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Before yesterdayPPJ Current

Teaching Graduate Students to Teach

As one who has urged graduate departments to offer their students a practicum in teaching, I read with interest Heather Brantโ€™s thoughtful post A Graduate Seminar With a Unique Topic: Teacher Training, published this spring. She describes a course she took that explored how insights from cognitive science and related areas could enhance understanding of [โ€ฆ]

The Ends and Means of a Graduate Student Conference

A graduate student in philosophy has the responsibility of organizing a graduate student conference hosted by their department, and has some questions, starting with:

1. โ€œWhy put on a graduate student conference? What should the purpose of a graduate conference be?โ€œ

(modification of a photo by Simon C. May)

They write, โ€œOne possible answer is that it provides a low stakes opportunity for grad students to practice presenting and commenting. And the student presenters can get valuable feedback on their work.โ€ But the student hase questions about how to address various issues:

2. โ€œI donโ€™t quite know how I should balance the needs and interests of the two main stakeholders: student presenters from other schools and the grad students at our school.โ€
3.ย โ€œWhich papers should we accept for the conference? The obvious answer is to accept the best papers. But there are competing goals. For example, I want the presenters to benefit from the conference. Our conference will have a (faculty) keynote speaker. So it seems thereโ€™s a reason to prioritize papers by graduate students that suggest theyโ€™d benefit the most from the keynote speakerโ€™s presence.โ€
4. โ€œI want to be inclusive of the diverse interests the audience (i.e. grad students at our department) might have. Not everyone is interested in the main theme of the conference, and Iโ€™d feel bad having them sit through the whole conference feeling bored. How many of the accepted papers should be โ€˜off-themeโ€™?โ€
5. โ€œShould location be taken in the consideration, by preferring students closer to our department since the travel cost would be lower?โ€
6. โ€œWhich parts of the conference do presenters and keynote speaker find the most value in?โ€
7. โ€œHow should I pick the conference theme? How narrow or broad should it be?โ€
8. โ€œHow can I get the grad students in my own department to be more invested in helping with the conference and making it good?โ€

They add: โ€œIn general, I want to hear from people who have attended and/or organized grad conferences. I want to know what they like and dislike about grad conferences, and how such conferences can be made better.โ€

Readers?


Building Community and Trust During a Graduate Student Strike

There is this passage from Camusโ€™s The Rebel that I taught to my students a couple of years ago and has stuck with me ever since. Talking about rebellion against The Absurd, Camus says that โ€œthe logic of the rebel is to want to serve justice so as not to add to the injustice of [โ€ฆ]

UC Faculty Strike Brought Huge Pay Raise, Now Administrators Are Cutting Grad Student Jobs to Pay For It

by Renae Cassimeda Two months after the six-weekย strikeย of 48,000 academic workers in the University of California system was prematurely shut down by the UAW bureaucracy, academic workers and the public university system are facing a new wave of attacks. In a retaliatory move, according to reports from academic workers throughout the UC system, the university has advised major cuts to departments. The move by the university is meant to punish workers for striking. The cuts are being justified as needed to pay for the cost of raises outlined in the new contracts between academic workers and the university. According to [โ€ฆ]
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Doctoral Program Attrition

Anyone who has earned a philosophy PhD in the US or Canada knows that not everyone who enters doctoral programs completes them. Even students who receive fellowships to attend highly-ranked programs do not always complete them. No doctoral program is immune to the problem of attrition. Sometimes students leave for reasons having nothing to do [โ€ฆ]

Temple U. Philosophy Faculty Express Support for Striking Grad Students

Graduate students at Temple University have been on strike since the end of January, seeking an increase in wages, more affordable healthcare, longer parental and bereavement leave, and better working conditions.

Faculty in the Department of Philosophy at Temple have issued a statement in support of their graduate student workers. Dated February 10th, it states:

As members of the Department of Philosophy faculty, we support the demands of the Temple University Graduate Studentsโ€™ Association (TUGSA) in their current contract negotiations with the University. We also strongly oppose the Universityโ€™s revocation of striking graduate studentsโ€™ tuition and health insurance benefits. Our graduate students rely on Temple health insurance to meet their basic healthcare needs. Directly threatening the health and welfare of members of our student body evidences a disregard for our community and undercuts the Universityโ€™s claims to care about equity.

Graduate workers are a key part of our department and our university: without them, we are not able to complete our own research, mentor undergraduate students, or effectively teach students in our courses.ย For over a year, TUGSA has put forward proposals to ensure fair wages, working conditions, dependent health care coverage, and leave policies for graduate TAs and RAs. These proposals would improve the lives of graduate workers, as well as benefiting our department and enhancing the quality of undergraduate instruction.

We believe that the members of TUGSA, even while they are on strike, remain Temple graduate students, and we hope that the University will refrain from unnecessarily harsh or disrespectful treatment of them.

Eli Alshanetsky, Philip Atkins, Katie Brennan, Cรฉsar Cabezas, Lee-Ann Chae, Eugene Chislenko, Paul Crowe, Kristin Gjesdal, Espen Hammer, Brian Hutler, Miriam Solomon, and David Wolfsdorf
Department of Philosophy,ย Temple University

You can learn more about the strike here.

Virtual Dissertation Writing Groups

New virtual writing groups for people working on dissertations in philosophy will be forming soon.

Joshua Smartย (Southern Illinois University โ€“ Edwardsville), once again, is organizing them. He writes in with the following information:

Signups are open through Sunday, January 29th. To join, fill out a short survey atย www.jasmartphilosophy.com/virtual-dissertation-groups.

What it is:ย Virtual Dissertation Groups is a free service for those currently working on their doctoral dissertations in philosophy departments (or philosophy of science or the like). Since 2014, VDG has connected students from over 30 countries to provide peer feedback on dissertation work with a minimal time commitment.

How it works:ย Each dissertator is placed in a group of three on the basis of a short survey about their project/area of work. Toward the end of each full month of the semester, one member will send some work (3k โ€“ 6k words) to the other two, who then return feedback in a week or so. (Usually these are written comments, though some groups choose to have video discussions.)

Why itโ€™s good:ย While advisors and committees are important, it can be incredibly helpful to discuss oneโ€™s work with peers in a lower-stakes environment and particularly enlightening to do so with those who take a different approach, outlook, or focus. There is evenย evidence from psychological researchย that even just thinking about problems in relation to persons who are geographically distant can promote creative insights. With students at a variety of programs and from around the world, VDG is a great way to capture some of these benefits!


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