1963. We conducted extensive research to get feedback directly from employers, candidates, prospective candidates, and the industry at large to inform how best to advance the knowledge and skills we provide to the investment professionals of the future.

“We can say with certainty that candidates are exceptionally keen to get an edge in the market for employment, and they are willing to work very hard for the advantage that the CFA Program provides. These changes will meet their needs by helping them to understand how to put investing concepts into practice on the job and be desk-ready on day one. The CFA Program signals clearly that candidates are serious about a long and successful career in investment management.”

The six changes are as follows:

1. Self-contained, digital practical skills modules will be introduced to the CFA Program to teach candidates on-the-job, practical applications. The initial practical skills modules include Financial Modelling for Level I; Analyst Skills at Level II; Python Programming Fundamentals (Level I or Level II) and Python, Data Science and Artificial Intelligence (Level II). Additional practical skills modules are in development for Level III for the calendar 2025 exam series. Beginning in 2024, at least one practical skills module must be completed for each of Levels I and II but will not be graded as part of the exam.

2. Specialized pathways will be introduced at Level III beginning in 2025. A common core of study will exist for all three pathways at Level III, and candidates will be able to choose one of three job-role focused pathways:

I. Portfolio Management (the traditional version of Level III)
II. Private Wealth
III. Private Markets

All three pathways will be equally rigorous and in pursuit of one credential: the CFA charter.

3. An improved digital badging strategy will reinforce the value of Level I and Level II achievements to candidates on their CFA Program journey. Candidate feedback suggests that a formal acknowledgement of completing Levels I and II would be beneficial in their search for internships and full-time positions as an indicator of the seriousness of their commitment to a career in the investment profession.

4. The volume of study materials will be reduced at each Level to ensure candidate preparation remains at around 300 hours for each exam. In our research, we found that today’s candidates are spending significantly more than 300 hours to study for each Level of the CFA Program. Best practices in instructional design are therefore being incorporated to ensure that the content is efficient, accessible, and relevant while maintaining the rigor and value-add of the CFA Program. Some introductory content that most candidates would have learned during undergraduate studies will remain available to registered candidates in the preparatory materials but will not be tested on the exams.

5. Additional practice materials: when registration opens for the February 2024 exams this May, Level I candidates will have the opportunity to purchase the CFA Program Practice Pack, a new product that includes 1000 new practice questions and six additional Level I mock exams. Candidates are currently granted access to two mock exams at no additional charge eight weeks before their exam window. Based on candidate surveys, it was determined that significant demand exists for more mock exams and practice questions from CFA Institute.

6. Level I CFA Exam eligibility has been extended by a year to those who are two years away from completing their undergraduate degree. This change was previously announced on 16 November, 2022.

Chris Wiese, CFA, Managing Director and Head of Credentialing, said:

“We spent years researching market needs while contemplating these changes. We spoke to candidates, students, employers, our members and societies, and others in the financial industry ecosystem. As the $10 trillion private markets continue to play a larger role in investment portfolios and as the $130 trillion[1] wealth management segment requires more highly trained professionals, we landed on adding these two new pathways at Level III in addition to the traditional portfolio management route. We also know that the new Financial Modeling, Python, and Analyst Skills modules will be valuable to candidates and employers alike and dovetail with existing curriculum content.”

For further information on the CFA Program, please visit https://evolve.cfainstitute.org, where you can also watch a video explainer from Marg Franklin, accompanied by more detailed on the six changes by Chris Wiese.

For further information please contact pr@cfainstitute.org

[1] https://www.bain.com/insights/in-a-new-world-time-for-wealth-management-firms-to-shift-course/]

About CFA Institute

CFA Institute is the global association of investment professionals that sets the standard for professional excellence and credentials. The organization is a champion of ethical behavior in investment markets and a respected source of knowledge in the global financial community. Our aim is to create an environment where investors’ interests come first, markets function at their best, and economies grow. There are more than 190,000 CFA charterholders worldwide in more than 160 markets. CFA Institute has nine offices worldwide and 160 local societies. For more information, visit www.cfainstitute.org or follow us on Linkedin and Twitter at @CFAInstitute.

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3 Rams compete, earn All American at NCAA Championships

While Colorado State University only sent three athletes to the NCAA Track and Field Indoor Championships, the Rams still secured three spots on the All-American second team. 

It started on the first day of the competition on Friday, as Sarah Carter finished in ninth place in the 5,000 meters with a time of 16:31. This clocked in 24 seconds behind her winning time at the Mountain West Championships, but still earned her the second-highest spot from the conference, behind only The University of New Mexico’s Gracelyn Larkin.

That first day also involved an impressive finish from Lexie Keller, whose 4,217 points in the pentathlon earned her 10th place in the event. Similarly, this was below her 4,306-point total at the Mountain West Championships in the same building several weeks prior. But Keller hit a major milestone during the event, with a season-high in the high jump with a mark of 1.72 meters.

 

This consistency stayed true on the second day, as Gabi McDonald finished with a solid mark of 16.20 meters in the shot put.

This mark was good enough for a 12th-place finish and a spot on the second-team All-American. While once again below her Mountain West number, McDonald has now put together consecutive meets at over 15 meters. The junior hopes to build this momentum heading into the outdoor season as the indoor season has officially concluded.

Colorado State track and field will be back competing as a whole squad after the spring break at the Spank Blasing Invitational in Pueblo, Colorado, in their first outdoor meet of the season March 24-25.

Reach Dylan Heinrich at sports@collegian.com or on Twitter @dylanrheinrich.

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