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    Member Engagement

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    CGS membership provides opportunities to engage with an active community of institutions and organizations that support graduate education. We invite you to explore our categories of membership and their distinct benefits, which include data analysis and best practice expertise, discounts on meetings and publications, and opportunities to exchange information and resources with fellow members.

    2020 Three-Minute Thesis (3MT®) Virtual Showcase and Roundtable Discussion
    Wednesday, February 3, 2021

    Universities and regional organizations of graduate schools are launching 3MT® competitions to help prepare graduate students to communicate the value of their research to a broad audience. This virtual event showcased the winners of regional competitions and concluded with a roundtable discussion and People’s Choice award. Students reflected on their experiences, offering insights that can help graduate schools develop successful 3MT® competitions-- even in virtual environments-- and other programs designed to hone students’ communication skills.

     

    This event was moderated by Andrea Golato, Dean of the Graduate College, Texas State University

     

    Virtual 3MT® Showcase support provided by ProQuest.

     

     

    2020 LaPidus Lecture and Awards Ceremony
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021
    The LaPidus Lecture and CGS Awards Ceremony is an opportunity to reflect and celebrate the best of the CGS community and the resilience of graduate ed ...
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    2020 CGS Award Winners Announced
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Receives ETS/CGS Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education

    Today the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) and ETS presented The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) with the 2020 ETS/CGS Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education: From Admission through Completion. Dr. Suzanne Barbour, dean of The Graduate School, accepted the co-sponsored award on UNC-Chapel Hill’s behalf during a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    Susan Porter Receives Debra W. Stewart Award for Outstanding Leadership in Graduate Education

    The Board of Directors of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has announced that Dr. Susan Porter, dean and vice-provost of the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies at the University of British Columbia (UBC), is the 2020 recipient of the Debra W. Stewart Award for Outstanding Leadership in Graduate Education. Dr. Porter received the honor at an awards ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    Jan Allen Wins Assistant and Associate Deans Leadership Award

    The Board of Directors of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has announced that Dr. Jan Allen, associate dean of academic and student affairs of the Graduate School at Cornell University, is the 2020 winner of the Assistant and Associate Deans Leadership Award. Allen received the honor at a ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    Maryl B. Gensheimer Receives 2020 Arlt Award in the Humanities

    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has awarded the 2020 Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities to Dr. Maryl B. Gensheimer, associate professor of Roman art and archaeology and director of undergraduate studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. The awards ceremony was held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    Winners of 2020 CGS/ProQuest® Distinguished Dissertation Awards Announced

    The Council of Graduate Schools / ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Awards, the nation’s most prestigious honors for doctoral dissertations, were presented to Akhil Rao and Caroline Trippel during the Council’s award ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting. Dr. Rao received his PhD in economics from the University of Colorado Boulder in 2019; Dr. Trippel completed her PhD in computer science/computer architecture from Princeton University in 2019.

    Winners of 2020 CGS/ProQuest® Distinguished Dissertation Awards Announced
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     

    Contacts: Katherine Hazelrigg  (202) 461-3888 / khazelrigg@cgs.nche.edu  and Gilia Smith, ProQuest (734) 707-2691 | gilia.smith@proquest.com

     

    Washington, DC The Council of Graduate Schools / ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Awards, the nation’s most prestigious honors for doctoral dissertations, were presented to Akhil Rao and Caroline Trippel during the Council’s award ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting. Dr. Rao received his PhD in economics from the University of Colorado Boulder in 2019; Dr. Trippel completed her PhD in computer science/computer architecture from Princeton University in 2019.

     

    Bestowed annually since 1982, the awards recognize recent doctoral recipients who have already made unusually significant and original contributions to their fields. ProQuest, an international leader in educational technology and content – including dissertation archiving, discovery, and access – sponsors the awards and an independent committee from the Council of Graduate Schools selects the winners. Two awards are given each year, rotating among four general areas of scholarship. The winners receive a certificate of recognition, a $2,000 honorarium, and a travel stipend to attend the awards ceremony.

     

    “Over the past 39 years, the Distinguished Dissertation Award winners have consistently demonstrated the significant impact young scholars have in their disciplines and the broader graduate education community,” said CGS President Suzanne T. Ortega. “The 2020 honorees, Dr. Rao and Dr. Trippel, continue this tradition through their innovative research and noteworthy contributions to their respective fields. Their work embodies the value and impact of graduate education to the world and merits recognition.”

     

    “We are honored to sponsor and recognize these scholars, whose work in their fields will make contributions to future research in years to come,” said Angela D’Agostino, VP of Dissertations at ProQuest. “We celebrate their immense achievements and offer well wishes for their future successes. In support of their aspirations, we are pleased to include their research with ProQuest where it can be referenced and expanded upon by other researchers around the world.”

     

    Dr. Rao received the 2020 Award in Social Sciences for his dissertation, The Economics of Orbit Use: Theory, Policy, and Measurement. Rao’s work investigates, “the nature of orbit-use externalities, classify existing policies, identify a category of optimal policies, consider the extent to which technological advances can mitigate orbital externalities, and calculate the time path of an optimal satellite tax and the gains from implementing it.” Dr. Rao is currently an assistant professor of economics at Middlebury College.

     

    The 2020 Award in Mathematics, Physical Sciences, & Engineering was presented to Dr. Trippel for her dissertation, Concurrency and Security Verification in Heterogeneous Parallel Systems. Trippel’s work, “combines hardware systems architecture approaches with formal methods techniques to support the specification, analysis, and verification of implementation-aware event ordering scenarios. The specific goal here is enabling automatic synthesis of implementation-aware programs capable of violating correctness or security guarantees when such programs exist.” Dr. Trippel is currently an assistant professor of computer science and electrical engineering at Stanford University.

     

    This year several outstanding scholars received honorable mentions: Anna Grummon (nominated by the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill) and Cristina Gauthier Hernández (nominated by Michigan State University) for the Award in Social Sciences; and Daniel Gilman (nominated by the University of California, Los Angeles) and Kaveh Matinkhoo (nominated by the University of British Columbia) for the Award in Mathematics, Physical Sciences, and Engineering.

     

    More information about the CGS / ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award is available at www.proquest.com/go/scholars or at www.cgsnet.org.

     

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    About the Council of Graduate Schools (www.cgsnet.org)

    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is an organization of approximately 500 institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada engaged in graduate education, research, and the preparation of candidates for advanced degrees. The organization’s mission is to improve and advance graduate education, which it accomplishes through advocacy in the federal policy arena, research, and the development and dissemination of best practices.

     

    About ProQuest (http://www.proquest.com)

    ProQuest supports the important work in the world’s research and learning communities. The company curates six centuries of content – the world’s largest collection of journals, ebooks, primary sources, dissertations, news, and video – and builds powerful workflow solutions to help libraries acquire and grow collections that inspire extraordinary outcomes. ProQuest products and services are used in academic, K-12, public, corporate and government libraries in 150 countries.

     

    Along with its companies and affiliates Ex Libris, Alexander Street, and Bowker, ProQuest helps its customers achieve better research, better learning and better insights. For more information, visit our ProQuest and Extraordinary Stories blogs, and follow us on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram.

    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Receives ETS/CGS Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     

    Contacts: Katherine Hazelrigg  (202) 461-3888 / khazelrigg@cgs.nche.edu  and Alescia Dingle, ETS (609) 851-4913 | adingle@ets.org

     

    Washington, DC – Today the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) and ETS presented The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) with the 2020 ETS/CGS Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education: From Admission through Completion. Dr. Suzanne Barbour, dean of The Graduate School, accepted the co-sponsored award on UNC-Chapel Hill’s behalf during a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    The ETS/CGS Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education recognizes promising, innovative proposals to enhance student success and degree completion at the master’s and doctoral levels while promoting inclusiveness. The winning institution is selected on the strength of its proposal to meet the award’s goals and to serve as a model for other schools. The winner receives a two-year, $20,000 matching grant.

     

    This year’s winner, The Graduate School of UNC-Chapel Hill, will build on the work of its Diversity and Student Success (DSS) team which strives to create an environment where students are equipped to not only survive but to thrive during their tenure as graduate students. The current racial unrest, the Black Lives Matter movement, and COVID-19 have elevated the importance of DSS’s work. DSS/The Graduate School will pilot the development of intersecting learning communities for both graduate students and faculty/departments to continue building upon innovative diversity and equity efforts, to address various components of systemic racism, and to create an inclusive and welcoming climate for all graduate students.

     

    The intersectional learning communities will build upon the existing DSS work, which includes five diversity initiatives and one recruitment initiative. Through the Carolina Grad Student F1RSTS, Global Grads, Initiative for Minority Excellence, Military-Affiliated Grads, and Queer Graduate and Professional Students efforts, DSS recognizes the intersectionality of identity and encourages students to join as many of the initiatives as appropriate. The Summer Undergraduate Pipeline (SUP) program, a DSS recruitment initiative, works directly with summer undergraduate research programs to create connections and provide the necessary tools for a successful transition into a graduate career.

     

    “We are very grateful for the honor of this support, which will help us to realize our goal of ensuring that every UNC-Chapel Hill graduate student has a positive and productive experience during graduate school,” said Dr. Barbour. “Our project builds on the success of DSS in two crucial ways, by both better preparing graduate students to thrive in the cultures that they find in their departments and by providing departments with tools to assess and further strengthen their climates to better serve all graduate students.”

     

    “Ensuring graduate students from traditionally underrepresented groups succeed is crucial to our future. I cannot emphasize enough that this is a top priority for CGS, and the work UNC-Chapel Hill is doing through its DSS project and under the leadership of Dr. Barbour prioritizes student success by placing the critical need for an inclusive environment at the center of graduate education,” said CGS President Suzanne T. Ortega. “We are so grateful to ETS for their support in recognizing this innovative way to promote best practices among graduate schools.”

     

    “We are proud to recognize the outstanding innovation in diversity by UNC-Chapel Hill with the 2020 ETS/CGC Award for Innovation in Promoting Success in Graduate Education: from Admission through Completion,” said Dr. David Payne, vice president and chief operating officer of global higher education at ETS. “The efforts by the DSS team at UNC-Chapel Hill are a shining example of advancing equity by fostering a more inclusive school community to ensure that all graduate students are welcome, supported and have an opportunity to succeed.”

     

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    About ETS

    At ETS, we advance quality and equity in education for people worldwide by creating assessments based on rigorous research. ETS serves individuals, educational institutions and government agencies by providing customized solutions for teacher certification, English language learning, and elementary, secondary and post-secondary education, as well as conducting education research, analysis and policy studies. Founded as a nonprofit in 1947, ETS develops, administers and scores more than 50 million tests annually — including the TOEFL® and TOEIC® tests, the GRE® tests and The Praxis Series™ assessments — in more than 180 countries, at over 9,000 locations worldwide. www.ets.org

     

    About CGS

    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is an organization of approximately 500 institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada engaged in graduate education, research, and the preparation of candidates for advanced degrees. The organization’s mission is to improve and advance graduate education, which it accomplishes through advocacy in the federal policy arena, research, and the development and dissemination of best practices.

    Susan Porter Receives Debra W. Stewart Award for Outstanding Leadership in Graduate Education
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

    Contact: Katherine Hazelrigg  (202) 461-3888 / khazelrigg@cgs.nche.edu

     

    Washington, DC – The Board of Directors of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has announced that Dr. Susan Porter, dean and vice-provost of the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies at the University of British Columbia (UBC), is the 2020 recipient of the Debra W. Stewart Award for Outstanding Leadership in Graduate Education. Dr. Porter received the honor at an awards ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    A passionate advocate for graduate education, Dr. Porter becomes the fifth Debra W. Stewart Award recipient for her invaluable contributions to the University of British Columbia and the international graduate education community. Dr. Porter has been integral to the work on “reimagining the PhD” at UBC and across the globe, including as a co-lead of a Canadian task force on the future of doctoral research and the dissertation. She created the UBC Public Scholars Initiative to support doctoral students across all disciplines by reconceiving concepts of scholarship to include collaborative, action-oriented research intended to make lasting contributions to the public good.

     

    As dean, Dr. Porter led initiatives that supported scholarly approaches to mentorship development and assessment, and oversaw the creation of innovative and widely used online tools for recruitment and faculty networking. Under her leadership, UBC became the first university in Canada to make individual graduate programs’ data on student completion times and rates, on application and enrollment figures, and on doctoral career outcomes readily available to the public.

     

    Dr. Porter has also been involved in many CGS projects, including Supporting the Mental Health and Wellbeing of Graduate Students and the Global Postgraduate Diversity Resource. She has served as president of the Canadian Association for Graduate Studies and is currently on the Graduate Record Exam Board of Directors. In addition, she was an expert panel member for the Council of Canadian Academies Report on Labour Market Transition of PhD Graduates, commissioned by the Canadian government.

     

    “Susan is widely recognized on our campus for her ethical thought leadership, her sincere commitment to outstanding, transformative education, and her indefatigable championing of broadened conceptions of graduate education to better address the needs of the 21st century,” said Santa J. Ono, president and vice-chancellor, University of British Columbia. Recognizing her many achievements and her exceptional leadership in advancing graduate education is a wonderful message to all who, like us, share her passion for creating a better university and scholars ready to contribute fully to the complex world in which we live.”

     

    “Dr. Porter’s innovative approaches and solutions to notions of transparency and scholarship and her unwavering commitment to supporting graduate students are just a few of the reasons the CGS Board of Directors is pleased to recognize her leadership and service to the graduate education community,” said Dr. Andrew G. Campbell, dean of the Graduate School at Brown University and chair of the Council’s Board of Directors. “Susan’s creative and strategic thinking make her an outstanding leader, and deserving of this award”.

     

    The award, created in 2016 by the CGS Board of Directors, recognizes outstanding leadership in graduate education, particularly those leadership qualities exemplified by the Council’s fifth President, Debra W. Stewart. The selection committee considers nominees with a strong reputation for ethics and integrity, a history of active participation in the graduate community, and a record of strategic vision and actions resulting in meaningful impacts. Areas of special consideration include evidence-based innovation, program development, diversity and inclusion, student learning and career outcomes, personnel management, policy advocacy in support of graduate education and research, and fiscal responsibility.

     

    Nominees for the award must be a current senior, graduate dean at a CGS member institution (Regular or Associate) and cannot be an active member of the CGS Board of Directors. Nominations are made by member institutions and are reviewed by a selection committee of former graduate deans in the CGS community. The winner receives a $4,000 prize to support continuing innovations at the awardee’s institution.

     

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    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is an organization of approximately 500 institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada engaged in graduate education, research, and the preparation of candidates for advanced degrees. The organization’s mission is to improve and advance graduate education, which it accomplishes through advocacy in the federal policy arena, research, and the development and dissemination of best practices.

    Maryl B. Gensheimer Receives 2020 Arlt Award in the Humanities
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     

    Contact: Katherine Hazelrigg  (202) 461-3888 / khazelrigg@cgs.nche.edu

     

    Washington, DC – The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has awarded the 2020 Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities to Dr. Maryl B. Gensheimer, associate professor of Roman art and archaeology and director of undergraduate studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. The awards ceremony was held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    Bestowed annually, the Arlt Award recognizes a young scholar-teacher who has written a book deemed to have made an outstanding contribution to scholarship in the humanities. Dr. Gensheimer becomes the award’s 50th recipient for her book, Decoration and Display in Rome’s Imperial Thermae: Messages of Power and their Popular Reception at the Baths of Caracalla (Oxford UP, 2018). She received her PhD in Classical art and archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University in 2013.

     

    In Decoration and Display in Rome’s Imperial Thermae, Gensheimer analyzes the decoration of the Baths of Caracalla (inaugurated 216 CE) and elucidates its critical role in advancing Roman imperial agendas. As Gensheimer notes, “This reassessment of one of the most sophisticated examples of architectural patronage in Classical antiquity examines the specific mechanisms through which an imperial patron could use architectural decoration to emphasize his sociopolitical position relative to the thousands of people who enjoyed his benefaction.”

     

    “Elevating the exceptional work of early-career humanities faculty has never been more important, and Dr. Gensheimer’s brilliant work contextualizes the cultural significance of the two-thousand-year-old ancient Roman Baths of Caracalla and the role art and architecture plays in advancing the politics of imperialism. We are honored to present her with this year’s prestigious Arlt Award,” said Dr. Suzanne Ortega, president of the Council of Graduate Schools.

     

    Created in 1971, the Arlt Award honors the first president of CGS, Gustave O. Arlt. The winner must have earned a doctorate within the past seven years, and currently be teaching at a North American university. Nominations are made by CGS member institutions and are reviewed by a panel of scholars in the field of competition, which rotates annually among seven disciplines within the humanities. This year’s field was The Arts (Art History/Criticism/Conservation and Music). The winner receives a $1,000 honorarium and travel to the awards ceremony.

     

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    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is an organization of approximately 500 institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada engaged in graduate education, research, and the preparation of candidates for advanced degrees. The organization’s mission is to improve and advance graduate education, which it accomplishes through advocacy in the federal policy arena, research, and the development and dissemination of best practices.

    Jan Allen Wins Assistant and Associate Deans Leadership Award
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     

    Contact: Katherine Hazelrigg  (202) 461-3888 / khazelrigg@cgs.nche.edu

     

    Washington, DC – The Board of Directors of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) has announced that Dr. Jan Allen, associate dean of academic and student affairs of the Graduate School at Cornell University, is the 2020 winner of the Assistant and Associate Deans Leadership Award. Allen received the honor at a ceremony held as a post-meeting event of the virtual CGS 60th Annual Meeting.

     

    The award was created by the CGS Board of Directors to recognize individuals who have shown exemplary commitment to graduate education by demonstrating creativity and innovation in response to institutional challenges and/or limited budgets or resources; building partnerships both internal and external to the graduate school; identifying and obtaining resources, both internal and external to the graduate school; effectively advocating on behalf of graduate education; fostering inclusiveness in the graduate community; and engaging student voices (including diverse voices).

     

    Dr. Allen becomes the award’s second recipient for her valuable contributions to the Cornell University graduate community. Her many accomplishments include designing and implementing high-impact writing, professional development, and mentorship programs with little-to-no additional funding; partnering with Cornell’s teaching center, writing center, and research office to deliver high-quality graduate student programs; and chairing Cornell’s task force on supporting international graduate students, leading to the creation of the English Language Support Office staffed by three instructors and 15 peer tutors. Allen has served as president and an executive committee member of the Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools, where she is currently a senior advisor. In addition, she has presented at dozens of seminars and workshops on graduate professional development and leadership and work/family issues.

     

    “Jan is known throughout the graduate education community, nationally and internationally, for sharing her professional expertise widely to help graduate students recognize and overcome common hurdles to writing and to implement best practices for writing productively,” said Dr. Kathryn Boor, dean of the Graduate School and vice provost for graduate education at Cornell University. “Her innovative writing programs, dedication to mentoring for professional development, and generosity of spirit are just a few reasons why Jan is so deserving of this award.”

     

    “Dr. Allen’s 23 years of service as an assistant/associate dean across four institutions of higher education is a testament to her exemplary dedication to graduate education. The committee was particularly impressed with her conflict resolution work and her tireless commitment to collaboration whenever possible. She promotes respect for students by helping them learn to engage professionally in challenging situations, using skills to advocate for themselves and with their faculty advisors,” said Dr. Thomas Jeitschko, selection committee chair, and dean of the Graduate School and associate provost for graduate education at Michigan State University.

     

    Nominees for the award must be a current assistant or associate-level dean at a CGS member institution (Regular or Associate) with primary administrative responsibility in graduate education. Assistant or associate deans whose graduate deans currently serve on the CGS Board are not eligible to be nominated for the award during the dean’s active years of board service. Nominations are made by CGS member institutions and are reviewed by a committee selected by the CGS Board of Directors. The winner receives a $1,500 honorarium and is invited to plan and participate in a session at the CGS Summer Workshop on a topic of their choosing.

     

    CGS gratefully acknowledges Liaison’s financial support of the Assistant and Associate Deans Leadership Award.  Liaison, a higher education enrollment marketing and admissions management company, is a CGS Sustaining Member.

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    The Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) is an organization of approximately 500 institutions of higher education in the United States and Canada engaged in graduate education, research, and the preparation of candidates for advanced degrees. The organization’s mission is to improve and advance graduate education, which it accomplishes through advocacy in the federal policy arena, research, and the development and dissemination of best practices.

    2021 Sustaining Members Page
    Monday, December 21, 2020

     

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

                

    At ETS, we advance quality and equity in education for people worldwide by creating assessments based on rigorous research. ETS serves individuals, educational institutions and government agencies by providing customized solutions for teacher certification, English language learning, and elementary, secondary and post-secondary education, and by conducting education research, analysis and policy studies. Founded as a nonprofit in 1947, ETS develops, administers and scores more than 50 million tests annually—including the TOEFL® and TOEIC® tests, the GRE® tests and The Praxis Series™ assessments—in more than 180 countries, at over 10,000 locations worldwide. For more information, visit www.ets.org.

                

     

                
                

    ProQuest is committed to supporting the important work happening in the world’s universities and colleges. The company curates content that matters to research and learning, assembling an archive of billions of vetted, indexed documents. It simplifies workflows so that students, faculty and librarians use time most effectively. And because ProQuest connects information communities, complex networks of systems and processes work together efficiently. With ProQuest, drawing insights and finding answers is straightforward and leads to extraordinary outcomes. ProQuest and its companies and affiliates – Ex Libris, Alexander Street, Bowker -- stand for better research, better learning, better insights. ProQuest enables people to change their world.

                

     

                
                

    Academic Analytics is a full-service provider of business intelligence solutions for higher education. Founded in 2005 to address the need for accurate and timely strategic data, Academic Analytics provides its clients with comprehensive data on faculty research activity and solutions drawn from nuanced analyses of national disciplines and custom comparisons at the institutional, department, program and individual faculty levels.  These data support university leaders as they make strategic investment decisions, benchmark scholarly research activity, review academic units with discipline-relevant comparisons, and develop the university research enterprise.
                
                 

                
                

    Founded by professors in 1999, bepress – newly part of Elsevier – exists to help academic communities maximize the impact of their research and demonstrate their value. Nearly 500 institutions use Digital Commons and the Expert Gallery Suite to collect, preserve and showcase the full range of their intellectual output and expertise.

                
                

    Over the last two decades, Liaison has helped over 7,000 programs on more than 800 campuses more effectively manage admissions through its Centralized Application Service (CAS™) technology and complementary processing and support services. Partnering with over 30 professional associations, the company has developed discipline-wide services for a range of fields, including most of the health professions, as well as graduate education (GradCAS), engineering (EngineeringCAS), graduate management education (BusinessCAS), social work (SocialWorkCAS), psychology (PSYCAS) and architecture (ArchCAS). To learn more, visit liaisonedu.com.

                

     

                
                

    Prodigy Finance is a lending platform that provides postgraduate loans to international students attending the world’s top universities. Our loans are collectively funded by institutional investors, qualified private investors and a community of alumni, who receive a financial and social return; while the student borrower gains access to higher education that they might not otherwise be able to finance.  We’re changing the world by addressing the social and geographical inequalities that exist when accessing finance, and have revolutionised the international student loan market with a borderless credit model available to 150 countries. Since 2007, Prodigy Finance has funded more than US$628 million in loans to over 13,600 students around the world. Prodigy Finance ranks 33rd in The Sunday Times Hiscox Tech Track 100, won the ‘Best Overall Peer-to-Peer Lending Platform’ in the Fintech Breakthrough Awards 2018, and was nominated by City AM as ‘Fintech Company of the Year’ and ‘Explosive Growth Company of the Year’ in 2016.

                
                

    Busy Deans (especially in a decentralized environment) do not have the time to pull together and rigorously maintain top quality professional development for all stages of Masters and Doctoral writing, research and career development.  This is even harder when students look for services on the web or in apps.  We boost retention and completion for a cost as low as 1-2 tuitions and our university partners rest easy that a constantly growing level of digital supports is available to all their graduate students. 

                

     

                
                

    Nature Research supports researchers with training and editing services to help institutions attract talent through our career services. We also help institutions promote recent findings and demonstrate research thought-leadership. Our partners benefit from editorial expertise and communication to an audience of scientists, consumers, and opinion-leaders through Nature journals and Scientific American.

                

     

                
                

    EAB’s mission is to make education smarter. We harness the collective power of more than 1,300 institutions to uncover proven practices and transformative insights. Since complex problems require multifaceted solutions, we work with each school differently to apply these insights through a customized blend of research, technology, and services.

                

     

                
                

    Wiley Education Services is a core business unit of Wiley, a global provider of knowledge and learning services. Wiley Education Services uniquely understands the process of designing and implementing innovative learning experiences and comprehensive solutions that address today’s higher education challenges. Through trusted collaborative relationships, Wiley provides services, technology, insights and content that support their education partners to achieve improved institutional performance and learners to achieve their goals. Together, We'll Transform Higher Education.

                

     

    CGS AM Exhibitor Sample Page
    Monday, December 21, 2020

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    CGS is the leading source of information, data analysis, and trends in graduate education. Our benchmarking data help member institutions to assess performance in key areas, make informed decisions, and develop plans that are suited to their goals.
    CGS Best Practice initiatives address common challenges in graduate education by supporting institutional innovations and sharing effective practices with the graduate community. Our programs have provided millions of dollars of support for improvement and innovation projects at member institutions.
    As the national voice for graduate education, CGS serves as a resource on issues regarding graduate education, research, and scholarship. CGS collaborates with other national stakeholders to advance the graduate education community in the policy and advocacy arenas.  
    CGS is an authority on global trends in graduate education and a leader in the international graduate community. Our resources and meetings on global issues help members internationalize their campuses, develop sustainable collaborations, and prepare their students for a global future.