Honors College Colloquium: Fake News & Alternative Facts

Fake news isn’t a new term. During the Weekend Update, Saturday Night Live’s satirical news segment, anchor Norm McDonald would start it off with “Good evening — and now for the fake news.”

The segment was good for laughs. But today, “fake news” in the public eye has gone from satire towards a more problematic tone of propaganda.

In the age of the continuous social media feed, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to suss out the truth from falsehoods. Since the last presidential election, the term has been thrown around by all sides of the political field.

Communications professor Dr. Mark Tremayne studies ways to fact check what is said in the media. He said the fake news phenomena is fueled by hyper-partisan politics that dominate the public landscape. He also said the filter bubble of social networking has contributed greatly to the ideological divide.

This Friday, he’ll teach students about the relevance of media literacy, its significance for American democracy and the way journalism has gone through phases of objectivity and partisanship.

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Honors Graduate Examines Epidemics With Equations

When Mayowa Olawoyin was ten years old, she loved to play school with her friends and be a pretend teacher, happily writing down problems and giving her students homework. The subject was always math.

It was in high school that she figured out that a lot of people don’t really ‘get’ math. So, she was able to explain it to other students. She wanted to help people that don’t understand the subject to see it in a different light.

Today Mayowa is a second year graduate student with an honors degree in mathematics. She graduated in May 2015 and received the Torgeson Bridge fellowship the following summer. Now her focus is research in mathematical biology, which is useful for understanding organic processes with equations. Continue reading

Meet The Honors Staff: Bobbie Brown

It’s not always easy navigating the college world without a great adviser. That’s where Bobbie Brown steps in. And she plays several roles: student, teacher, mother and grandmother who went from an honors students to a honors adviser. Most students become acquainted with her when they’re determining their academic paths.

Bobbie is a non-traditional student. Before college, she worked as an accountant and office manager for ten years. During an economic downturn, her company let her go. Everyone was getting laid off and nobody was hiring.

“That’s when I decided to reinvent my life,” she said. Continue reading