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Overarching Questions. What have we learned from your institution's innovations?What is replicable?What future directions are worth pursuing?. Lessons Learned for Success and Transferability. Integration and continuity of programs and pathwaysExtensive involvement of top facultyRecruitment that
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1. Diversity Programs and Vertical Integration: Pathway to Doctoral Education and Beyond Susan K. Avery
University of Colorado, Boulder
Responsive Ph.D. Conference
Princeton, N.J., June 2005
2. Overarching Questions What have we learned from your institution’s innovations?
What is replicable?
What future directions are worth pursuing?
3. Lessons Learned for Success and Transferability Integration and continuity of programs and pathways
Extensive involvement of top faculty
Recruitment that focuses on fit
Graduate students as proactive agents of change
Provide academic and community support structures, especially expectation of success
Engagement (scholarship; teaching, learning and mentoring; application; community building; profession)
Collection of data and assessment of programs Elements of support:
pre-registration summer research experience
transparency of degree program outcomes
orientation programs that are ongoing – build relationships with faculty
Workshops
Peer advising (provide Lead Graduate Peer Advisor Positions – future; analogous to Lead GPTI)
Provide clear information on benchmarks to completion, average time to completion, utility of credential upon completion, options for employment
Have information and provide guidance on how underserved students can easily and readily share their doctoral ambitions, progress, success, with their familiesElements of support:
pre-registration summer research experience
transparency of degree program outcomes
orientation programs that are ongoing – build relationships with faculty
Workshops
Peer advising (provide Lead Graduate Peer Advisor Positions – future; analogous to Lead GPTI)
Provide clear information on benchmarks to completion, average time to completion, utility of credential upon completion, options for employment
Have information and provide guidance on how underserved students can easily and readily share their doctoral ambitions, progress, success, with their families
4. Diversity Efforts at CU-BoulderVertical Integration
Commitment to diversity
Enriches educational experience of students
Working diligently to increase minority graduate student enrollment and retention
Pipeline programs
SMART: completed 16th summer program
NIH/Howard Hughes Medical Institute Scholars Program: year-round comprehensive research program in biosciences
McNair Scholars, Minority UG programs (Arts and Sciences; Engineering)
Discipline-based programs: SOARS; Outreach (K-12); Federal Labs The main focus for the NIH award is to prepare our own undergraduates for graduate school. We have teamed up with the Biological Sciences Initiative, funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, to offer a comprehensive research program for our minority/first generation, low income bioscience majors to encourage more of the them to pursue doctoral studies.
The Graduate School received a national grant in 2004 for feasibility studies for professional master’s degrees. One of the guidelines for the proposal was to propose strategies to seek the participation of minorities and other underrepresented groups. The 15 thousand dollar award from the Ford Foundation and the Council of Graduate Schools was matched by Provost Phil DiStefano. Participating departments include geography, history and linguistics.
The main focus for the NIH award is to prepare our own undergraduates for graduate school. We have teamed up with the Biological Sciences Initiative, funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, to offer a comprehensive research program for our minority/first generation, low income bioscience majors to encourage more of the them to pursue doctoral studies.
The Graduate School received a national grant in 2004 for feasibility studies for professional master’s degrees. One of the guidelines for the proposal was to propose strategies to seek the participation of minorities and other underrepresented groups. The 15 thousand dollar award from the Ford Foundation and the Council of Graduate Schools was matched by Provost Phil DiStefano. Participating departments include geography, history and linguistics.
5. Diversity Efforts at CU-BoulderVertical Integration Federal programs at graduate level ($1M/year)
Colorado Diversity Initiative
NSF Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate
NIH Initiative for Minority Student Development grants
IGERT programs
Leveraging other CU Support Programs
Graduate Teacher Program
Graduate Career Services
Interdisciplinary and professional certificate programs
Post-Doctoral Program (2/year)
Celebrations
Diversity and Excellence Banquet
The main focus for the NIH award is to prepare our own undergraduates for graduate school. We have teamed up with the Biological Sciences Initiative, funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, to offer a comprehensive research program for our minority/first generation, low income bioscience majors to encourage more of the them to pursue doctoral studies.
The Graduate School received a national grant in 2004 for feasibility studies for professional master’s degrees. One of the guidelines for the proposal was to propose strategies to seek the participation of minorities and other underrepresented groups. The 15 thousand dollar award from the Ford Foundation and the Council of Graduate Schools was matched by Provost Phil DiStefano. Participating departments include geography, history and linguistics.
The main focus for the NIH award is to prepare our own undergraduates for graduate school. We have teamed up with the Biological Sciences Initiative, funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, to offer a comprehensive research program for our minority/first generation, low income bioscience majors to encourage more of the them to pursue doctoral studies.
The Graduate School received a national grant in 2004 for feasibility studies for professional master’s degrees. One of the guidelines for the proposal was to propose strategies to seek the participation of minorities and other underrepresented groups. The 15 thousand dollar award from the Ford Foundation and the Council of Graduate Schools was matched by Provost Phil DiStefano. Participating departments include geography, history and linguistics.
6. Future Directions More integration of pipeline including K-12; post-doctoral positions; discipline-based programs
Engagement of interdisciplinary programs/structures in recruitment and program development
Enhanced coordination with professional societies; Federal laboratories; private and public sectors
Strategies for sustainability of programs that work