STUDENTS DROWNING IN DEBTecccccecceseeseeeeeneuneensennenall Many post secondary students across Canada are struggling to pay for high tuition costs and stu- dent loans MARPOLE BUSINESS ASSOCIATION photos Celebrants grab candy from the stores between 63rd and 71st Avenue during the Great Marpole Trick-or-Treat last Halloween. Trick-or-treat fun in Marpole Participating businesses around the area provide treats for families By STEVEN CHUA houls, zombies and ghosts will be storming Marpole for candy on Halloween day. Costumed candy-seekers can pillage Granville Street between 63rd Avenue and 71st Avenue in the ninth annual Great Marpole Trick-or-Treat. Business owners lining the road will give out treats from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. to anyone up to 18-years-old, provided they’re in costume. “Tt touched us that the community has really embraced the event,” said event organizer Claudia Laroye. The event started off as a way for members of the Marpole Business Im- provement Association to get to know residents in the area. A handful of establishments started handing out candy to families in 2003. Now it attracts over 400 members of the undead horde, who stagger and stalk about 50 businesses each Hallow- een, Laroye said. Evidently organizers haven’t forgot- ten their treat-seeking days. Laroye said the event’s name is a homage to the Charlie Brown show’s Halloween special, It’s the Great Pump- kin, Charlie Brown. Marpole businesses are making sure kids aren’t the only ones coming dressed to the party. Natasha Fong works at the TD Bank on 63rd Avenue and has been partici- pating for three years. Fong and her co-workers aren’t shy about adopting the spirit of Halloween. “My manager was a bumblebee and some girls were devils and angels,” she said. Her latest alter-ego was a giant can- dy Malteaser. Desiree Baron, branch director of Marpole library, has been giving loot for the same amount of time. Her entire staff donned the outfits from the Disney Peter Pan movie. “Tt’s really fun seeing the children in their costumes,” said Baron. “We couldn’t be more delighted to be part of the Great Marpole Trick-or-Treat.” Participating businesses are identi- fied by a pumpkin decal placed on their storefront. 66 It touched us that the community has really embraced the event Claudia Laroye, event organizer IT Dept in trouble Staff shortage and campus capacity lead to wide- spread technical problems By TANYA HILL mester the information technolo- gy service desk has been swamped with technical support requests from Langara students. Students are not getting the support from IT staff as quickly as they would like. “We are aware of the issues and we are working on it. We want to improve the service, and better communicate with students. It’s a matter of resource and time,” said Justin Yau, IT service desk manager at Langara College. The IT department is short three staff at their busiest time and the influx of support requests, mainly to do with wireless connections, has been a chal- lenge. Since August, the IT department at Langara has been searching for new IT service desk workers, which has not been an easy task. “Some people got promoted and one employee left, it happened at the worst possible time,” said Yau. “Recruiting is not easy, there are lots of people apply- ing,.” Another factor contributing to the poor wireless internet connection on campus is capacity. “Think of the average student today, they could have a laptop, mobile phone and a tablet,” Yau said. “We have had an increase in enrolment and more stu- dents from out of high school using this technology, this is something that started about a year or two ago.” Students can find out information about service improvements by going to the IT department website, where you can also find contact information. S"= the beginning of the fall se- i) GILLIAN HAMES photo Karena Tchakedjian, a general studies student is frus- terated with the new online course managment system. Desire2Learn program has been met with criticism By GILLIAN HAMES agement program, was phased out this year at Langara, but many remain skeptical that the new system is actually an improvement. Carol Elder, the project co-ordinator for Langara’s transition to the Desire- 2Learn system, said since the contract with Blackboard was up, the college was free to explore other options. “D2L is more intuitive,” said Elder, who is also an educational technology advisor. She also explained that D2L is Canadian-based, unlike the company Bese the online course man- that owns Blackboard. Not all instructors have adopted the new system yet, but many that have are finding it less than ideal. “The learning curve has been steep,” said Stephen Phillips, a political sci- ence instructor. Phillips was one of the instructors that initially tested the product when it was in its pilot stage this summer. He wanted to get to know the product be- fore school started. However, he still finds D2L challenging. Phillips said that, although D2L seems to have more features, so far it “compares unfavourably with Black- board.” Carol] MacLeod, an anthropology in- structor, said although EdTech is very helpful in assisting with D2L, she is still having difficulties. Students, staff unhappy with new system “Tt’s the online course that’s a real headache right now,” she said. Initially, MacLeod had trouble down- loading databases from the publisher of the textbook she uses, a necessity for online courses. She now thinks the problem has been solved, but noted that it took over a month for her, other online instructors and EdTech to figure it out. D2L has a help program for instruc- tors struggling to navigate the system. “Once you get into the semester like this, every minute counts,” she said. “You know it’s frustrating when the teacher is freaking out,” said Karena Tchakedjian, a general studies student. “T used Blackboard and even though it was not the prettiest thing to look at, it was super easy to use... I would prefer that over this system.”