Thank you for visiting CGS! You are currently using CGS' legacy site, which is no longer supported. For up-to-date information, including publications purchasing and meeting information, please visit cgsnet.org.
Featured
As an advocate for women and diversity in the science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics (STEAM) fields, Rebecca Long hopes to encourage more women to go into these areas. “It’s really important for me to encourage more women,” Long said. “We need diverse people in these fields to take the world forward.” Long received her M.S. in computer science from Eastern Washington University in 2013 and in 2017, she founded a non-profit organization, Future Ada, which aims to secure space for women and non-binary individuals in STEAM fields.
Named after renowned mathematician and computer programmer Ada Lovelace, the organization promotes inclusion, diversity, and collaboration in STEAM. One of Future Ada’s primary drivers is to ensure “the people we are solving problems for are also given a chance to be represented in the problem-solving process.” Future Ada offers community programs, including career mentoring, a privacy and security workshop, a women in tech interview workshop.
Long’s drive to make STEAM more inclusive is not limited to her work on Future Ada, however. She is involved in several other organizations with related missions, including “Write/Speak/Code and the Spokane Area National Organization for Women. “I realized that just my efforts alone aren’t enough,” she noted. “I felt a strong need in the community to mentor more people, to have workshops and training, to put together a bigger effort of support for women and minorities. We want to make all of our STEAM fields in Spokane inclusive and diverse.” To learn more about Rebecca’s work visit the Eastern Washington University website.
Visit the GradImpact Feature Gallery to learn more about the amazing, innovative research being done by graduate students and alumni across the world.
The CGS GRADIMPACT project draws from member examples to tell the larger story of graduate education. Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of graduate education not only to degree holders, but also to the communities where we live and work. Do you have a great story to share about the impact of master’s or doctoral education? Visit our WEBSITE for more information.
On March 11, 2019, the Trump Administration released its Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 budget proposal outlining federal funding priorities. The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is concerned that the Administration is withdrawing essential support for critical discretionary programs.
“This marks the third year the Administration has introduced unprecedented cuts to domestic programs that ensure a highly-educated and diverse workforce, spur innovation, uphold our national security, and preserve the U.S.’s position as a leading global competitor.” said Suzanne T. Ortega, President of the Council of Graduate Schools.
The proposal significantly reduces funding for student aid programs that have longstanding success in promoting access to affordable higher education, particularly for low socio-economic and underrepresented students. The budget makes harsh cuts to Federal-Work Study and TRIO, and it would eliminate the Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need and the Public Service Loan Forgiveness programs. This poses a long-term risk to diversity and inclusiveness not just within academic institutions, but also within the future American workforce.
The proposal gouges funding streams for research entities includingthe National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Department of Energy, all of which invest in discoveries that translate to new technologies and cures. In addition, the Fulbright-Hays International Education and Foreign Language Studies programs, which provide U.S. students opportunities to learn across international borders and foster cross-cultural understanding, would also be eliminated.
“CGS is committed to working with Congress in a bipartisan manner to ensure that a final spending package includes necessary investments that will allow universities to respond to the demand for a highly-skilled workforce, a competitive scientific enterprise, and future generations of global leaders.”
Nabila Hijazi, a doctoral student in English Language and Literature at the University of Maryland, College Park, came to the U.S. from Syria with her husband in 1989. As an 18-year-old just out of high school, Hijazi began her life as a homemaker and eventually a mother. College wasn’t something many women in Syrian culture pursued, but after years of investing in her family, Hijazi started taking business classes at a local community college. Years later, she now has a bachelor’s degree in accounting, a master’s degree in English Language and Literature, and is currently pursuing her Ph.D.
Hijazi’s background and passion for teaching others has driven her doctoral research. Her involvement with the Prince George’s Muslim Association (PGMA) led her to teach writing to multilingual students through coordination with Syrians and Iraqis living in the area. But to her surprise, the incentives of free transportation and childcare weren’t enough to entice students. “I kept wondering why throughout the course, enrollment was so low. Beyond some of the technical or logistical issues of the program, it was apparent there were other reasons for low enrollment and retention, and this became the focus of my dissertation. I decided to interview these women to understand how language programs can be created to attract/retain students,” says Hijazi.
Hijazi recently received the Dr. James W. Longest Memorial Award for Social Science Research from UMD last fall to support her doctoral dissertation research that potentially benefits small and/or disadvantaged communities. In addition, she has published several journal articles on teaching composition. To learn more about Nabila’s work visit the University of Maryland, College Park website.
Visit the GradImpact Feature Gallery to learn more about the amazing, innovative research being done by graduate students and alumni across the world.
Photo Credit: Anna De Cheke Qualls, UMD
The CGS GRADIMPACT project draws from member examples to tell the larger story of graduate education. Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of graduate education not only to degree holders, but also to the communities where we live and work. Do you have a great story to share about the impact of master’s or doctoral education? Visit our WEBSITE for more information.
On April 3 and 4, CGS will welcome a group of 40 member deans and graduate students to particiate in the 2019 CGS Advocay Hill Day. The two-day event will feature a training session in preparation for the Hill visits and meetings on Capitol Hill with their Congressional offices in both the House and Senate. This is an excellent opportunity for the community to advocate for the value of graduate education, science, and research.
Alexandra Kralick, a doctoral student in anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania, studies the growth and development of sex differences in great apes and humans. Kralick recently spent time examining orangutan bones in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History’s mammal collection to understand how orangutan growth and development differ from humans.
Kralick wrote an article published in The Atlantic last November, which has been featured in other online publications, including Pacific Standard and Slate. In her article, Is Gender Written Into Your Skeleton? Kralick argues that based on her research, our bodies are too complicated to fit a legal, binary definition of sex. “Skeletal studies, the field that I work in as a doctoral student in anthropology, and the history of this field show how assumptions about sex can lead to profound mistakes, and how acknowledging that things are not really as binary as they may seem can help resolve those errors.” She summarizes the recent history of the binary and outlines instances that have proven it does not exist.
Kralick is currently a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow. She received her bachelor’s degree in biological anthropology from George Washington University, where she investigated the dental development in Virunga mountain gorillas in Rwanda. To learn more about Alexandra’s work visit the University of Pennsylvania website.
Visit the GradImpact Feature Gallery to learn more about the amazing, innovative research being done by graduate students and alumni across the world.
The CGS GRADIMPACT project draws from member examples to tell the larger story of graduate education. Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of graduate education not only to degree holders, but also to the communities where we live and work. Do you have a great story to share about the impact of master’s or doctoral education? Visit our WEBSITE for more information.
The Organization and Administration of Graduate Education has been revised and updated! This publication provides a picture of the structures, stakeholders, and challenges that define contemporary graduate education. The revised edition features expanded sections on program leadership and pressing issues; call-out boxes highlighting key insights; case studies from leading graduate programs addressing pressing issues; and guidance from CGS best practices projects.
You can purchase copies of the volume on the publications page. Free digital download of this volume is included as part of the CGS member benefits package.
Megan Perkins, a doctoral candidate in neuroscience at the University of Vermont, received the 2018-2019 Rodney L. Parsons Anatomy and Neurobiology Award and plans to use the award for professional and career development opportunities. Perkins’ research examines a population of cells in the bladder called interstitial cells using biochemical processes to better understand “the role of interstitial cells in the sensitization of afferent nerves in bladder disorders, specifically interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome.”
Perkins contributed to national Brain Awareness Week last March, participating in educational outreach to local elementary school students. In addition to her research, Perkins has served as the student coordinator for the Neuroscience Graduate Program (NGP) Student Journal Club, which provides graduate students the opportunity to gain experience with research presentations and critical reviews of literature in the neuroscience.
Perkins received her bachelor’s degree in psychology at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, where she worked with a cognitive psychologist in the field of behavioral economics. After she completes her doctorate, she plans to pursue a postdoctoral fellowship and hopes to become more involved in scientific communication and advocacy. To learn more about Megan’s work visit the University of Vermont website.
Visit the GradImpact Feature Gallery to learn more about the amazing, innovative research being done by graduate students and alumni across the world.
The CGS GRADIMPACT project draws from member examples to tell the larger story of graduate education. Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of graduate education not only to degree holders, but also to the communities where we live and work. Do you have a great story to share about the impact of master’s or doctoral education? Visit our WEBSITE for more information.
The Role of Research Integrity in Promoting Excellence: Tools for College and University Leaders
May 22-23, 2019 at Northwestern University in Chicago, IL
This conference seeks to engage university and college leaders in lively discussions about strategies, resources, and tools for promoting research integrity for current and future scientists, and scholars at institutions nationwide. It was co-organized by the Council of Graduate Schools, Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of Research Integrity, and Northwestern University.
To learn more about this event, click here to visit the conference website.
On Wednesday, February 13, CGS submitted comments in response to a solicitation from a group of senators around disparities faced by students of color when accessing and financing their postsecondary education. The letter underscores the need to continue to diversify graduate programs to address our changing population and the demands of the workforce, and reiterates CGS’s commitment to achieving this goal. Specifically, it highlights a proposal to allow graduate students who remain income-eligible to apply Pell Grants toward their graduate degree, as well as the need to support several current student aid programs that help students from underserved populations finance higher education.
View letter here.
As members of the University of Missouri—Columbia Graduate Professional Council, Rachel Owen and Michael Hendricks recognized the impact of science policy on their doctoral research. Upon learning of a state science policy fellowships program in California, Owen (Ph.D. candidate, School of Natural Resources) and Hendricks (Ph.D. candidate, Department of Political Science) set out to start a similar program in Missouri. What developed are the Missouri Science & Technology (MOST) Policy Fellows, and Co-Directors Owen and Hendricks hope the program ensures legislators understand the benefits and consequences of their policies to the scientific community.
The proposed fellowship model will provide an opportunity for in-state doctoral graduate students who wish to work in science policy upon graduation to work in the state legislature in Jefferson City. Owen and Hendricks argue that retaining students within the state that invested in their training and education is in the state’s best interest. MOST is currently fundraising and hopes to have raised enough money to fund a fellowship for the 2021 legislative session.
“Just doing my science isn’t really enough,” Owen said. “That is enough for a lot of people, but I really want to be able to connect my science with society and make my science, or make other people’s science, more impactful.” To learn more about Rachel and Michael’s work visit the Missouri Science & Technology Policy Fellows website.
Visit the GradImpact Feature Gallery to learn more about the amazing, innovative research being done by graduate students and alumni across the world.
The CGS GRADIMPACT project draws from member examples to tell the larger story of graduate education. Our goal is to demonstrate the importance of graduate education not only to degree holders, but also to the communities where we live and work. Do you have a great story to share about the impact of master’s or doctoral education? Visit our WEBSITE for more information.