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GPSO Monthly E-News: July 2013

Join us for a July social hour!

Who: you (and your friends and GPSO staff)

What: A Midsummer Night's Social Hour!

Where: The Tap, located on the corner of Kirkwood and College

When: 7-9pm on Friday, July 19

Why: Because it's summer, we like socializing, and we also like craft beer and (free!) Pizza X.

 

Still looking for fall funding?

Not sure if you need it?

Check out the following on- and off-campus resources:

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2013-2014 GPSO Elected Positions: Vice President, Treasurer

The IU Graduate and Professional Student Organization is seeking students to serve as Vice President and Treasurer for the 2013-2014 academic year.

Elections for these positions will be held in September, and nominations will be accepted in August. Interested students should direct questions to GPSO President Brady Harman at gpsopres@indiana.edu.

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2013-2014 GPSO Appointed Position: Benefits Officer

The IU Graduate and Professional Student Organization is accepting applications for the position of Benefits Officer for the 2013-2014 academic year.

The Benefits Officer addresses the benefit needs of Student Academic Appointees (SAA’s) and student employees, specifically health insurance, stipends, fee remission structure and related employment issues. The position seeks to recommend improvements to benefit and compensation policies for all graduate and professional students.

Interested graduate should contact gpso@indiana.edu for more information on the responsibilities, remuneration, and application process.

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Guest Article: The Point of Grad School is to Learn to Say No

Brian Croxell in The Chronicle of Higher Education ProfHacker

A few weeks ago, I discussed how I discovered toward the end of graduate school that mentoring is a fantasy. In short, what I mean by this is that in any advising situation both parties often have expectations of how the relationship will work and that these expectations do not always align with each other or with reality. I came to this realization after one of my dissertation readers suggested I add a bit of Heidegger to my project. (If that sounds like the set-up to an academic punchline, well, it’s Friday, right?) Eventually, I declined, and my reader didn’t bring it up again.

As I’ve reflected on this event again recently, I’ve come to a new realization, summed up neatly in this post’s title: the point of grad school is to learn to say “no.” Let me explain.

When I was finishing my undergraduate work, I found myself looking forward to grad school as an opportunity to stop writing research papers where I reported on others’ thoughts and instead began creating interpretations of my own about novels. I was a little bit surprised, then, to get to graduate school and find that I was even more reliant on citations of other scholars’ work than I had been as an undergrad. When was I going to get to do my own work? (I’ll go ahead and head off the comments by pointing out that this was clearly a mistaken view of how scholarship works. But I think it’s a feeling shared by many starting grad school.)

A clear example of not getting to set my own direction came with the lists of books that I was reading for my oral exams. Each time I chatted with any faculty member who would be sitting in on my examination, he or she would add another four books to my list. Not only was I not setting my direction, but I just couldn’t read it all. And so I rebelled a bit, halfway through my prep. I simply started erasing books from that list. My committee members could add more the next time I saw them, but I quickly discovered that they never really noticed that I had taken any away. Problem solved!

For years, I’ve shared this story of my orals lists with graduate students, seeing it as an inside tip to lighten their workload. In connection with my last post, however, I’m just now realizing that while I did make less work for myself, I wasn’t getting away with something on the sly so much as I was doing what I had wanted to do all along: decide for myself what I needed to know and say “no” to what I didn’t. Three years later, this is exactly what happened in the Heidegger conversation with my dissertation reader. In both cases, what perhaps matters most is that I had learned enough to say “no.”

In the end, this is what graduate school is all about. Training you to know when you are done and when you don’t need to do any more. I offer this not as evidence of any great perspicuity on my part. (It’s taken well more than 5 years to have this realization, after all.) Instead, it’s an effort, as so much of ProfHacker is, to make visible the hidden assumptions of work in academia.

Of course, knowing that the ultimate goal of grad school is to empower you to say “no” doesn’t give you permission to start refusing to do anything (à la Bartleby). But recognizing that this “no” is the endpoint of things may help current graduate students give credence to their own intuition and prepare advisers to congratulate them when they do. After all, all of us can benefit from doing a better job saying “no” on occasion to service commitmentsor to our “yes” habit.

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GPSO plans your weekends!

July 5 - 7

  • July 5, 6:30pm: Jazz in July - Craig Brenner and the Crawdads (IU Art Museum, free)

  • July 6, 10pm: Fourth of July Fireworks at Lake Monroe (Fourwinds Resort and Marina, $5)

  • July 7, 6:30pm: Bloomington Symphony Orchestra in the Park (Bryan Park, free)

July 12 - 14

  • July 12, 6:30pm: Fridays at Third Street Park Concerts (Third Street Park, free)

  • July 13, 10pm: New Wave Night - 80's Dance Party (Root Cellar, free)

  • July 14, 2pm: Shape Note Singing from the Sacred Harp (725 North Bell Trace, free)

July 19 - 21

  • July 19, 7:30pm: IU Festival Theatre - The Matchmaker (Norvelle Theatre, $15/students)

  • July 20, 2:30pm: Relay for Life of Monroe County (Bloomington High School North, donations only)

  • July 21, 2pm: Blues wity Gary Applegate (Oliver Winery, free)

July 26 - 28

  • July 26, 5:45pm: Gallery Talk - African Textiles/American Jazz (IU Art Museum, free)

  • July 27, 4-9pm: Bloomington Cycling Grand Prix (Kirkwood/Peoples Park, free)

  • July 28, 8am-8pm: Monroe County Fair (5700 W Airport Road, free)

Nothing look good to you?

Check out the ongoing exhibits featured in the sidebar or visit www.bloomingtonscene.com and www.visitbloomington.com for the full on- and off-campus scoop.

Have an event to promote?

Email me at gpso@indiana.edu, and I can help you spread the e-word to our fellow grad students.

Go have some fun!

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