Shelby and her horse

Shelby and her horse

Lauren Fencing

Lauren Fencing
Showing posts with label UMass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UMass. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Massachusetts Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies has 'something that interests everyone'

Near the northeast corner of the University of Massachusetts campus lies a faded brick building. Set off of East Pleasant Street by a tree-lined driveway, the only indication of its presence to passersby is a small white sign.
Although it is unknown to many students and townspeople alike, the Massachusetts Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies attracts scholars from around the world. With more than 40,000 books and six gardens filled with only Renaissance-era plants and a theater, according to Director of the Renaissance Center Arthur Kinney, the center has a lot to offer to anyone who enjoys studying the Renaissance.
The 28 acres of land on which the center sits was willed to UMass in 1996 by Janet Wilder Dakin. Her estate included the house – which was built in the style of a Renaissance cottage in Shakespeare’s Warwickshire, according to the center’s website – as well as a barn and shed.
Former UMass Chancellor David Scott made the decision to transform the property into a center for Renaissance studies and it was officially opened in 1998. The barn was changed to house the Black Box Theatre, where the center holds plays.
According to Kinney, the center “subsequently has served both the campus and the community” in a variety of ways.
For example, the gardens bring together the Five Colleges and the local community. Students from Hampshire College and Smith College influenced the creation of the six Renaissance-era gardens.
All plants within these gardens can be found in “Gerarde’s Herball,” a book which was published in 1698 and is essentially an encyclopedia of Renaissance-era plants. One of the six gardens is made up entirely of flowers that were mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays.
In addition, students from the Stockbridge School of Agriculture planted an orchard on the property two years ago, according to the Renaissance Center’s librarian, Jeff Goodhind. Townspeople are also allowed to plant flowers in honor of family members.
The 40,000-volume library in the basement of the Renaissance Center attracts scholarly attention for its quality. Of its vast collection – much of which was received by donation – 1,000 books were written before 1700. A bible from 1495 is its oldest book that is fully intact.
Among the dozen Renaissance centers throughout the world, the Massachusetts Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies is set apart, according to Kinney.
“(The other centers) certainly don’t have the number of rare books we do,” Kinney said.
Although all of the books are searchable through the W.E.B. DuBois Online Library, they cannot be checked out. Because of their age, they are very fragile and the staff of the center want to keep them in the best condition possible.
During the fall semester, the center hosted a variety of scholars, including a student from Harvard University and two students from the University of Tuebingen in Germany.
Each semester, the center holds at least two conferences involving guest speakers and three concerts, which Goodhind said are almost always free and open to the public.
An Italian Renaissance Harvest Banquet is held each fall, featuring only Renaissance-era food, jugglers, flute players and more.
Each spring brings the Renaissance Festival, which is the center’s most popular event. Kinney said that as many as 650 people attended the 2014 festival, a record number for the event.
Despite rainy weather, students and community members came out to experience blacksmithing, falconry, basket weaving and theater, musical and dance performances.
“It’s one of those ‘something-for-everyone’ kind of events,” Goodhind said.
Kinney and Goodhind believe that so many UMass students enjoy studying the Renaissance due to the diversity and overwhelming importance of the period.
The Renaissance attracts English majors, comparative literature majors, history majors and foreign language majors, in particular. The Renaissance period is one of the three largest focuses of study in the English department.
“The Renaissance was art, it was history, literature (and) theater,” Goodhind said. “It encompasses everything so there’s something that interests everyone.”
By Shelby Ashline

Flashnotes.com a new form of income for college students

Across the country, college students are getting paid for doing what they normally do on a regular basis: go to class, take notes and study.

Flashnotes.com, a website that was founded in 2010 by Mike Matousek, allows students to buy and sell digital notes, study guides, flash cards and other learning aids.

Matousek, who is also the company’s CEO and president, said he came up with the idea for the site while taking a statistics class at Kent State University, a required class for finance majors like himself.

“I switched majors a couple of times and when I finally settled on finance, I had already taken a statistics class, so I understood statistics,” Matousek said in a phone interview. “For whatever reason there was just a disconnection where the other students couldn’t learn or understand the concepts from the professor’s teaching. So I started creating study guides and I sold (them for $10 each) and I made over $1000.”

Matousek’s personal experience made him consider how he could expand this friendly sharing of knowledge to all college students who struggle to understand the subject matter of their courses.

“My main vision for (Flashnotes) was to give students a voice in how they study and learn,” Matousek said. “We’re not using this for any other reason than to truly make a difference in the number of students that don’t graduate. We believe having focused, course-specific, high-quality content can actually make a difference when students are walking out of class thoroughly confused about what’s going on.”

According to Matousek, three months ago, he and his employees redesigned Flashnotes, making it easier for users to find content and providing sellers with “additional tools to help promote their content.” A significant change was the addition of a “live video component” by which students can directly pose individual questions to other users.

Backed by $11.2 million from two venture firms, Stage 1 Ventures and Cengage Learning, the site is currently run out of Boston by 22 employees. Flashnotes has over 100,000 users from 1,600 colleges and universities across the country, most of whom are buyers.

Oddly enough, what a user pays for a piece of studying material is left up to the seller. Sellers set their own prices for their work based on its quality and educational value.

Although the average is $31 per hour (meaning an hour spent either in class or organizing notes outside of class), student salaries range from $1.99 per hour to $36 per hour depending on the content’s worth in the eyes of the seller.

Sellers receive 70 percent of what buyers pay. The remaining 30 percent goes to the company.

To date, student sellers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst have uploaded 323 items to Flashnotes. UMass student Kristen Sarno has sold 63 copies of the 9 items she has made available since she first started selling with Flashnotes on Oct. 28, 2014.

Sarno, an undeclared sophomore from Plainville, said Flashnotes helps her afford the expenses of living off-campus and helps her pay for college while still spending a lot of time learning her class material.

“Flashnotes lets me focus more on my classes than if I were to work 25 hours a week somewhere else,” Sarno said. “My grades have definitely improved since starting it too.”

By selling notes, study guides and flash cards for two of her classes, communications 287 and classics 100, Sarno estimated she has earned $490. She said she usually spends four to five hours preparing a piece of material for the site. One of her study guides is 30 pages long, double-spaced.

“I don’t skimp,” Sarno said. “I want people to do really well. I don’t want them to pay for something and not get a good product.”

However, Sarno said she has received mixed reviews of her work. On the one hand, some of her classmates have thanked her and asked her to put up more study materials, having noticed an improvement in their grades after using them.

“Other people get really upset that they have to pay for it,” Sarno said. “(But) if you didn’t understand the material you’d end up going to a tutor. That would cost way more than using a $10 study guide or $8 flash cards.”

Sarno said she would recommend Flashnotes to both buyers and sellers because of the site’s benefits, convenience and ease of use.

“Making an account is really easy (and) simple to do,” Sarno said. “The Flashnotes people are really nice to work with…They’re really helpful if you have any questions.”

Matousek encourages all students who have a good understanding of their class material to get involved with Flashnotes, both for their own benefit and for their classmates’ benefit.



“We always want to target the best sellers and we really encourage students that do have a great grasp (on their class topics) to join,” Matousek said. “Not only can you make the additional money, but our sellers really do make a difference for other students in their class.” 

By Shelby Ashline

Office of Emergency Management continues preparations for security drills on campus

At least twice each semester, sirens echo across the University of Massachusetts campus. Students hear a monotone voice call out over the speakers and feel their phones buzzing, with text messages and e-mails conveying the same information as the voice –“This is a test of the UMass Amherst Alerts System.”
The Office of Emergency Management conducted this semester’s first test of the UMass Amherst Alerts system last Thursday, Oct. 2, at 11:15 a.m.
Although the test may have seemed routine, Jeff Hescock, director of University Emergency Management and Business Continuity, said improvements made to the system over the summer sped up the delivery of the messages on Thursday.
“(The new system) allows us to be more streamline in the way that we send the message,” Hescock said. “Once you hit ‘send’ you’re sending (the message) to both e-mail and text at the same time versus before we had two different systems…We kind of went from having two red buttons to one red button.”
Hescock assessed last week’s test as being “extremely successful,” and said he and his staff have not run into any problems with the system that need to be addressed.
Before each test, the Office of Emergency Management staff members are positioned around  campus to act as spotters. They give Hescock feedback once the test is over regarding how well they could hear the sirens and the voice.
Hescock explained that even though there are eight strategically placed outdoor warning sirens across campus, depending on the day of the year, time and weather conditions, people might have more difficulty making out the voice’s message. All the same, hearing a warning siren indicates to the 30,000 students and faculty on campus that they should check their phones for emergency emails and texts that will provide them with more information.
“Through the years, (the sirens) have been tested so much, we really feel like we have great coverage on the campus,” Hescock said. Federal law requires that UMass test the UMass Amherst Alert system at least once per semester, according to Hescock, but the Office of Emergency Management chooses to test twice per semester and once during the summer.
Hescock emphasized that part of the purpose of testing the system so frequently is to gauge the sound quality of the sirens and voice so adjustments can be made, if necessary, in addition to combatting any potential problems with delivering the automated e-mails and texts.
“Preparedness is key,” Hescock said. “We’re always practicing before we respond (to) an emergency. We update our procedures, update our plans and update our checklists.”
Hescock and his staff’s preparedness extends beyond just the tests of the alert system. He and the Campus Emergency Operations Center Team, which consists of 18 people from different functional areas across campus, have regular meetings where they perform tabletop exercises, practicing how they would respond to mock scenarios. Additionally, the Office of Emergency Management conducts a full-scale mock exercise each year.
This year, the Office of Emergency Management, in collaboration with UMass Police Department, received a grant from the Department of Homeland Security for $106,500, which will fund an all day, regional exercise sometime during the spring semester. According to Hescock, it is expected to integrate all of the Five Colleges, campus, local and state police forces, the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency and the Campus Emergency Operations Center Team.
However, the UMass Amherst Alert system is not only used during tests or to alert people of danger on campus. During particularly harsh winters, the system is utilized to alert students, faculty and staff when the University closes due to weather conditions.
“We probably used it a half a dozen times for school closures this past year,” Hescock said.
Although the system doesn’t need to be used frequently, Hescock is convinced that when and if an emergency situation does occur, he and the Campus Emergency Operations Center Team will be ready to respond because of their extensive preparation.
“At the end of the day…when (the Campus Emergency Operations Center Team needs) to come together, we do so effectively because we’ve trained, we’ve exercised, we all know each other…We can kind of finish each other’s sentences at some points,” Hescock said. The UMass Amherst system in turn “becomes kind of a well-oiled machine.”
Hescock encourages anyone who has not signed up for text message alerts to do so to further enhance communication of the urgent messages.
By Shelby Ashline

Monday, April 28, 2014

The Influence of Technology on Children

     The use of technologies such as iPads, iPods and iPhones has become mainstream in recent years.  However it’s not just the adult world who has been influenced by the modern age.
     
     Children have become so involved with technology that new products have been designed to enable their screen play.  Not only are there drool-proof tablet covers to protect the devices, but since just last year parents can purchase a toilet training potty with an attached stand for an iPad, appropriately called an iPotty, for just $40.  The model was even adapted into a bouncy seat by Fisher Price, which they call an “Apptivity Seat,” according to a Washington Post article.
     
     Children’s prominence in the technological world at a very young age has led psychologists like Dr. Daniel Anderson, professor emeritus in psychology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, to study how their mental capacities, social skills and physical health might be affected. 
     
     In Anderson’s experience, he has found that media can both foster and inhibit learning depending on the content, although he said that touch screen technologies allow children to learn more than television because of their interactive qualities.  He also believes that advertisements can encourage unhealthy behavior and that frequent technology use contributes to obesity.
     
     During his 40 years working at UMass before retirement, Anderson primarily studied the effects of television viewing on children.  He also served as an educational advisor in the production of television shows such as “Blues’ Clues,” “Dora the Explorer” and “Sesame Street,” among others, for over 20 years.  As an educational advisor, Anderson gave producers his input regarding how to make the shows mentally stimulating for children.
     
     From his experience, Anderson said the effect of television on children mostly depends on their age, the content of the shows and then to a lesser extent, the amount of time they spend watching.  He does not condemn TV-watching by children.
     
     “Television can be a very effective educational medium,” Anderson said.
    
     As an example, Anderson explained a study of “Sesame Street” that he and other professors at UMass had participated in in collaboration with professors at the University of Kansas, where they observed the progression of 560 kids from Springfield, Mass. and Topeka, Kan. from preschool through high school graduation.
     
     “We found that the more they had watched “Sesame Street” as a preschooler, the better grades they got in high school in English, math and science,” Anderson said.
     
     Parents take notice of the educational quality technology can have.  Dawn Kennedy, a resident of Leverett, Mass., has found that watching television and playing on the iPad has helped her 22-month-old daughter Anika learn to speak clearly.
     
     “Anika’s clearest vocabulary is words that she’s learned from apps or TV,” Kennedy said.
     
     In fact, Kennedy said her daughter’s most-clearly pronounced word is “map,” which she learned from watching “Dora the Explorer.”  Kennedy believes this may be because even though she spends a lot of time having conversations with her child, she isn’t saying the same words repetitively as is often the case in children’s television shows, so Anika doesn’t learn the words as quickly.
     
     Sue Kelly, coordinator at the Amherst Family Center in Amherst, Mass., agrees that technology “could definitely be an educational tool,” but that socializing is equally, if not more important.  For this reason, she doesn’t use any technology at AFC.
     
     “They need to practice being with each other, not being with a mouse,” Kelly said.
    
     As it is, the effects of technology on children aren’t entirely positive.  Anderson recognizes limitations, saying that “there’s plenty of junk on television and in the digital media,” that can harmfully affect children, such as violent programming that can cause children to act more aggressively and impulsively.
    
     In fact, the study of the 560 “Sesame Street” viewers demonstrated some of the effects of viewing television violence at a young age, as the researchers had very detailed information about the children’s television viewing habits.
    
     “The more they watched action and violent programming, the worse they did in high school,” Anderson said.  “This effect was particularly true for girls.”
    
     Furthermore, Anderson explained that the content of commercials is key in triggering unhealthy behavior.
    
     “Spending too much time watching television, because it’s inherently sedentary can be bad for kids’ health, but also the food advertising on television really tilts heavily towards foods that aren’t very healthy, so it can contribute to obesity and other health problems,” he said.
    
     Because of the often sexual content of media, Anderson said that some advertisements encourage premature sexuality.  Still other ads, which focus on alcohol and tobacco, encourage kids to experiment at much earlier ages.
     
     The content of advertisements is one of the reasons why Cameron Carey and his wife Sarah of Hadley, Mass., don’t allow their four-year-old son Devin to watch any television at all.  Carey said he doesn’t want Devin to hear bad language or watch adult-level content, whether it’s from an advertisement or a television show.
     
     “He picks up bad language or bad behavior if he happens to see something in a cartoon,” Carey said.
    
     When Devin was allowed to watch television, Carey said he saw his son try to duplicate in real life what he had watched on television.  Even the violence of older cartoons, that can seem innocent to adults, like hitting someone on the head with a frying pan, can have a negative impact on children’s behavior, Carey said.
    
     Nonetheless, in today’s high-tech world of touch screen devices, television isn’t the only form of media affecting children.  Anderson is continuously broadening his area of study to include newer technologies.  However, he said that the health risks are the same as with watching television, since for the most part interactive media remains sedentary and advertising is still prominent.
      
     Yet because technology such as tablets and other touch screen devices are still so new, their long-term effects on children are not fully understood since in-depth studies can take years to complete.  Anderson said he’s currently working with another faculty member and one of his graduate students to develop a proposal to study the effects of touch screen devices.
     
     All the same, Anderson spoke of one of his former students, now a professor at the University of Wisconsin, who is just finishing up an essay about her studies of children and touch screen devices.
     
     “She’s basically found that babies learn more from touch screen media than they do from TV,” he said.  He explained that this could be because touch screen media is far more interactive than television, allowing children to learn certain mental skills that are not fostered by television.
     
     As a recommendation, Anderson cites the advice of the American Academy of Pediatrics: no screen time should be allowed before the age of two, then from the ages of two to five about one hour of screen time a day can be permitted, and after the child is older than five, two hours a day is acceptable.
     
     Local parents like Phoebe Hazzard are setting limits on screen time that coincide with Anderson’s recommendation.  Hazzard says her five-year-old daughter Stella and her three-year-old son Sidney are only allowed 30 to 60 minutes with all forms of technology each day.  They often watch a show on PBS in the afternoon and are given some time before bed to watch a YouTube clip or play on a drawing app called Doodle Buddy.
     
     Hazzard has found that allowing her children to use technology too much can negatively affect them because she said it has “a very addictive quality.”  When Stella was younger, Hazard allowed her to use the tablet for short periods four times a day.  Her daughter began to ask to use the tablet so frequently that she minimized her screen time.
     
     Hazzard also commented on how absorbed her children become when they’re given the tablet.
     
     “They’re totally sucked in.  You can’t even talk to them,” she said.
     
     Carey noticed this addictive quality of touch screen devices with his son.  Carey said he used to allow Devin to play a language-learning game on the Kindle where he could match pictures to Spanish words, but Devin started to become overly involved with the game.
    
     “He quickly became demanding.  Almost like an addict,” Carey said.
    
     Because of Devin’s behavior, he hasn’t been allowed to play the game in a year.  Instead, he is allowed to watch YouTube videos for 20 to 30 minutes a day, which his parents choose for him.  Even then, Carey said it is necessary to give his son several warnings before taking the tablet away or he will push to watch more.
     
     Though there are parents like Carey who are highly restrictive concerning their children’s media use, Anderson has noticed that parents often seem proud of their children for their savviness with technology.
     
     “It is funny that parents take great delight in their babies’ media use,” Anderson said.  “When babies really pay attention or get excited by something they see on the screen, parents get extremely interested in that.”
    
     Carey would argue that he’s not proud, but impressed by Devin’s versatility.
     
     “I am very impressed and surprised at how quickly children can adapt to what’s going on on the screen,” he said.
     
     This feeling of bewilderment is a common theme among parents, Kennedy included, who said she’s “so amazed” that Anika can turn on the tablet and find her apps at 22-months-old.
     
     Elianis Gautier of Amherst said her two sons, four-year-old Boqian and two-year-old Kendrick are very adept with their children’s tablet, which allows for more parental blocks and is more durable than an adult tablet.
     
     “They’re really fast learners with technology,” Gautier said.  “I’m slow, but you give them an iPhone, they know how to use it.  You give them a tablet, they know how to use it.”
    
     Gautier also puts restrictions on her children’s media use, limiting it to an hour a day, although she admits she sometimes lets them go over the time limit.  For many parents, if they need to keep their children occupied or need a break from watching them, they allow them to use technology longer than usual.
    
     For example, Kennedy limits Anika’s media use to an hour a day, like Gautier, but says that if they’re on a road trip, the tablet is used to keep them occupied.
     
     Carey also said his son’s tablet use is often “purpose-oriented.”  The tablet is used to keep Devin quiet and immersed long enough to let his younger brother, Cameron Jr., fall asleep.
     
     Surprisingly, Kelly believes that this use of technology to keep children distracted can actually be a good thing.
     
     “There’s not a way to get a break and when a parent gets a break, they’re a better parent,” Kelly said.
     
     However, Anderson argues that there can be negative effects to utilizing technology as a distraction, even though it gives parents some time for themselves.
     
     “In two studies now, we’ve found that when kids are with their parents and there’s a TV going on, the parents’ behavior is really affected and it’s affected negatively as parents are less caregiving and less responsive to their kids,” Anderson said.
    
     In fact, Anderson found in his studies that when children are occupied with technology, parents talk less with them, with an average reduction of 315,000 words a year.  He cautions against parents getting too distracted themselves and not spending enough time talking with their children.

     
     Overall, Anderson thinks it’s necessary for children to have well-balanced lifestyles where screen time, creative play with toys and traditional education, particularly reading, can all play their roles in positively developing cognitive functioning.

By Shelby Ashline

UMass Western Equestrian Team Feature

     University of Massachusetts junior Neha Deshpande, a member of the Western Equestrian Team, circled the indoor arena at the Hadley Farm Equine Center on a recent afternoon atop a gleaming chestnut-colored horse named Chico. 
     
     Underneath her black cowboy hat, her expression was serious: if she placed first or second in her advanced-level class at the regional qualifying show, she would move on to the semi-finals.
     
     She directed her mount around the outside of the ring in both directions and at three different speeds, cued by the announcer, whose instructions bellowed out over the loudspeaker.
     
     Thus far, the regional qualifying show, held on March 15, had been no different than the several other shows Deshpande had competed in throughout the semester across Massachusetts and Connecticut.  Members of the Western Equestrian Team compete in only one class per show where they are judged on their form and their ability to control their horses.  They always wear the same entirely black outfits, with the exception of burgundy silk scarves around their necks, with the goal of looking uniform.
     
     But the regional qualifying show would offer a rather unfamiliar challenge to the competitors.  After having circled the arena, the riders lined up at the end, near the crowd of spectators – friends, family members, teammates and coaches – that stood on the sidelines, and one by one, rode through a pattern.
     
     Consisting of a series of circles, figure eights and sudden turns, the patterns are made clear to the competitors at the start of the show.  Each rider receives a paper with the pattern on it, although the difficulty of the pattern depends on the level the rider is competing at.  Large orange cones mark transition points, where the riders must cue their horses to change speed or direction.
     
     Every competitor is expected to memorize their pattern.  Some of the riders are so serious, that they can be seen before the start of their class practicing the pattern on foot in the parking lot, using cones that are just a few inches tall.
     
     Deshpande had done just that, minus the cones, and she skillfully directed Chico through the series of twists and turns.  Then she waited anxiously to hear the judge’s decision.
     
     Finally, the anticipation broke and the final placing was announced.  Cheers from Deshpande’s coach and teammates echoed around the arena when they heard that she had placed second and would move on to the semi-finals on March 28-30 at the University of Findlay in Findlay, Ohio.
    
     Deshpande was one of three UMass riders who qualified for the semi-finals, along with open-level rider Emily Messing and novice-level rider Alissa Baldarelli.
     
     This semester, the team’s roster includes 17 people: two men and 15 women.  The majority of the group participated in local shows, and whether first or last place, whether at a home show or regionals, the UMass Western Equestrian Team supports all of its members.  It provides them with an environment conducive to improving their riding ability where they not only have the opportunity to ride many different horses on a regular basis, but can find encouragement and helpful advice from their teammates and coach.
     
     Deshpande, who started riding when she was eight-years-old and has been a UMWET member since her freshman year, appreciates the opportunities being on the team has given her.  In particular, she likes being able “to ride a variety of different horses, which really helps your overall horsemanship.”
     
     The horse that a given rider will use each practice is a mystery to them.  Coach Michele Carver, a slim 37-year-old woman who rarely stands still and typically sports a baseball cap, selects mounts for each person based on the rider’s experience and whether or not they have ridden the given horse before.  Because mounts are picked randomly at the shows, the riders must be prepared to handle any kind of horse, whether energetic or lazy, and cannot grow accustomed to regularly riding the same horses.
     
     Sophomore Katie Flanagan, an animal science major from Wellfleet, Mass. agrees with Deshpande.
    
     “I like riding a variety of different horses because it helps you improve as a rider,” Flanagan said.   “Also, showing on a horse you have never ridden is a great way to test your ability.”
    
     Flanagan said she learned about the team when considering which college to attend.  While on a tour for animal science at UMass, a now former member told her about the Western Equestrian Team.  UMass was the only university of the ones she was considering attending that had such a team.
    
     Like Deshpande, Flanagan is a longtime horse enthusiast.  Because her mother had always had horses, Flanagan started riding when she was three-years-old.  She now has a golden brown mare named Daisy, which she keeps at home in Wellfleet.
     
     Junior Maylin Crouss, a hospitality and tourism management major from Pelham, Mass., said she wanted to join the team because she was a member of 4H when she was younger and used to love competing with the 4H team in horse shows.
    
     “I also am always looking for new techniques to use with my own horses,” Crouss added.
    
     Senior Caroline Eng, an animal science major from Westhampton, N.Y., said she only heard about the team last year from a friend who was a member.  She was interested in joining because she was familiar with riding but missed having the opportunity to ride during the school year.  She explained that riding is one of the ways she’s able to stay active.
    
     Eng also commented on the team’s spirit, adding that she loves “how nice and easy going everybody is and how everyone helps each other out.”  This helpfulness can take many forms, whether it be giving each other pointers on how to handle a horse or doing each other’s hair in preparation for a show.
     
      The shows, at all levels, are organized through the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association.  According to the IHSA website, www.ihsainc.com, almost 400 colleges throughout the United States and Canada are IHSA members, sending more than 9,000 riders to competitions.
     
     The UMass Western Equestrian Team regularly competes against Mount Holyoke College out of South Hadley, Mass., Sacred Heart University out of Fairfield, Conn. and the University of Connecticut out of Mansfield, Conn.  The schools are qualified under IHSA as competing in Region 1.5, Zone 3, according to UMWET President Emily Messing.
     
     There are six divisions at which riders can compete, ranging in difficulty: beginner, intermediate, novice, advanced, open and open reining.
     
     To prepare for shows, UMWET practices once a week in groups of five or six under Coach Carver.  Two groups ride Tuesday evening and a third group rides Friday afternoons.
     
     Practice is held at the Hadley Farm in two hour intervals.  However because the riders must groom and tack up their horses before practice, they only spend about an hour to an hour and a half of that time riding.
     
     Members of UMWET are also required to travel to Carver’s personal stable in Broad Brook, Conn. once a month for a private lesson.
     
     The Hadley Farm also is the home of two other riding teams: the UMass Equestrian Team and the UMass Dressage Team.  They ride and show separately from the UMWET because they specialize in different disciplines.
     
     Whereas UMWET uses Western equipment, like what is used on the horses in old Western films featuring cowboys like John Wayne, the other two teams use English equipment which is usually lighter and less bulky.
     
     When the Equestrian Team shows, they participate in classes similar to that of the Western Equestrian Team, where they are judged on their form and their ability to handle the horses.  However, the style of their disciple calls for them to encourage their horses to go slightly faster at each gait and they must position themselves differently in the saddle.  The riders on the Equestrian Team also guide their horses over jumps.
     
     The Dressage Team guides their mounts through intricate patterns, which they must have memorized, using large black letters located on the sides of the arena to pinpoint exactly where in the arena they should be.  Each member on the team rides separately in front of the judge, saluting him or her before and after their ride, which lasts about three to four minutes.
     
     Although the three teams practice different riding styles, they frequently help each other out.  When one team hosts a home show at the Hadley Farm, members of the other two teams will volunteer to help clean the barn or hold horses at ringside throughout the day.
    
     Because the upkeep of horses is costly, Hadley Farm requires that each member of UMWET pay $200 at the start of each semester to help fund the facility. 
    
     In addition, Carver receives $25 per lesson from each member in exchange for her instruction.  This $25 fee carries over to horse shows as well, where Carver advises her students from the sidelines.  A $36 entrance fee is required from each competitor in order for them to participate in a show.
     
     On an organizational level, UMWET functions similarly to many other campus teams and clubs with a president/captain, a vice-president/co-captain, a treasurer and a secretary.  This year, Deshpande holds the position of secretary and Messing, a senior, is president.  Senior Katie Rinaldi is vice-president and senior Alex Raftopoulos is treasurer.
    
     According to the team officers, there is a possibility that the team will relocate from the Hadley Farm in the upcoming semester. 
     
     Such a change wouldn’t be new to UMWET.  Founded in 2008, UMWET originally practiced at the Crimson Acres Equestrian Center in Orange, Mass.  In 2011, they made the transition to the Hadley Farm, according to Messing.
     
     The team will most likely begin holding all of their practice sessions at Carver’s facility.  Though it is a lengthy drive from campus, it would save the team money compared to practicing at the Hadley Farm.
     
     After this semester, five senior team members will graduate, leaving several open positions.  According to Deshpande, who has already been voted in as next year’s president, anyone who is interested in trying out for the team should like the UMass Western Equestrian Team page on Facebook.  Deshpande says information about tryouts will be posted on the page early next semester.

By Shelby Ashline