Post by rabia373
Online Highlight The Geosciences Institute's Freshmen Reception Committee, made up only of students from the unit, changed the hazing format that had existed since the s to welcome freshmen, changing practices considered abusive The USP Geosciences Institute (IGc) Reception Committee, made up only of students from the unit, changed the hazing format that had existed since the s to receive freshmen, changing practices considered abusive In , USP was the scene of one of its most emblematic cases of violent hazing: the death of student Edison Chi Hsueh, a freshman medical student, who was thrown into an Olympic-sized swimming pool by his seniors even after having stated that he did not know how to swim. In the same year, the Government of São Paulo sanctioned law ,/, which prohibits hazing considered violent in state universities, and, in September , law ,/ extended the ban to all levels of education. Even so, complaints from freshmen who experienced abusive situations during reception continued. At IGc, until , it was no different.
Practices that incited physical and psychological violence were transmitted between generations of veterans, forming a culture of tradition in the rite of passage. Check it out in the video below: Tradition questioned Student Ana Luísa Magalhães, from the Geology course, is part of the Reception Committee. According to her, the general discontent of second-year students with hazing led to the proposal to end the cul Whatsapp Number List ture of abusive practices at the institute. “Our room got together with the old committee to talk about the problems we had at reception. Then we realized that most people there didn’t like something that happened”, says the student. “That’s when we thought: there’s a serious problem with this prank.” The student informs that the institute's Academic Center has a file with files that report hazing every year since This year's commission studied this file and realized that some practices have existed since the dictatorship.
The nicknames, which are a very old tradition here, started because geology students were very active against the military dictatorship, and this made it difficult to identify their original names”, says Arthur Lima, also a geology student and member of the Geology Commission. Front desk. Professor Paulo Boggiani, who is currently part of the IGc faculty, was a student at the institute in the s. He says that when he was a freshman, hazing was very violent, precisely because of the tradition of combating dictatorship. “They [the veterans] carried out this oppression to show what the military government did. It worked, we had several leaders that emerged”, he recalls. The professor also states that, despite the reception being entirely organized by the students, the institute still monitors prank calls through a form that is filled out anonymously by freshmen. “This week is going very well, everything is calm, and I have serious expectations that we will not identify any complaints”, says Boggiani.
Practices that incited physical and psychological violence were transmitted between generations of veterans, forming a culture of tradition in the rite of passage. Check it out in the video below: Tradition questioned Student Ana Luísa Magalhães, from the Geology course, is part of the Reception Committee. According to her, the general discontent of second-year students with hazing led to the proposal to end the cul Whatsapp Number List ture of abusive practices at the institute. “Our room got together with the old committee to talk about the problems we had at reception. Then we realized that most people there didn’t like something that happened”, says the student. “That’s when we thought: there’s a serious problem with this prank.” The student informs that the institute's Academic Center has a file with files that report hazing every year since This year's commission studied this file and realized that some practices have existed since the dictatorship.
The nicknames, which are a very old tradition here, started because geology students were very active against the military dictatorship, and this made it difficult to identify their original names”, says Arthur Lima, also a geology student and member of the Geology Commission. Front desk. Professor Paulo Boggiani, who is currently part of the IGc faculty, was a student at the institute in the s. He says that when he was a freshman, hazing was very violent, precisely because of the tradition of combating dictatorship. “They [the veterans] carried out this oppression to show what the military government did. It worked, we had several leaders that emerged”, he recalls. The professor also states that, despite the reception being entirely organized by the students, the institute still monitors prank calls through a form that is filled out anonymously by freshmen. “This week is going very well, everything is calm, and I have serious expectations that we will not identify any complaints”, says Boggiani.