Tuesday, 31 January 2012

If you have not done so already, please make sure you take this survey before tomorrow February 1. The results of the survey may have direct impact on how our department is assessed in the up-coming Graduate Program study, and that, in turn, affects graduate students. Your participation is vital!

Department of English: http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908

NOTE:  If you have trouble accessing and completing the survey, please try a different internet browser.


From Jeannie Thomas:

Our return rate on the grad survey is very low.  The department needs a statistically valid sampling so that we can advocate for program improvements that can directly improve your lives.  Please be sure to take the short, online graduate program survey before the end of tomorrow, Feb 1. 
 
Jeannie
 

From Dean McClelland:

Dear Students:
As part of the ongoing university-wide graduate program review, all current graduate students are being asked to complete this short online survey. Your feedback is imperative in helping departments to provide continued high quality graduate education. All responses are anonymous, and will be reported only in aggregate form. Each department has a unique link, so we ask that you only complete your department-specific survey, which appears at the link below. Please complete your survey no later than 1 February 2012. Thank you for your participation!

Mark R. McLellan, PhD | Vice President for Research & Dean of the School of Graduate Studies

Friday, 27 January 2012

Am I allowed to take any undergraduate classes and count them toward my graduation requirements?

Typically it is not advisable to use undergraduate courses for graduate study; however, policy states that up to 15 semester credits of undergraduate level coursework may be used for a graduate degree, if that coursework is applicable to the Program of Study (for instance, if a case can be made that the subject matter of the course is directly relevant to what the student is doing for a thesis). In our department, we typically only allow 5000 courses to count toward your graduate degree. In some instances, up to 3 semester credits of coursework at the 3000-4990 level may be included within the 15 semester credit limit, if the course is outside the student’s graduate-degree field. In both cases, however, the student must have their supervisory committee’s approval in writing (and on file with the DGS) prior to enrolling in the course. The Graduate Dean has final say about whether such courses may be counted on the Program of Study. Courses that students are expected to have taken as undergraduates and prerequisites for graduate courses are not acceptable; neither may language courses taken for an MA count toward a student’s Program of Study. If students are interested in taking a 3000 level course in our department because the subject matter is relevant to their Program of Study, the student may petition to enroll in the course with the Directed Study course number, English 6920; in this case, the student is expected to negotiate a Directed Studies contract with the faculty member that requires additional coursework, writing, reading, etc., above and beyond what would be expected of undergraduate students, in order to make the course equivalent to a graduate course. However, please be advised that faculty members have final say about whether to allow graduate students to enroll in their undergraduate courses at any level, and any course the grad student takes must be taught by member of the graduate faculty (ask DGS about this, if you have questions). Also be aware that you may take no more than three credits total of Directed Study (Engl. 6920) for your degree. The reason for this limit is that Directed Study credits take students out of scheduled graduate seminars and place an extra supervision burden on faculty, who are not paid extra for supervising 6920 projects. In special cases, however, a faculty member may request that the three-credit limit be waived to allow a student to take an additional three credits of 6920 under his or her supervision.

For information from the Graduate Degree Requirements Page, see (http://catalog.usu.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=254#Graduate_Degree_Requi)

How do I apply for a Graduate Instructorship?

To apply for a Graduate Instructorship, you may indicate your interest in being considered for a GI-ship either in your Letter of Intent or in a separate letter that you send directly to the DGS.  In addition to indicate your interest in teaching, you may also include a paragraph that describes any previous teaching experiences you have that would make you a good candidate for a graduate instructorship (again, this can go either in letter of intent or a separate letter addressed to DGS).  Also indicate any teaching experience in any resume or CV that you send to the DGS with your application materials.  

(Send to Dr. Evelyn Funda, Department of English, USU, 3200 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322-3200).
 
Most of the Graduate Instructorship awards will be made in February. However, we may have additional openings throughout the Spring and Summer as staffing needs dictate. For additional information call or email Dr. Evelyn Funda, DGS (435-797-3653 or evelyn.funda@usu.edu).

What does a Graduate Instructor do?

Your Responsibilities: Teaching, Research, and Service
Graduate Instructors in the Writing Program have three areas of responsibility: teaching, research, and service. Success in these three areas helps you build a resume that will make you a competitive applicant to a Ph.D. program or a successful job candidate. Furthermore, positive reviews of your accomplishments in the areas of teaching, research, and service will assure you continued employment by the English Department as a graduate instructor. Regardless of what your career goals are, we train you in your roles and responsibilities as academics, assuming that you may one day want to enter a Ph.D. program.

Teaching

You will teach two classes of English 1010 (Introduction to Academic Writing) each semester of your first year. During your second year, you will teach two classes of English 2010 (Research Writing in a Persuasive Mode).


As part of your GI contract you will tutor 1 hour a week int he USU writing center and will attend a 1-hour staff meeting each month (you are excused if you're teaching or if you're attending a grad class, but you are required to read the meeting notes). In spring, GIs are invited to stay on as tutors for hourly pay.


TEACHING

Writing Center 1 hour;
Two Classes of English 1010 6 hours
Office Hours 4 hours
Preparation for Teaching 8 hours
Total 20 hours per week teaching

How your teaching will be evaluated:

1. You will be observed in at least one tutoring session in the Writing Center by the director.
2. Your students will evaluate your teaching using a University-prepared form. You will be rated on a six point scale for a wide variety of descriptors of good teaching in addition to extended written comments by students. The Writing Program also uses student comments to evaluate your teaching.
3. You will be observed several times by other G.I.s in English 6820.
4. You will write a self-assessment of your teaching for your teaching portfolio. (We'll show you how to assemble a teaching portfolio during the semester.)
5. You will observe experienced tutors and write and analysis of how your tutoring experience applies to your teaching methodology.


Because you are a graduate student, the rest of your time might be considered research.


Research

Excellent research and writing are crucial for those wishing to continue with an academic career. A good research record is also required for jobs in many different fields. Your research will be conducted in conjunction with your graduate classes. You will write many papers based on your research, all leading either to your master's thesis or to a series of papers which will demonstrate your mastery of your field.

You will share your research through the following venues: presentations in class, presentations at local and national conferences, and publication of your papers in appropriate journals. Graduate schools and two-year colleges look especially at a graduate student's record of research and publication. The best predictor of future success in academic research is a candidate's past accomplishments.


Research

English 6820 5 hours
Second Graduate Class 3 hours
Preparation for Classes 12 hours
Total 20 hours per week researching

Service

Service is an often over-looked area by graduate students. However, the types and kinds of academic service you perform are very important to future employers and graduate schools as they consider your candidacy. In our profession, to be an outstanding teacher and an excellent researcher is still not enough.


As academics, you will be expected to devote another few hours a week to service, as do all faculty members. It's just part of the job, and it makes the academic community work in a way that is unique to all other organizations which are not self-governed. Service includes your membership on committees but can include other academically-related work as well.

Employers, whether in academics or not, want employees who have demonstrated their ability to volunteer, take on extra responsibilities, and who are clearly "team players" in the sense that they are willing to work for the good of the whole organization. In the academic profession, the future success of an individual is often evaluated on the basis of past accomplishments. That is why in academics we submit a Curriculum Vitae ("my life in academic pursuits") as opposed to a two-page business resume.

To encourage your curriculum vitae development, you will have many opportunities to participate in service activities in the Writing Program and the English Department. You will serve either as a chair, co-chair, or a member of various committees. You will also have the opportunity to volunteer for special projects and participate in the larger university graduate student organizations.

What follows is a list of typical activities enjoyed by graduate instructors in the past few years. Be thinking about which committees you will take part in. Every graduate instructor and instructor is expected to participate in at least three committees-- the same expectations that are held for tenure-track faculty.

Committees for which you should volunteer depending on your interest and expertise:

• Handbook Revision Committee: revises the handbook for English 1010 each semester.

• Social Committee: organizes parties and recreation.

• Web Site Development Committee: writes, edits, and keeps up on the Writing Program Web Site.

• Special Projects Committee: these vary from year to year; last year we participated in the Diversity
Fair with a presentation on authors from different cultures and ethnicities.

• Computer Liaison Committee: accesses and evaluates the state of the G.I. computers and makes recommendations to the Department Computer Committee.

• English Department Committees: many English Department committees require that a G.I. be a member; there will be a number of openings this fall.

• Graduate Student Council as Senators: English graduate students elected to this committee represent the concerns of the graduate students in English to the University.

• Helicon West: Helicon West is an open readings/ featured readers series, with events on the second and fourth Thursday of the month, 7 PM, at True Aggie Café, 117 North Main, Logan. Graduate students are invited to read at the open mike, serve on the planning committee, and help produce community broadsides. See Star Coulbrooke for details.

• Conversation Socials: a forum with guided topics for ESL/NNS/International students to hone their English-speaking skills and become better writers in the process. Fall 2011 Socials will be held on September 14th and 28th, October 12th and 26th, November 2nd and 16th and the 30th, from 2:00-3:00 PM, in RWST 311. See Matt Winters for details about how to get involved.

The Directors of the Writing Program are ex officio members of most of these committees, but the committees are usually chaired by G.I.s and usually have two to three G.I.s as members.

How Your Work Hours Relate to Your Pay

The University considers you a half-time employee who works 20 hours per week. (Graduate students are not allowed to be employed for more than half time on campus.) Here is how we figure the 20 hours per week for which you are paid:

TEACHING

Writing Center
2 hours
Two Classes of English 1010
6 hours
Office Hours
4 hours
Preparation for Teaching
8 hours
Total
20 hours per week teaching


Because you are a graduate student, the rest of your time might be considered research.

RESEARCH

English 6820
5 hours
Second Graduate Class
3 hours
Preparation for Classes
12 hours
Total
20 hours per week researching


SERVICE

As academics, you will be expected to devote another few hours a week to service, as do all faculty members. It's just part of the job, and it makes the academic community work in a way that is unique to all other organizations which are not self-governed. Service includes your membership on committees but can include other academically-related work as well.

 

Opportunity to Study Abroad:



Dr. Alan Blackstock is offering a course that will explore the work of several of the most prominent English writers of the nineteenth century and visit the places where this work was created and set: the Lake District of Wordsworth and Coleridge, the Yorkshire of the Brontë sisters, Jane Austen’s Bath, and the London of Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde, and George Bernard Shaw. We will visit the residences of these writers and associated historical sites, museums, and art galleries, as well as attending related theatrical performances. The course will be broadcast for two weeks at the beginning of the first summer block, to provide orientation to the period, authors, works, and details of the trip, after which we will spend approximately eighteen days in England. The remainder of the class will be conducted online to allow students to stay on in England or travel elsewhere in Europe if they wish. For more information, see the link at: http://www.usu.edu/studyabroad/programs/prgm.cfm?prog_id=87.

Participating graduate students would negotiate a 6000 level Directed Studies contract with Dr. Blackstock.  You should also make sure that any credits you take with a Study Abroad experience are cleared with your Supervisory Committee as being acceptable for your Program of Study.

FREE Practice GRE, LSAT, MCAT, DAT, PCAT

Option 1: On Weber State Campus, Sat Feb. 11th, 10:00am WSU Alumni Building

Option 2: Anywhere! Find the perfect date and time at www.kaptest.com/practice <http://www.kaptest.com/practice>


Kaplan is holding a FREE Practice Test for the GRE, LSAT, MCAT, DAT, OAT, or PCAT.    Our on site, campus event at the Weber State University is taking place on Sat. Feb 11th at 10:00am in the WSU Alumni Building. To register for this free event, fill out the following web form:
http://bit.ly/WSUNPT  <http://bit.ly/WSUNPT%C2%A0> . Before the event, we will send you an email confirming your registration and providing you with instructions for checking in on Sat. morning.


Each test will last up to 4 hours and will be proctored like an actual exam The exams will be scored and results will be available immediately following the exam, or later that afternoon, with comprehensive feedback on your individual performance. After the test, one of our expert instructors will give a short workshop on test-taking strategies and will answer any questions that you may have.

This is a great opportunity for you to see how you might score on the real thing, and also to become familiar with the kinds of questions that will be on the real test. For most students, this exam will be a more realistic test-taking experience as you can practice in the format that mirrors most graduate school exams.
For additional information, visit us at
www.kaptest.com/practice <http://www.kaptest.com/practice> or call one of Kaplan’s test experts at 1-800-KAP-TEST.

This is a great opportunity for anyone interested in going to business, grad, law, med, dental, optometry, or pharmacy school in the next few years!

Thursday, 26 January 2012

Planning to Graduate Current Semester with a Plan C degree?

To do so, you must fill out a Plan C Completion of Requirements for before the deadline (see below).  A Plan C Completion of Requirements form simply alerts that School of Graduate Studies that you plan to graduate during a given term. It needs to be signed by your major professor (chair of Supervisory Committee).  The form is available here.  After your chair has signed the form, send the original to Joan Rudd, School of Graduate Studies (drop off at Old Main, room 164; campus mail to UMC 0900; or mail to USU School of Grad Studies, 0900 Old Main Hill, 84322-0900).  Also drop off a copy of the signed original in Dr. Funda’s mailbox or send to her campus address (Dept of English, USU, 3200 Old Main Hill, Logan UT 84322-3200).



Deadlines:

Fall Semester completion: Oct 15
Spring Semester: Feb 15
Summer Semester: June 15






Wednesday, 25 January 2012

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS:

Spring 2012 Scholarships and Tuition Awards for
Graduate Students in the English Department

Click here for the application.

Eligibility
The department has a limited number of scholarships and tuition awards that it distributes to graduate students each spring. Our policy is to reward students who have proven themselves since matriculation into one of our programs, so students in the English Department’s programs are eligible if they will have completed at least 12 credits of graduate work towards their current degrees by the end of Spring 2011 semester and if they are continuing their studies at USU in Fall 2012 and/or Spring 2013. Students graduating in Spring or Summer 2012 are not eligible for these awards.

Review and selection process
Applications will be reviewed by the Graduate Advisory Committee (GAC), which represents all graduate specializations in the department.

Application process
To be considered for one of these financial awards, please submit an application (found at http://newenglish.usu.edu/scholarships.aspx), a letter of application that addresses the criteria below, transcripts, and a CV (curriculum vitae) to Prof. Evelyn Funda’s mailbox no later than 12 noon on Friday, February 24. You should present evidence of your achievements in the CV and you should also highlight and comment on the CV in a letter that supports your application. The letter is also a chance to discuss your career goals.

The letter should be addressed to the Graduate Advisory Committee and it should be no more than two pages long, single-spaced, set in 11- or 12-point typeface, with margins of at least an inch all around. For help with creating a CV, see pp. 9-13 of the first issue of In Medias Res: A Grad Newsletter, which is linked off the main English website: http://newenglish.usu.edu/inmediasres.aspx

Note: There will probably not be enough scholarships and tuition awards to make offer to all who apply. The GAC will make awards based on how well applicants’ letters and CVs demonstrate that they have met, or are meeting, criteria similar to those that academics are asked to meet throughout their careers. These criteria are:

Criteria

1) Engaging in scholarly or creative activity.
Graduate students are here primarily to do advanced study and make good progress towards their graduate degrees. We assume they are also moving towards the goal of participating in their chosen scholarly or creative fields as academic professionals who interact with their peers or colleagues in the field.

To evaluate this first criterion, the GAC will look at graduate GPAs, the numbers of courses completed, course loads each semester, progress towards graduation (e.g., formation of Supervisory Committee, completion of Program of Study form, approval of Thesis Proposal, timely progress on thesis), and such extracurricular scholarly activities as conference papers, publications, or readings of creative work that are listed on the CV. Some credit will be given for work in progress, depending on the current status of the work, which the CV should indicate by words like “submitted,” “accepted,” or “in press.” The more tangible the progress, the more credit will be given.
 
2) Sharing expertise.
Academic professionals not only acquire and create knowledge, expertise, and material in their fields but also find ways to share it with novices and people outside those fields who might benefit from it. Sharing expertise implies instruction but is not limited to formal classroom teaching.

Graduate Instructors should list the courses they have taught and student evaluation scores they have received, along with any other evidence of excellence (e.g., reports by observers, unsolicited letters of appreciation from students). Other evidence that students may submit, whether or not they are GIs, may include such things as assisting professors through teaching internships, guest lecturing to classes on or off campus, teaching writing workshops or organizing reading groups for communities outside the department, tutoring in the Writing Center or privately tutoring students, consulting, teaching below the college level, etc.—in short, any activity that involves sharing the knowledge and expertise that has been gained as a graduate student with others who are not peers or colleagues in the field. This work may be done for pay, for credit, or pro bono.

3) Leading and serving.
Academic professionals find ways to sustain or improve their academic communities through forms of leadership and service within them that do not fall under categories 1) and 2) above.

To evaluate this third criterion, the GAC will look for evidence of active involvement (leadership and/or service) in committees or organizations relating to students’ roles as academic professionals: for instance, serving on departmental or university committees, assisting with professional development workshops for graduate students, working as a Graduate Student Senator, helping organize a regional conference, chairing a session at an on-campus or national conference, judging a local writing contest, working for the local chapter of a national academic organization, helping organize a poetry reading series, reviewing textbooks for a publisher, writing letters of recommendation for students, etc. Service work may be paid or unpaid.

Financial need
The GAC will award scholarships and tuition awards first and foremost on the basis of achievement in the three areas listed above. However, a limited number of scholarships also take financial need into account. Briefly indicate your financial needs in your cover letter. If you have serious financial needs that may keep you from continuing as a graduate student, contact Dr. Funda as you may be eligible to apply for a Seely-Hinkley Scholarship (awarded separately through the College of Humanities and Social Sciences); this scholarship is based on critical hardships and financial need. Deadline for this award is April 15.  


URGENT!

If you haven’t already, please make sure to complete the Graduate program survey.  According the Grad School, only 25 of our students have taken the survey thus far.  This is well below the 100% participation I’m shooting for!  Your feedback really is valued and important!  See below for the link.
--Evelyn Funda, DGS 



Message from Dean Mark McClellan,  Vice President for Research & Dean of the School of Graduate Studies
Dear Student:

As part of the ongoing university-wide graduate program review, all current graduate students are being asked to complete this short online survey.  Your feedback is imperative in helping departments to provide continued high quality graduate education.  All responses are anonymous, and will be reported only in aggregate form.  Each department has a unique link, so we ask that you only complete your department-specific survey, which appears at the link below.  Please complete your survey no later than 1 February 2012.  Thank you for your participation!

Department of English
http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908
<http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908>


 

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

New Posts

Hello Everyone!!!

We have new posts in just about all of our sections. Please make sure to check them weekly! Some posts may pertain to you or be of interest to you.

Let us know if you have concerns or questions with the blog!

~USU English Graduate Program~

If you have not done so already, please make sure you take this survey before February 1. The results of the survey may have direct impact on how our department is assessed in the up-coming Graduate Program study, and that, in turn, affects graduate students. Your participation is vital!
From Dean McClelland:


Dear Students:
As part of the ongoing university-wide graduate program review, all current graduate students are being asked to complete this short online survey. Your feedback is imperative in helping departments to provide continued high quality graduate education. All responses are anonymous, and will be reported only in aggregate form. Each department has a unique link, so we ask that you only complete your department-specific survey, which appears at the link below. Please complete your survey no later than 1 February 2012. Thank you for your participation!
Department of English
http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908


NOTE: Should your students have trouble accessing and completing the survey, they should try a different internet browser.

Mark R. McLellan, PhD | Vice President for Research & Dean of the School of Graduate Studies

Friday, 20 January 2012

Utah Humanities Council Announces:Research Fellowships for Students

Up to five fellowships of up to $2,000 each are awarded on a competitive basis to undergraduate or graduate students attending an accredited university or college in Utah. Student fellows conduct research in the humanities, including history, philosophy and ethics, literature, linguistics, languages, jurisprudence, cultural anthropology, archaeology, comparative religions, art history and/or criticism, folklore, or interdisciplinary scholarship in these areas. Click here for more information on fellowships for students.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

If you have not done so already, please make sure you take this survey before February 1.  The results of the survey may have direct impact on how our department is assessed in the up-coming Graduate Program study, and that, in turn, affects graduate students.  Your participation is vital!

From Dean McClelland:


Dear Students:

As part of the ongoing university-wide graduate program review, all current graduate students are being asked to complete this short online survey.  Your feedback is imperative in helping departments to provide continued high quality graduate education.  All responses are anonymous, and will be reported only in aggregate form.  Each department has a unique link, so we ask that you only complete your department-specific survey, which appears at the link below.  Please complete your survey no later than 1 February 2012.  Thank you for your participation!

Department of English
http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908


NOTE:  Should your students have trouble accessing and completing the survey, they should try a different internet browser.
 
Mark R. McLellan, PhD | Vice President for Research & Dean of the School of Graduate Studies
From the Office of Dr. Mark R. McLellan
USU Vice President for Research & Dean of the School of Graduate Studies:
All graduate students should have registered for all classes by January 30 (Monday) at 5:00 p.m.. The Day 15 enrollment figures are very important as they are used for many state reports, national surveys, and funding decisions.   We appreciate your help with this.

Tuesday, 17 January 2012

January Brown Bag





Join in again for the January Brown Bag Lunch with Evelyn.

Date: January 18, 2011

Time: 11:30 – 1:00

Place: RBW 308

Bring your own lunch. Cookies will be provided.

Friday, 13 January 2012

UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY

OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND GRADUATE STUDIES


POSITION:                  Communications Assistant
START DATE:             Immediately
RATE OF PAY:           $8.00/hr minimum
HOURS:                      20 hours per week



JOB DESCRIPTION:
The communications assistant works with the RGS communications team to coordinate various projects and initiatives. Specific job duties include:
  1. Conducting interviews, writing, and editing articles, memos or concept papers about USU research and graduate studies.
  2. Drafting press releases and other articles about newsworthy research-related events.
  3. Assisting with development and maintenance of RGS website and other related sites.
  4. Assisting with event planning tasks for marketing-related events.
  5. Assisting and/or supervising other major marketing projects congruent with his or her previous experience and expertise.
QUALIFICATIONS:
  1. Junior or senior preferred. 
  2. Public Relations, Journalism, Marketing, or English major preferred.
  3. Excellent writing and research skills required.
  4. Previous experience in and knowledge of marketing, public relations, and journalism principles and techniques a plus.
  5. Proficiency in Internet, word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, and desktop publishing programs required.
  6. Must be able to work well independently and with others in a professional office environment.
APPLICATION:
Please submit cover letter, resume, and transcript via email to Anna McEntire at anna.mcentire@usu.edu by January 12, 2012d.  Successful candidates will be contacted for an interview and will be asked to submit writing and design samples.

CALL FOR PAPERS

Writing the World Symposium – April 18-20, 2012
A regional, interdisciplinary conversation on literacy, ecology, and social justice
Theme: Ecotones: Productive Spaces, Converging Communities

Keynote Speakers:
Allen D. Kanner, PhD, ecopsychologist and practicing child, family, and adult psychologist, and Paul Kei Matsuda, PhD, Arizona State University second language writing scholar.

Featured Speakers: Michelle Eodice, PhD, University of Oklahoma, Executive Director of the Learning, Teaching, and Writing Program, and Judith Hendry, PhD, University of New Mexico, environmental rhetoric and communication scholar

Presentation proposals, paper and poster abstracts, and film synopsis with submission screening copy due by February 24, 2012
The Writing the World Symposium is an interdisciplinary symposium that focuses on a broad range of practical and theoretical issues in literacy, ecology, and social justice today. The theme for the 2012 conference is “Ecotones: Productive Spaces, Converging Communities.”
An ecotone is a space wherein distinct ecological communities converge, resulting in rich diversity and unpredictable creative potential. In a broad sense, an ecotone might be a neighborhood, border town, cultural practice, artistic production, historical moment, or scientific observation. Ecotones emerge when one academic discipline informs another, academy meets community, civilization dialogues with nature, and theory enters into practice. Ecotones challenge us to deconstruct, consolidate and recreate our identities as neighbors, citizens, scholars, and environmental stewards. By serving as its own kind of ecotone—a productive space where communities converge—the Writing the World Symposium hopes to foster meaningful conversations that point the way to direct and influential action.

Submission: Send your presentation proposal, poster, film, or paper abstract of 500 words or fewer to: wtw.symposium@gmail.com
. The submission should be an attachment in Word (doc or docx), PDF, or RTF format. Include a working title for your paper or presentation. Please also include a brief biography specifying your name, institution, department or discipline, and research interests. For panel presentations, submit a single document containing a working title for the panel, working titles for each of the presentations, and the abstracts for each presentation. See special requirements for film submissions, below and on the WAC Alliance website. All submissions must be received by February 24, 2011.
Graduate Presentation Format:
We welcome graduate students to submit proposals for individual presentations (15 minutes) or three-person panels (45 minutes per panel) in any discipline or combination of disciplines that address the symposium’s theme. We welcome multi-media presentations as well as traditional papers.
Undergraduate Poster Format: Undergraduate students may submit proposals for individual poster presentations in any discipline or combination of disciplines that address the symposium’s theme. Find the guidelines for poster presentations on the WAC Alliance page at http://www.unm.edu/~wac/.



Film Submission and Format: Undergraduate and graduate students may submit a DVD (NTSC format only) or the URL to a YouTube or Vimeo online video. Films must be 10 minutes or less in any genre, and the subject matter should address the symposium’s themes.  Find the complete guidelines for short film submissions on the WAC Alliance page at http://www.unm.edu/~wac/


Submission copies of DVDs should be mailed to:

Department of English Language & Literature
Attn: Deborah Paczynski
MSC 03 2170
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001

For more information: contact Writing the World Symposium steering committee chair, Deb Paczynski, dpaczyns@unm.edu, or find conference information on the WAC Alliance page at http://www.unm.edu/~wac/

Jack Kent Cooke Foundation's Dissertation Fellowship

Dear Colleagues: I would like to remind you that the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation's Dissertation Fellowship deadline for application is quickly approaching.  Applications are due no later than February 3, 2012.  The Foundation will award four Fellowships of up to $25,000 to support advanced doctoral candidates whose research contributes to the understanding of the educational experiences and pathways of high-achieving, low-income students.  Please note that although the dissertation topic concerns education and human potential, graduate study may be in a diverse range of academic disciplines.  Applicants must be candidates for a doctoral degree at a graduate school in the United States, though they need not be US citizens. Links to the application requirements and guidelines are posted on our website.  
Please visit www.jkcf.org for more information about the Fellowship and direct any questions to fellows@jkcf.org  or call the Foundation at 703-723-8000.  Recipients will be notified in May 2012. Thank you for helping us spread this information to interested and qualified applicants.   Best regards, Barbara Schmertz, Ph.D. Program Manager The Jack Kent Cooke Foundation 703-723-8000

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Grad Student Survey

As part of the ongoing university-wide graduate program review, all current graduate students are being asked to complete this short online survey.  Your feedback is imperative in helping departments to provide continued high quality graduate education.  All responses are anonymous, and will be reported only in aggregate form.  Each department has a unique link, so we ask that you only complete your department-specific survey, which appears at the link below.  Please complete your survey no later than 1 February 2012.  Thank you for your participation!

Department of English
http://ezplug.usu.edu/survey/htm/id=2908


Grad Student Survey:

The Graduate Programs in the English Department (Lit & Writing, American Studies—Standard and Folklore, Online Technical Writing, and Theory and Practice of Professional Communication) are all going to be undergoing an important self-study this semester. This process has been initiated by the new Vice President for Research and Dean of School of Graduate Studies Mark McClelland, and as a part of the process you will receive a survey form from the School of Graduate Studies this week.  Dean McClelland has said that “[O]ur goal is to ensure that all degrees are delivered in a manner that is world-class!... It is a self-improvement process that encourages creative changes in the department programs.”  In sum, I want to impress upon you how much we need and value your candid responses to the questions on the Grad School survey.  --Dr. Evelyn Funda, DGS

Girls Generation - Korean