Wednesday, April 22, 2009

2009 Graduate Mentoring Awards


from Left: Marianne Constable, Department of Rhetoric (Sarlo);
Amani Nuru-Jeter, Department of Public Health (Sarlo),
Loren Partridge, Department of History of Art (FMA),
Inez Fung, Department of Planetary Science (FMA).
(Carla Hesse, Department of History (FMA), not seen here, at a conference overseas.
)

Presented by the Graduate Council, the Graduate Assembly, and the Graduate Division.

Today, awards are being presented to the winners of The Sarlo Distinguished Graduate Student Mentoring Award, and the Graduate Assembly Distinguished Faculty Mentoring Awards. The former is funded by a grant from the Sarlo Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin, and Sonoma Counties. The latter comes from the Graduate Assembly.

The 2009 Sarlo Distinguished Graduate Student Mentoring Award Recipients are
Marianne Constable, a professor in the Department of Rhetoric
and
Amani Nuru-Jeter, an assistant Professor in the School of Public Health.


The 2009 Graduate Assembly Distinguished Faculty Mentoring Award Recipients are
Inez Fung, a professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Science,

Carla Hesse, a professor in the Department of History,
and
Loren Partridge, chair and professor in the Department of History of Art.



For more information, please visit:
Best practices for faculty mentoring of graduate students adopted by the Graduate Council, March 6, 2006
The Sarlo Foundation
Graduate Assembly Distinguished Faculty Mentoring Awards
and The Sarlo Distinguished Graduate Student Mentoring Awards website.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

April Meeting Recap

A recap of the April delegates meeting followed by some forwarded
announcements:

1) Please keep in mind ASUC elections are underway. For information and to
vote, go to www.elections.asuc.org

2) We heard from Vice Chancellor of Equity and Inclusion, Gibor Basri

3) Resolution results: 0903a (amended in accordance with the Rules
committee analysis and approved); 0903b (approved); 0903c (amended in
accordance with the Rules committee analysis and approved); 0903g (amended
in accordance with the Budget committee analysis and approved); 0903e&f
tabled until the May meeting.

4) Below I've included a revised April officer report from Project
Coordinator Liaison, Zelideth Maria Rivas, as well as a message from
Budget Chair Nish Rajan about the ASUC elections (the ASUC voter guide is
attached to this email).

a) Project Coordinator Liaison Report:
This month, the projects has concentrated on outlining their environmental
sustainability policies which includes offering discounts at events for
people who bring their own mugs and higher level of co-sponsorship for
environmentally conscious groups.

April 16: Death and Taxes party (GSC and GSSP) @ Alumni House @ 6-9, $4,
$1 off for those that bring their own mug
April 18: Cal Day GA Open House 9AM-4PM (GMORR)
April 18: American Indian Grads Cal Day Recruiting (GMORR)
April 23: Lecture of Color @ 7:30PM @ Wheeler (GMSP)
April 24: WOCI brown bag series Heller Lounge
April 25: Bay Cruise (GSC) – SOLD OUT
April Women’s writing workshop and performance with slam poet (GWP)
April Panel/Dinner with Women Professor: Dialogue on Personal and
Professional Journey (GWP)
May 1: Women of Color Brown Bag Discussion (WOCI)
May 4: Berkeley Review of Ed and L&S – Guest Lecturer Ana Celia Fratella
from UCSD (GMORR)
May 9: Solidarity Sunday (GMORR)
May Graduate Women’s Study Hall (GWP)
May Spring Fiesta (GWP)


b) Message from Nish:

Hello Delegates,

As requested after the presentation by the ASUC senators at the delegates
meeting last week, please find attached a voter guide to the ASUC
elections in PDF form. This guide is available in printed form in today's
(April 6th Monday) Daily Californian.

There you will see many candidates running for executive office
(President, Executive VP, External Affairs VP, Academic affairs VP and
Student Advocate. Many of these positions play similar roles as the
Executive board does on the GA.

There are also many candidates for the Senate. There are only 20 seats
available on the Senate for those candidates. Many of those candidates
have cogent platforms. Some have less cogent ones. A description of the
various party statements follows on the last page.

Also on the last page are the main propositions being considered in this
election. The propositions are mostly procedural but seek to change the
procedure of recall elections (presumably balancing the power to check
senators with the possibility of expensive, inefficient recall processes),
unintentional typos, suspension of ASUC bylaws (balancing procedural rule
with efficiency) and polling in residence areas.

The campus faces many challenging issues in the coming months and years. A
strong empowered graduate student electorate will be key for a variety of
important issues that will be on the ballot in the next three years. I
would encourage all of you to make your colleagues aware of these issues
and promote a more involved grad student body.

I am happy to answer any questions you may have on this issue. Please feel
free to respond to this email with clarifications etc.

thanks,
Nish