University Graduate Council Minutes
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
Council in Attendance:
Mike Wittie (Engineering)
Christopher Livingston (Architecture)
Scott Creel (Letters & Science)
Tricia Seifert (Education)
Michael Brody (Faculty Senate)
Marc Giullian (Business)
Wade Hill (Nursing)
Catherine Dunlop (Letters & Science)
Hannah McKelvey (Library)
Dawn Tarabochia (Health & Human Development)
Craig Ogilvie (Dean of The Graduate School)
Also in Attendance:
Lauren Cerretti (Graduate School)
Emily Peters (Graduate School)
Absent:
Maureen Kessler (Student Representative)
Jane Mangold (Agriculture)
Dennis Aig (Arts)
Meeting started at 11:01 am on WebEx
September 14, 2021 minutes
- Motion to approve by Giullian, 2nd by Dunlop, unanimous approval
Announcements
- Update from the Dean
- Graduate enrollment 8% higher than last year; all time high
- Retention/time to degree efforts
- Retention survey sent to students that started this fall
- Will send summary information to departments
- 55 food scholarships awarded
- 20 childcare scholarships
- Wellbeing initiative: week of sleep Oct. 11-15
- Doctor in 5 initiative: encourage finishing in 5 years
- Retention survey sent to students that started this fall
- Faculty Senate update (Brody)
- Faculty Senate passed a resolution asking BOR to support mask mandate for the MUS system
- MUSFAR asking BOR to require vaccinations on campus
- Q: Will any of the policies UGC review go to Faculty Senate?
- Policies approved by UGC do not go to Faculty Senate for a vote
- Dean Ogilvie can attend to get feedback
Old Business
- Video Conferencing Policy
- Review revisions based on feedback from last meeting:
- Added that video can be turned off when screensharing
- Added that the student is not responsible for the logistics
- Motion to approve policy by Wittie, second by Dunlop
- Discussion: could clarify some of the language— “option” refers to videoconferencing;
applies to members and student could be moved to the beginning
- Agreement that these minor changes can be fixed when adding the language to the policy website
- Policy approved: 7 in favor, 0 opposed, 0 abstention
- Discussion: could clarify some of the language— “option” refers to videoconferencing;
applies to members and student could be moved to the beginning
- Review revisions based on feedback from last meeting:
- Co-convening Policy
- Review revisions based on feedback from department heads and faculty:
- Separate learning outcomes
- Quality of experience as perceived by students: instructor review evaluations
- UGC will review co-convened courses when they are new or changed
- Curriculum committee reviews when a course is updated
- Open Discussion:
- Attached syllabi often do not include much information about how different the classes will be—this policy ensures the differences are articulated
- Why is the focus on the experience versus the content?
- What does “experience” mean?
- A graduate class would speak to higher level skills: research, creation of knowledge; maybe the word is not experience
- Suggest: rigor, setting, or content (knowledge, skills, and affective development/dispositions)
- Content can be monitored. It is articulated in the syllabus. We can see the syllabus, not necessarily the experience.
- Do want to get a sense of the graduate student’s experience: addressed in item #3 (instructors review evaluations)
- Suggest the instructor should consider undergraduate evaluations separate from graduate evaluations
- This is the way it works now and is what instructors should be doing
- Suggest removing #3: it shouldn’t be a policy if not monitorable, but can be included as a best practice
- This should be reviewed at the departmental level: course instructors and departments should be the ones reviewing evaluations
- All courses should be reviewed, not just co-convened courses
- Increase in tenure track faculty would help
- Policy subcommittee will review and send back out to Council
- Review revisions based on feedback from department heads and faculty:
- CSAI-CERT Artificial Intelligence, Level I Proposal
- Review responses from proposer:
- UGC’s interpretation was correct—no individual course must be taken
- Open to changes in future if ethics courses available
- Philosophy offers an AI ethics—can send this information to proposer
- Worthwhile to wait on ethics course reply before voting—this could be added to the course list
- Still feel the answer to #1 isn’t sufficient. There should at least be one course
from the first and second block.
- Can build a curriculum map as a requirement and waive if a student has an equivalent course
- Seminars and Independent study must be AI relevant: couldn’t that mean anything?
- Provide additional feedback to proposer
- Review responses from proposer:
New Business
- Graduate Certificate in Science Teaching in STEM, Level I Proposal
- STEM is a broader area than MSSE has looked at: recommend reaching out to Ag Ed –
they have an online program
- Courses/partnership should be discussed to broaden the program
- Also include Math
- Also invite proposers to reach out to Dept of Ed – science instructors for licensure
areas
- Seems like there should be some coursework with an Education rubric, at least listed as options
- Should include letters from these departments stating their support (Math, Ag Ed, Educ)
- Proposal doesn’t clearly articulate how this is different than the other science certificates currently offered
- Doesn’t address whether there is a similar program in the MUS system or not – that will be asked by OCHE
- Livingston will send feedback to proposer
- Members can email their comments to Livingston to compile
- Courses/partnership should be discussed to broaden the program
- STEM is a broader area than MSSE has looked at: recommend reaching out to Ag Ed –
they have an online program
Adjourned at 12:30 pm
Next scheduled meeting – October 12, 2021 WEBEX