SG: The Graduate Council Blog

GC Home - Representatives - Forum - Documents

Welcome to the Graduate Council's Webpage. The Graduate Council consists of 17 representatives who serve to articulate their constituents' concerns. Each division has at least one voting seat while the larger divisions hold two voting seats. All Graduate Students have a right to speak in front of the Council, though appropriate decorum is required. Meetings are the 'odd' Mondays of the quarter at 6:15 in GSB 010. See the SG Calendar for the exact dates.

If you are interested in becoming active please contact myself or the chair of the committee which sparks your interest.

Anthony Green

Chair of the Graduate Council

Updated: February 13th, 2008

March 11, 2008

Petitions Available

Petitions Are Available NOW!!!!
Petitions are Due: 5:00 PM on 4/7/08 at Sharlene Holly’s Office Reynolds Club 2nd Floor, Room 205
Candidates Meeting: In the evening of 4/8/08
Elections Open:  9:00 AM on 4/22/08- 5:00PM on 4/24/08
Announcement of winners: ~6:00 PM on 4/24/08

To learn more about these positions, see the Constitution and the Overview page.

Executive Slate - A President, Vice President of Administration, and Vice President of Student Affairs run as a three person team. They are the executive branch of Student Government and represent all 15,000 students in the Student Association. To qualify for the ballot, collect 300 signatures of registered students. Download a petition.

Undergraduate and Graduate Liaison to the Board of Trustees - Two students who attend all Board of Trustee meetings at the University. They generally sit in the Student and Campus Life Committee Meeting. They also organize bringing trustees to campus and are a member of the Executive Cabinet. To qualify for the ballot, collect 200 signatures of registered students. Download a petition.

College Council - Four members are elected from each class year in the College. These members represent the College in Student Government’s legislative body, the Student Assembly. College Council members can also be elected by the Assembly to sit on the Student Government Finance Committee (SGFC), the Committee on Recognized Student Organizations (CORSO), and the Program Coordinating Council (PCC). To qualify, collect 30 signatures from students in your year. Download a petition.

All Petitions are due

April 7th at 5 PM

to Sharlene Holly’s Office (Reynols Club 2nd Floor, Room 205)

Written by Scott

Open Forum With the Provost

I was one of a handful of undergraduates who attended Monday’s Open Forum with Provost Rosenbaum.

Overall, I was really disappointed with the way that the provost addressed the numerous questions that he received about graduate student’s position in the budgetary process. He continually referenced the fact that he has to make decisions about university priorities: crumbling buildings, security, three gymnasiums south of the Midway, etc.  However, what I think gets to the core of the issue is that the issues of graduate student funding have an immediate effect on the lives of hundreds of people.  These are students in their mid or late twenties, thirties, and beyond, who have chosen to sacrifice the ability to almost certainly make significantly more money in the private sector for the opportunity to engage fruitfully in the life of the mind.  Shouldn’t this sacrifice and dedication to the intellectual principles of the university warrant more than a hand-wave as a passing gesture?  Don’t current graduate students constitute a meaningful part of the campus environment in which we all engage?

While I applaud the efforts of the administration to speak publicly about these issues, I urge them to consider the transparency of their decision making process, and their faltering rhetoric about institutional priorities.

Written by Matt

March 10, 2008

Airport Shuttle

The Shuttle will run on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of finals week. Registration is now open. The times are:

O’Hare Thursday 9:00 AM
Midway Thursday 9:00 AM

Midway Friday 5:00 AM
O’Hare Friday 6:00 AM
Midway Friday 6:00 AM
O’Hare Friday 8:00 AM
Midway Friday 8:00 AM
O’Hare Friday 10:00 AM
Midway Friday 10:00 AM
Midway Friday 2:00 PM
O’Hare Friday 12:00 PM
Midway Friday 12:00 PM

O’Hare Saturday 6:00 AM
Midway Saturday 6:00 AM
O’Hare Saturday 7:30 AM
Midway Saturday 7:30 AM
O’Hare Saturday 9:00 AM
Midway Saturday 9:00 AM
O’Hare Saturday 10:30 AM
Midway Saturday 10:30 AM
O’Hare Saturday 12:00 PM
Midway Saturday 12:00 PM
O’Hare Saturday 1:30 PM
Midway Saturday 1:30 PM

Written by Scott

March 9, 2008

Support Our Graduate Students

Graduate Students

Deserve Better!

Show your support for the people who make the life of the mind possible by coming out to:

The Rally on the Quads on Wednesday, March 12th at Noon!
Complete with bands, demands, and guest speakers!

RSVP on Facebook here and here.

Learn more at the Graduate Funding Blog.

Background Article:

University of Chicago Receives a Failing Grade in Graduate Student Funding

CHICAGO – University of Chicago graduate students unveiled a “Grad Funding Report Card” on Thursday in the form of a 7-foot banner, which they carried through the University’s main quad. Over the past four days nearly 500 students participated in a survey to voice their opinions on how well recent University actions met student needs. The results were released last Wednesday.

Students were not impressed. Students felt the university continued to fail to resolve key concerns. The administration received an “F’ concerning teaching pay as well as a ‘D-“ for health care. Dissertation grants and stipends both received “C-” grades while summer grants won the highest grade of “C.” Student leaders also gave the university an
‘F’ for participation as Provost Thomas Rosenbaum has yet to meet in an open forum with students.

This is only the latest action in the growing demand for improved funding for Humanities, Social Science and Divinity school graduate students at the university. Last week, 150 students marched from the library and up the five flights of stairs to present apples (a symbol of education) to Provost Rosenbaum. Each apple signed by students asked the
Provost to advocate for better funding on their behalf.

The poor funding situation was highlighted last February when President Zimmer promised $50 million dollars to fully fund all future students in
the Humanities and Social Sciences. However, this new plan ignored the approx. 2000 current students whose funding falls far below the cost of living.

Teaching pay has not been raised for these divisions in the past 10 years. Student teachers at peer universities currently make as much as four to five times what the University of Chicago currently pays. The University also fails to compensate student employees with health care benefits.

Throughout the past year, graduate students have been working with the administration trying to improve current student funding. In response,
the Provost released a plan last Thursday, February 21^st to make some limited improvements in funding for those left out of the $50 million dollar funding initiative. However, these improvements fail to make
systematic changes to teaching pay and health care and only committed 10% of the funds that were needed to provide full funding to the university’s graduate students.

Student leaders will continue to press the university for increased funding and plan to hold another larger event– a rally featuring student and faculty speakers– on Thursday March 12^th . Students will
be presenting demands for increase teaching compensation equal to peer institutions, baseline stipends for all current graduate students,
summer research support, health insurance for all students employed by the university, a guarantee of quality teaching opportunities and dissertation-writing grants for all students.

Written by Scott

March 8, 2008

GC 3/3 Minutes

Graduate Council meeting minutes from March 3rd now posted.

Written by Mariana

March 3, 2008

Provost to Discuss Report in Open Forum

The Provost, Thomas Rosenbaum, will be discussing the Report on Graduate Aid and the action steps recommended in the report on Monday, March 10th at Noon in Max Palevsky Cinema (aka Doc Filmn).

The Provost and Cathy Cohen, the Deputy Provost for Graduate Education, will answer your questions about the Action Steps and discuss other issues of concern to graduate students.

Hosted by Graduate Council, all students are encouraged to attend!

Written by Scott

February 25, 2008

Provost Report’s Bad Accounting

The recent Provost Report on Graduate Funding DRASTICALLY overestimates the cost of funding all current Social Sciences and Humanities students at the same level as new students for this current year and the next three years.

By $23 Million

How does this happen? The administration estimated the cost of adding a 5th year of coverage by including ~$36,000 in annual tuition. So calculating their cost to them, for students in Advanced Residence Year One as ~$36,000 + $19,000. In fact, Advanced Residence’s tuition is estimated on the bursar’s site to cost $15,000. This tuition estimate has been confirmed by the administration in light of this news.

If you see this spreadsheet it goes into greater depths explaining the math. The cogent facts can be summarized as:

  • By mis estimating tuition, the administration overly inflated the estimated cost to support graduate students
  • Whereas before it would have taken $57 Million over four years to support current Graduate Students at the same level of incoming Graduate Students, this amount is actually closer to $33 Million
  • To cover Graduate Students for the next three years it would actually cost $17 Million (~$3 Million has already been pledged) where before it would have cost around $35 Million for the next three years.

Disclaimer: because our calculations are themselves based off the working report’s numbers, we can’t be sure of the exact figure on the bottom line. But it shouldn’t be wildly different from the $33 million and $17 million respectively.

It is extremely disappointing and disheartening that the Provost Report was allowed to be released with these bad numbers. Student Government hopes that this accounting error is not indicative of how serious the administration is focusing on this issue, and instead is just a simple mistake. Mistakes like these place a burden of mistrust upon this process and it is now on the administrations shoulder’s to bear and overcome this burden.

Substantive steps should be taken to show this matter is being treated with the utmost seriousness and that the administration will be one hundred percent truthful and accurate in all future reporting on this matter.

Especially given that four of the Provost’s recent proposals involve setting up new committees of inquiry. The veracity of these committee’s reports and of the information they have to work must be verified and guaranteed by the administration for future inquiry into these matters is to proceed.

This information was discovered thanks to the hard work of Daragh Grant and I was notified by our Graduate Liaison to the Board, Erica Simmons. Thursday the 28th, the Graduate Report Card on funding will be released on the main quads to respond to the Provost’s report.

Written by Scott

February 22, 2008

Graduate Council Minutes

GC Minutes for February 18th now available on the Minutes page.

Written by Mariana

February 18, 2008

Posting on Forum or Blog

If you want to post on the Forum or the Blog, you need to create a new account. Your CNET ID is not valid for these. You can use the same one but you still need to register as a new user. To do this on the forum, go to the ‘Register‘ Link on the top-center of the header and follow the directions. To post on the blog click on the ‘Register‘ link on the right side of the main blog.

Sorry for the confusion.

Written by Anthony

February 15, 2008

Synopsis of Graduate Funding up to now

This text is intended to make more accessible the diverse activity surrounding the effort to increase funding for current graduate students at the University of Chicago, activity that is a direct response to the new funding package aimed only at new graduate students. For any students who want to get involved or want
more information, this document is meant to make that effort significantly easier.

Synopsis of Graduate Funding 2-15-08

Written by Anthony



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