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zb642

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  1. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to virmundi in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Okay, okay... don't rat me out, guys.


    March 11, 2012
    Grad Programs in Humanities Are Shrinking

    Enrollment cutbacks redefine curricula as well as faculty jobs



    Matt Roth for The Chronicle
    "We are a research institution, and it's very important for faculty to bring their research material to bear in graduate courses," says William L. Pressly (left, at a faculty retreat), chair of the department of art history and archaeology at the U. of Maryland.

    By Robin Wilson
    Over the past decade, the University of Maryland's department of art history and archaeology has admitted up to a dozen graduate students each year. But when Caroline J. Dubinsky and Jessica Williams arrived on the College Park campus last fall, they were the department's only two new Ph.D. students.
    Like many graduate programs in the arts and humanities, Maryland's department is slimming down: Since 2005 its graduate-student population has fallen by a third, to a total of just 42.
    Some of that is the result of an extra push to get longtime graduate students to finish up and get out the door. But universities are also purposefully shrinking graduate programs because they are reluctant to continue flooding the already swamped academic job market with more Ph.D.'s, and because institutional budget problems have reduced fellowship money for students.
    "We are trying to right-size, given resources and the job market," says Elizabeth Bergmann Loizeaux, associate dean of Maryland's College of Arts and Humanities. "For most programs in the college, that has meant smaller graduate programs." Since 2009, graduate enrollment in the college has shrunk by 10 percent.

    Enlarge Image

    Matt Roth for The Chronicle
    With just two new Ph.D. students, art-history professors at the U. of Maryland are talking about opening up their graduate program to students looking to earn master's degrees to train for jobs in museums and other nonacademic destinations.
    Enlarge Image

    Matt Roth for The Chronicle
    Caroline J. Dubinsky (left) and Jessica Williams are the two new Ph.D. candidates in Maryland's department of art history and archaeology this year. "The idea of going to a university where my adviser would have 30 students and not remember my name was very unattractive," says Ms. Williams.
    The cuts are being made not only in art history, but also in English, history, comparative literature, and foreign languages. And they are happening even in top programs at institutions like Harvard University and the University of California at Los Angeles. The result? Changes in the very nature of graduate education, and in the shape of faculty jobs.
    Universities are canceling or recasting graduate seminars—the cornerstone of graduate education—and struggling to maintain a lively intellectual environment for students with fewer peers. Professors who have long counted the training of graduate students as a prized role are competing for the dwindling number of students. And as training graduate students becomes a smaller part of their jobs, professors are being forced to focus elsewhere, including on undergraduate teaching.
    "The only place I can really use some of the research I have is at the graduate level, and now I don't have someone to impart it to," says Anthony Colantuono, an associate professor of art history at Maryland, whose department held a retreat this month to talk about how to maintain a vibrant graduate program while admitting only a couple of students a year.
    Like many scholars in his field, Mr. Colantuono knows several languages. While undergraduates do not need to know them, he says, graduate students performing fieldwork do. "You want to pass that on; otherwise it could be lost for good," he says. With fewer graduate students enrolling, that loss is a real threat. "We are all terrified by this," he says, "because as researchers we're committed to graduate teaching."
    Uneven Decline

    The Council of Graduate Schools reported last fall that new graduate-student enrollment dropped in 2010 for the first time in seven years. Enrollment of new graduate students over all fell by 1.1 percent from 2009. But the decline was not equal across disciplines. Doctoral programs in the arts and humanities saw a drop, while the number of students in some Ph.D. programs—physical and earth science, health sciences, and business—actually rose.
    The biggest programs have seen the greatest declines. The graduate program in English at Ohio State University, traditionally one of the country's most robust, will trim its new enrollment for the next academic year by half compared with 2009-10, to around 20 master's and doctoral students. In the early 1990s, the program admitted as many as 60 students a year, says Frank Donoghue, a professor of English there.
    Indiana University's graduate program in English used to bring in as many as 70 students a year, says Patricia Clare Ingham, who is director of graduate studies there. "IU was one of those large, factory Big Ten programs," she says. But starting in the mid-1990s, the department began restricting enrollment to 19 to 25 graduate students per year, and last academic year it took another dip, to 14.
    The history department at the University of Wisconsin at Madison cut its new graduate admissions in half this past fall, to just 21 students. "Why train people if the outlook for professional historians is not nearly as good as it was five years ago?" asks Laird Boswell, director of graduate studies in the department.
    Pennsylvania State University's history department has gone even farther, dropping entire subfields in which graduate students were once invited to specialize and keeping only those in which it has a good track record of helping graduates find jobs. As of this academic year, it is no longer admitting students who want to write dissertations in 20th-century American history, modern European history, or medieval history. In the process, it is hoping to cut overall graduate enrollment by around 30 students—to a total of 40—in two years.
    "This is the way of the future, and we're way ahead of the curve here," says Michael Kulikowski, chairman of the history department, which was featured at this year's annual meeting of the American Historical Association as one of 10 departments doing innovative things. "People have been talking about the oversupply of unemployable Ph.D.'s in the humanities for several decades, and I think we've found a part of the solution. We are concentrating on areas where we can place students competitively."
    Vying for Seminars

    But while many deans and department heads say cutting back is wise, not everyone is embracing the trend. Some professors point to ways that a smaller student population is altering the culture of graduate education, for both students and faculty members. With fewer students, departments are winnowing the number of graduate seminars, which means that professors may teach graduate students only once a year, or even less.
    Ohio State's English department, which has 80 tenured and tenure-track professors, is reducing the number of its graduate seminars next year from 57 to 43. "I gave every field one seminar per semester, which means if you have six faculty in your area, they may get one every two to three years," says Marlene Longenecker, an emeritus professor who does course scheduling for the department. "We've had a lot of moans and groans."
    Mr. Donoghue, the English professor at Ohio State, has written a forthcoming article for the journal Pedagogy about the phenomenon. "The privilege of teaching a graduate seminar every year, or at least every two years, long ago came to become an expected perk of faculty teaching jobs at Ohio State," he says. "It clearly can't be anymore, but who gets seminars and who doesn't has become an increasingly significant factor in faculty morale."
    To keep graduate seminars well populated as enrollment shrinks, some departments are broadening the territory covered by the courses and allowing undergraduates as well as graduate students in other fields to sign up. Some professors and students applaud the move as making graduate education more interdisciplinary, but others say it waters down the intellectual conversations that should take place. It may also prompt faculty members to "make up sexy or bogus topics" to compete for students, says Mr. Colantuono, the art historian at Maryland. This spring his seminar on spirituality in the arts in the 17th century is one of five graduate courses the department is offering that enrolled three to seven students each. A sixth seminar was turned into an undergraduate class when not enough graduate students signed up.
    "From now on," he says, professors might think, 'I'm going to choose topics designed to arouse attention rather than things people need to know, so I will attract people in other fields." For example, if one of Mr. Colantuono's colleagues were teaching something racier than a course on 17th-century altar pieces in Dominican churches, he might "trump something up"—like 17th-century images of vampires—to bring in more students. "Because I'll have people in other fields, I will have to change the curriculum and decrease the specialization. It will create a lower level of graduate education."
    'The Soul of What We Do'

    Clifton Crais, a professor of history at Emory University, says professors are upset about the changes because they threaten a key way in which faculty members define themselves. "Training graduate students is part of the soul of what we do," he says. Emory's history department has cut the number of graduate students it accepts by more than half, from a high of 16 in 2008-9 to just six this year. "For many people, they are defined by their ability to train grad students in a particular model," says Mr. Crais. "And without that, it is causing people a great deal of anxiety."
    James Van Horn Melton, director of graduate studies in history at Emory, has sometimes borne the brunt of that anxiety. As head of the committee that decides which students to admit each year, he gets angry e-mails from faculty members, who also complain to the dean when graduate applicants in their own fields are not among the handful of new students each year. "The kind of pressure I feel has grown noticeably more intense," he says. "Some faculty members see how many Ph.D.'s they train as an index of their standing in the profession."
    In a sign of just how important graduate students are to professors, one historian at Emory agreed to pass up an outside job offer after Emory made a counteroffer that included allowing the history department to admit a few extra graduate students in 2010. That year the department admitted 12 students, says Jeffrey Lesser, chairman of history. (He wouldn't identify the faculty member.)
    Mr. Donoghue, at Ohio State, worries that with the decline in the amount of time that professors devote to training graduate students, administrators at research universities will find a reason to increase teaching loads, which have traditionally been kept low so professors could perform scholarship that they impart to graduate students. Indeed, one thing research-university professors may be doing more of is undergraduate teaching, particularly in departments like Ohio State's, where there are about 1,000 undergraduate English majors. "There are going to be a few people who really don't get enough graduate teaching, the meaty stuff," says Ms. Longenecker. "So every so often they will have a year where they will teach more composition than they ever wanted to."
    State legislators and some higher-education analysts have argued for years that tenured professors should spend more time with undergraduates. But William L. Pressly, who heads the department of art history and archaeology at Maryland, says substituting undergraduate teaching for work with graduate students isn't going to go over well with professors. Indeed, while faculty members at research universities like Maryland understand that their jobs must include some undergraduate teaching, and some embrace it, many were hired with the understanding that they would focus on scholarship and training graduate students.
    "Working with graduate students keeps you on your toes," says Mr. Pressly. "We are a research institution, and it's very important for faculty to bring their research material to bear in graduate courses." With undergraduate lectures, he says, "you stand up there and talk and you could be saying great stuff, but it just kind of washes over them."
    A Different Kind of Education

    Because faculty members are teaching fewer graduate seminars now, it is sometimes hard for students to establish relationships with them that lead to research collaborations. "It used to be that if you cultivated a relationship with a faculty member through courses, the relationship with the professor as a dissertation adviser would naturally follow," says Julia Voss, a third-year Ph.D. student in English at Ohio State. "But I had to ask a few professors first and then finally persuade my final adviser to agree to be my adviser, because I'd only taken one course with her."
    Some professors and students also worry that with fewer students enrolled, graduate education­—already a solitary endeavor—may become even more isolating. Students may find themselves without a critical mass of peers with whom to hash out problems and ideas. "With a larger graduate program, there is more discussion, argumentation, and contact," says Mr. Boswell, the history-graduate-studies director at Wisconsin.
    Ali Behdad, chairman of English at the University of California at Los Angeles, says he's tried to ensure that graduate students feel a part of a broad intellectual community. The number of incoming graduate students in the department will be down by about half next year from the early 1990s, he says, and the department, which has been admitting as many as 14 students a year, now hopes to hold the line at 12.
    Mr. Behdad invites distinguished scholars from off campus to give talks each month, with food and wine. "This creates an intellectual context for students and faculty to come together and creates a sense of community within the department," he says.
    Clearly, there are some pluses to smaller graduate programs­—particularly for students. Ms. Williams, one of the two art-history students admitted this year at Maryland, took an English course last semester and is now friendly with several graduate students in that department. "You'd be less willing to branch out if you had a larger class in your own department," she says. "It's wonderful because they have a different perspective on art, and I have a different perspective on literature. We help each other."
    Ms. Williams also says she gets special attention as one of only two new graduate students in art history. "The idea of going to a university where my adviser would have 30 students and not remember my name was very unattractive," she says.
    Ms. Dubinsky, the other art-history student admitted to Maryland this year, says being one of only two chosen was a "confidence booster." What's more, she says, they do not have to worry about competing with a horde of other graduate students for fellowship money.
    Still, when the art-history professors at Maryland gathered at a faculty member's home this month for their retreat, it was clear that they did not think the department could run a viable graduate program with just two new students each year.
    So the faculty members talked about opening the graduate program up to students who want to earn just a master's degree to train for jobs outside academe—in museums for example. "Our goal is to accept five students per year," says Mr. Pressly, chair of the department. "It would maintain a critical mass that would make for a healthy program."
    How 3 Graduate Programs Are Scaling Back

    OHIO STATE U.
    Department of English
    Number of graduate students: The university plans to enroll 20 students in 2012-13, down from 30 this year.
    Number of graduate seminars: 43 are scheduled for 2012-13, compared with 57 this year.
    Response to the decline: The campus chapter of the English Graduate Organization has taken steps to preserve a sense of community among graduate students even as their numbers shrink, holding colloquia where students present their work and organizing town-hall-style meetings on issues like what it means to be a teaching assistant.
    U. OF MARYLAND AT COLLEGE PARK
    Department of art history and archaeology
    Number of graduate students: Two enrolled this year, down from eight last year.
    Number of graduate seminars: 10 are offered this year, down from 11 last year.
    Response to the decline: The department held a retreat this month at which faculty members talked about whether the graduate program can remain vital while admitting significantly fewer students.
    U. OF WISCONSIN AT MADISON
    Department of history
    Number of graduate students: 21 are enrolled this year, down from 40 last year.
    Number of graduate seminars: 35 are offered this year, up from 30 last year (seminar enrollment dropped this year to 346 students, down from 387).
    Response to the decline: The department added a sentence in its letter to accepted graduate students this year, warning them about the job market: "You should also know that a growing number of history Ph.D.'s will likely have to use their training to seek employment outside the academic world."
  2. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to crazedandinfused in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    So is NYU really going to drag this out until April 14, 11:59 PM?
  3. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to uhohlemonster in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    I JUST GOT INTO NYU!!! FULLY FUNDED!!!

    For those of you still waiting from them, I should tell you that I applied to the dual program with History/Hebrew Judaic Studies, so we wouldn't be hearing the same day necessarily.

    this just made my weekend
  4. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to goldielocks in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    I just declined at Rutgers. It broke my heart, but I know it was the right decision. Here's hoping that frees up a spot for one of you on the wait list. As for me, I guess that means I'm D-O-N-E with this process. Now to the hard stuff! Thanks to all of you for being such a wonderful resource. I'll be lurking...
  5. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to R_Escobar in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Just received my email from UVA, which brings my season to an end. Now all that is left is decisions.
  6. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to zb642 in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    I'm not certain about NYU or Yale, but of 43 Chicago social sciences MA's who applied for a Chicago PhD last year, 18 were accepted. Within history, it was 7 out of (I believe) 12.
  7. Downvote
    zb642 reacted to virmundi in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Hmm -- if that is truly the case, one can only hope that you are never in such a position. Our field is one in which collegiality is highly valued. To completely disregard how others might feel is certainly far from being tactful.
  8. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to lureynol in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Guys... I got into Cambridge!
  9. Upvote
    zb642 got a reaction from StrangeLight in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Yep, and I think inflated numbers can come from the department, as well. I find it difficult to believe Columbia's claim that they have over 600 applicants annually, when comparable schools (Chicago, Yale, Harvard) never claim more than 400. Maybe it's the New York factor, but I'm doubtful.
  10. Downvote
    zb642 got a reaction from goldielocks in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Yep, and I think inflated numbers can come from the department, as well. I find it difficult to believe Columbia's claim that they have over 600 applicants annually, when comparable schools (Chicago, Yale, Harvard) never claim more than 400. Maybe it's the New York factor, but I'm doubtful.
  11. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to A Finicky Bean in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Dear History Grad Cafe-ers,

    Okay, I'm officially rejected-across-the-board. I got my Stanford reject just a few minutes ago. Now, I'm going to get off here for awhile and finish my last semester of my MA program (plan b exam in may). To those of you who were accepted: congratulations from the bottom of my heart!! For those of us with no acceptances: I'll see you on here again. I am going to be reapplying in the Fall of 2013. I am going to take next year to write some articles, work on getting published, learn more languages and such.

    I will be back.

    I will get into a doctoral program.

    I have reached my goal of applying before I turned 30. Now, I need to reach my goal and finish up this Master's semester. I think I will pick up German next year-- any other recommendations? I have Romanian, Spanish, and a working knowledge (reading) of French. I think German and Hebrew would be good ones next. Or Hungarian...or Russian...hmmm.

    For those of you that have been so gracious to PM me- I WILL be returning your letters. Just give me a bit. I am reading 5 books a week and working on two 25 page papers for May. Also- anyone else want to keep in contact? I would love to know real names and emails and even facebooks (or linked ins). Just PM me for details. So, you all have been amazingly supportive and I look forward to lurking this fall and then getting back into the thick of things in Fall 2013.

    Again, congratufuckinglations (in a good way!!) to those who got in! You are all-stars, know that for sure.

    Love,

    A_Finicky_Bean

    PS- If you are in the SF Bay area, let me know...I got the tips on getting to Stanford (and I'm in the east bay) and nice residences. Also, I'm presenting a paper at Berkeley in May if any of you are around (oh, awkward going there when I've got rejected...but so is applying to Indiana's language program this summer and working in the Hoover archives at Stanford).

    PPS- I am so happy to have been around such a great group of people and I sincerely hope to become "real life" friends with many/most/all of you.
  12. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to New England Nat in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    So I'm going to be brutal here and I'm sorry for that.

    The department at Princeton today released the list of accepted students by field to the current graduate students. It did not include Stafferz so they had already taken her decline into account. Not including Stafferz they accepted 35 people (last year they accepted 36), so they did not change their rate of acceptence at all. They are aiming for a yield of 22-23 again. With one exception this makes the idea that they will take anyone off the wait list very low.

    The composition of the cohort, with about 10 Americanists including the early americanists and the legal historians, makes me believe it is nearly impossible that they will take any Americanists off the wait list. In terms of composition relative to last year they took only half as many medievalists (if you include Byzantinists). So my suspicion that they were going to take more Americanists this year was correct.

    So the one exception. With Stafferz declining of their offer there are no Africanists on the list. In previous years they have taken one or two a year. This leads me to believe that if they take anyone off the wait list at all it will be an Africanist. But there is hardly a guarrentee of that.

    I'm sorry to be the bringer of bad news.... but there is very little room for interpretation given the list they posted. I just thought it best to make sure those of you on the Princeton wait list have realistic expectations.
  13. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to Safferz in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    So as we approach another new week that I'm sure will be as eventful as the last, I want to wish everyone the best of luck. I started off this week with a rejection from the lowest ranked school I applied to, and I was so sure that meant definite rejections from the rest. By mid-week I was thinking about a plan B, and kicking myself for aiming too high by not being realistic with my applications. Then I received the email from UPenn just before class on Wednesday afternoon, and by Thursday morning I had five acceptances. So stay patient and optimistic, and don't question yourself, your abilities or your worth as a candidate! Also keep in mind that it's still early in the process, and interpret silence as a sign that you're still in the running.

    Good luck folks! I'm almost embarrassed to admit that I haven't heard from my top choice yet, so I'm waiting for news this week too
  14. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to Safferz in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Found it -- UChicago conference on Jersey Shore Studies.
  15. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to owls in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    for people waiting on Berkeley-- checked their website today, got a rejection. (I think we can mostly assume that if you haven't gotten an acceptance from them, it's an implicit rejection, but check the website!) Kind of a bitter pill to swallow, since it was my undergrad institution...but in MUCH BETTER NEWS: got into Yale!
  16. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to oseirus in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Now I just feel weird & icky ... did I give a girl kudos?!?! I probably have kudos :-( ... JOKES!
  17. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to Safferz in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Just got into Princeton! Email from the dean of the graduate school.
  18. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to crazedandinfused in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Wow. Kindly take your bitterness elsewhere, ok? I don't want this forum to descend into invective so I won't respond directly; just don't bring that shit around here.
    " Those who indulge in or need human attachment are weak, they lack the resolve to suffer and destroy themselves for the sake of their art"
    Who does this guy/gal think he/she is? Oooooh, a suffering artist! Balls. Sorry, I had to. I'm very happy in my relationship and i already have a graduate degree, so thank you very much.
  19. Downvote
    zb642 reacted to deadmanfrack in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Be warned, top PhD programs are the bane of many relationships and marriages. Being a graduate student at a top program does not make you a great scholar, most are not and never will be. I am frustrated by the cheeriness of this forum, the last thing our field needs is more overly positive modern nonsense. Those who indulge in or need human attachment are weak, they lack the resolve to suffer and destroy themselves for the sake of their art. That's why the average time for PhD completion is 7yrs these days when it should be 4-5.
  20. Upvote
    zb642 reacted to crazedandinfused in Fall 2012 Applicant Chit Chat   
    Hahahaha!!! I think that the collective reaction says more about our mental state than it does about any ambiguity in TeachGrad's statement. We are all on many pins and needles......
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