West Virginia University Research Corporation (Morgantown, WV 26506-6201) Ryan Claycomb (Project Director: November 2017 to December 2019)
ZA-260704-18
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$21,352 (approved) $21,352 (offered) $21,352 (awarded)
Grant period:
7/1/2018 – 6/30/2019
|
The Broadly Trained Humanist: A Pathway to a More Flexible Humanities Ph.D.
The development of a Ph.D. Pathways program that
integrates career planning and public communication.
The WVU Humanities Center, with the Departments of History and English and the Office of Graduate Education and Life (OGEL) will innovate our humanities PhD programs by integrating parallel career planning and public communication of humanities knowledge for the public good. We will diversify doctoral training through a three-part approach: revised funding models, new practices for doctoral curricula, and programming that expands the humanities PhD to include a broad range of meaningful careers.
|
|
Washington State University (Pullman, WA 99164-0001) Todd Butler (Project Director: November 2017 to present)
ZA-260708-18
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$18,000 (approved) $18,000 (offered) $18,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2018 – 12/31/2019
|
Reimagining the 21st-Century Land Grant Ph.D.
The development of a mission-driven model for doctoral
education.
“Reimagining the 21st-Century Land Grant Ph.D.” envisions placing Washington State University’s land grant mission of public service at the heart of its humanities doctoral programs. Concentrating in particular on underserved communities, the proposal will catalyze discussions and regional site visits focusing on partnering with rural communities state-wide, expanding digital outreach and skills-building, and revising graduate program requirements to support more culturally-sensitive models of public engagement. These discussions will include not only humanities faculty, graduate students, and alumni but also key administrators and faculty from WSU’s Native American program office, its state-wide Extension Service, and its new School of Medicine, all of which have extensive experience in community-based research and learning. Together we will begin planning a potentially distinctive national model for a Ph.D. that is not only discipline-specific but also mission-driven.
|
|
University of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh, PA 15260-6133) Holger Hoock (Project Director: November 2017 to present)
ZA-260710-18
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$24,797 (approved) $24,797 (offered) $24,797 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2018 – 7/31/2019
|
Humanities Careers: Re-Imagining Doctoral Training
The redesign of the doctoral program in the School
of Arts and Sciences to optimize preparation for diverse careers.
Humanities Careers will engage graduate faculty and students across fourteen Humanities programs at the University of Pittsburgh, as well as administrators, alumni, and other stakeholders, in a planning process to rethink humanities doctoral education so as to optimize every student’s preparation for diverse careers. Embracing multiple definitions of student and program success, we will focus on student and alumni data; curricular change; partnerships across and beyond campus, including alumni relations; and experiential learning. We will thus foster a cultural transformation in how faculty, students, and the University envisage the broader importance of Humanities PhDs and the societal impacts of humanistic training. Studying current culture and resources across programs, and investigating best practices nationally, we will create an initial suite of new resources and make actionable recommendations to the University, School of Arts and Sciences, and doctoral programs.
|
|
Syracuse University (Syracuse, NY 13244-0001) Glenn Wright (Project Director: November 2017 to present)
ZA-260717-18
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$24,997 (approved) $24,997 (offered) $24,997 (awarded)
Grant period:
5/1/2018 – 5/31/2020
|
Reforming Doctoral Training in the Humanities
The development of a university-wide initiative to systematically
reform doctoral training for humanities Ph.Ds.
A systematic planning effort will lay the groundwork for a package of initiatives that will enhance support for humanities doctoral students as they explore and pursue a wide range of meaningful careers. The project directors will convene a Planning Committee comprising faculty with a variety of appointments; current students; program alumni; administrators and staff in relevant positions; and others representing professional destinations for doctoral graduates. Four Working Groups will be formed, addressing these key themes: • Curricular reform • Systematic integration of professional development and career preparation • Creation of a PhD alumni mentoring network • Development of resources to enable non-monographic dissertation projects. Each Working Group will produce a report fully describing a discrete product, service, or resource (e.g., proposed curricular innovations, a toolkit for faculty advising on nontraditional dissertation projects) to be implemented in AY 2019-20.
|
|
Regents of the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA 95064-1077) Tyrus Miller (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250640-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
|
UC Santa Cruz Next Generation Humanities PhD Planning Grant
Thematic convenings at the University of California, Santa Cruz to
expand mentoring relationships for graduate students, curricular changes toward
trans-disciplinary courses, and development of internship opportunities.
Project goals include expanded public sphere for humanities doctoral expertise,
reorganization of doctoral programs to expand opportunities, and the
identification of elements of doctoral programs that require change to meet the
goals.
UC Santa Cruz's Next Generation Humanities PhD planning grant will
facilitate planning for transformative changes in humanistic doctoral training
and post-doctoral career paths. We aim to envision a new, expanded public
sphere for humanities doctoral expertise and plan doctoral program change to
cultivate expanded opportunities to translate doctoral experience into public
impact. We will articulate a multi-dimensional mentorship model, coordinated around
a humanities-oriented Individual Development Plan process; develop a set of
skill modules relevant to expanded humanities career paths, and consider how to
integrate them into doctoral program curricula and degree requirements; and
expand tracking, networking, and experiential learning opportunities for
humanities doctoral students.
|
|
University of Kansas Center for Research, Inc. (Lawrence, KS 66045-3101) Paul T. Kelton (Project Director: February 2016 to November 2017)
ZA-250648-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (outright + matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Next Generation Careers for KU Humanities PhDs
Planning at the University of Kansas (KU) around five
topics: 1) potential reforms to the doctoral curriculum; 2) the place of
engaged or applied scholarship in PhD training; 3) methods for enlisting the
assistance of alumni in training for alternative careers; 4) possible
partnerships with nonacademic employers, and 5) the need to modify recruitment
and admissions practices.
The University of
Kansas humanities planning group will make
recommendations that will transform humanities doctoral education.
The committee's work will create departmental cultures in the humanities that
recognize and value the range of careers open to humanities doctoral
recipients. Secondly, it will create greater parity between the training that
doctoral students receive and the range of career opportunities they seek. The
end result will be a set of recommendations that will deepen the
impact PhD graduates can have in their careers.
|
|
University of Texas, El Paso (El Paso, TX 79968-8900) Charles H. Ambler (Project Director: February 2016 to July 2018)
ZA-250650-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$17,731 (approved) $17,731 (offered) $17,676 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 12/31/2017
|
Preparing Humanities Professionals in PhD Programs at an Hispanic-Serving Institution
Planning at the University of Texas, El Paso (UTEP) around
five topics: 1) preparing minority
doctoral students in the humanities for entry into a range of non-academic
careers; 2) achieving faculty support for reform; 3) stimulating collaboration among
programs and students across disciplines; 4) identifying humanities alumni to
participate in advising and mentoring programs; and 5) partnering with
nonacademic institutions.
This program will develop activities that will prepare humanities doctoral students for alternative career paths. This project will focus on preparation of students
for discipline-specific non-academic careers, as well
as for a broader range of careers that would draw on the particular skills and
talents that humanities students develop. The project will consist of a year-long set of activities
to investigate and pilot possible programing that enhances in humanities PhD
students critical skills that, combined with the skill sets developed in
academic programs, provide students a wider range of career opportunities.
|
|
Florida International University Board of Trustees (Miami, FL 33199-2516) Kenneth J. Lipartito (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250657-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Bridging the Gap: Linking History PhD Training to Non Academic Employment
Planning by the FIU History
Department around four topics: 1) the reorientation of curriculum toward
learning core competencies; 2) the advisability of mandating internship
experience or allowing a non-traditional dissertation; 3) best practices
relating to alternative skill development; and 4) student mentorship needs.
The History
Department at Florida International University (FIU), one of the nation’s
largest minority serving institutions, proposes a yearlong planning program
aimed at assisting history PhD students in navigating the “employment
roundabout” of the nonacademic job market. Building on our previous success in
placing students beyond the academy, our program has three aims: first, to
gather information so that faculty and students are well informed of
nonacademic opportunities and learn the appropriate skills and training needed
to compete for those opportunities; second, to build a coalition of university
administrators, faculty, and students, as well as community, government,
private sector, and NGO partners who will serve as advisors, consultants, and mentors;
and third, to produce a strategic plan for revamping the department’s culture
and PhD program with an eye towards building links between academic training
and nonacademic professional opportunities.
|
|
Regents of the University of New Mexico (Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001) Melissa Bokovoy (Project Director: February 2016 to November 2017)
ZA-250659-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$24,895 (approved) $24,895 (offered) $22,808 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Humanities Collective (or LoboHUB/Humanities Unbound):Planning for the Next Generation of Humanities Scholars at UNM.
Planning at the University of New
Mexico (UNM) around four topics: 1) ideas for developing new courses and
curricula; 2) strategies for collaborating with nonprofits; 3) methods for increasing cross-discipline collaboration, and
increasing the presence of humanities scholars in “nontraditional” sectors,
especially industries associated with the STEM fields; and 4) strategies for
introducing students to careers in the public sector.
The Departments of
American Studies, English, History, and Linguistics at the University of New
Mexico propose to connect disciplines, the university, alumni networks, and
professional communities to transform existing doctoral programs into education
models that prepare humanities scholars for careers in many different
professions, both inside and outside academia.
|
|
Lehigh University (Bethlehem, PA 18015-3027) Jenna Duggan Lay (Project Director: February 2016 to December 2017)
ZA-250682-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $22,908 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
|
Public Pedagogies: Graduate Education and the Interdisciplinary Humanities at Lehigh University
Planning at Lehigh around
five topics: 1) integrating multiple career outcomes into the curriculum; 2)
collaborations with entities on and off campus; 3) offering
non-teaching-focused financial support systems for students; 4) alumni-oriented
mentoring programs; and 5) alternative formats and requirements for the
dissertation.
The humanities
graduate programs at Lehigh University (Lehigh) seek to foster doctoral
recipients’ potential to contribute to public pedagogies within and beyond the
university. With the support of a NEH Next Generation Ph.D. Planning Grant, we
will strengthen interdisciplinary collaborations to enhance public-facing
curricular and professional opportunities and create a network of internal and
external partners to serve our students’ varied ambitions. Our core and
consulting committees will explore three areas: reciprocal partnerships within
and beyond the university to shape curricular and co-curricular activities; a
mentorship network comprised of alumni and community partners, including the
development of a joint advisory council for the History and English Ph.D.
programs; and new models for the doctoral dissertation.
|
|
University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati, OH 45220-2872) David Stradling (Project Director: February 2016 to July 2018)
ZA-250684-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$24,979 (approved) $24,979 (offered) $24,353 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 12/15/2017
|
University of Cincinnati Next Generation Humanities PhD Planning Grant
Planning
activities at the University of Cincinnati including thematic convenings to
facilitate interdisciplinary discussions and creation of a shared curriculum,
internships in and outside the university, and preparation for non-academic
posts.
The principal activities of our
planning process include facilitating interdisciplinary discussions to
determine the desirability and feasibility of creating a shared curriculum
to help our graduates push the humanities into the broader public,
through employment in what can be called the public humanities or within corporations. We anticipate this shared curriculum will have
room for internships and will emphasize mentoring from within humanities
departments and from humanities professionals outside the university. An
important dimension of our planning effort will be a series of guest
appearances in an open colloquium on topics related to humanities outside the
academy, ranging from project management to the digital production of humanities programs.
|
|
Regents of the University of California, Irvine (Irvine, CA 92617-3066) Julia R. Lupton (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250687-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
10/1/2016 – 9/30/2017
|
UCI Next Generation PhDs in the Humanities
Planning by the University
of California. Irvine (UCI) around four topics: 1) how to engage faculty and
graduate students in rethinking PhD training and employment horizons; 2) ways
to integrate multiple
career path outcomes into graduate curriculum and training; 3) methods for
creating community partnerships and mentoring opportunities; and 4) systems for documenting and disseminating information
about post-doctoral career paths.
The University of
California, Irvine’s School of Humanities has the structures to enable us to take on a
leadership role in developing new models of humanities graduate
education. Building on current and historic strengths in the area
of PhD reform, we will use an NEH Planning Grant to explore ways to restructure
graduate professionalization seminars for larger departments and to design
School-wide graduate professionalization seminars for small programs that can
leverage a critical mass of students so that these courses provide preparation for multiple career paths.
|
|
University of Iowa (Iowa City, IA 52242-1320) Judith M. Pascoe (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250689-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Offered (outright + matching):
$25,000
Grant period:
8/31/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
The Newly Composed PhD: Writing Across Careers
University
of Iowa’s plans to transform doctoral education, focusing on its strength in
writing and how new research and publication technology, along with a
broad array of rhetorical modes, can help graduate students communicate
effectively across a variety of platforms.
We
will use the planning year to imagine ways in which humanities PhD students can
equip themselves with the kind of flexible writing skills and technological
expertise that will prepare them for many career paths. As a uniting impetus,
we will focus our attention on rhetorical forms ranging from the dissertation
to the tweet. In this way, we will enable specialists from a broad array of
disciplines to unite around a common task: a consideration of PhD training in
its core essentials and of how these essentials (e.g., the discovery and
communication of new knowledge, the deployment of innovative research
technologies) can be envisioned as preparation for careers both within and
beyond the academy.
|
|
University of Kentucky Research Foundation (Lexington, KY 40506-0004) Sarah Lyon (Project Director: February 2016 to November 2017)
ZA-250692-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Careers Beyond the Academy
Planning at the University
of Kentucky (UK) around six topics: 1) integrating multiple career outcomes from
the very beginning of students’ experience in graduate school; 2) revisions to curriculum and degree requirements in order to better
prepare students for a diverse array of future occupations; 3) maximizing
faculty buy-in for a transformed PhD and methods for supporting students beyond
teaching-focused funding; 4) initiating partnerships with non-academic institutions,
and 5) developing an evaluation plan for future activities and implementation.
The goal of this program is to
enable graduate students in the humanities to explore the
possibility of non-academic
and alt-academic jobs. A program of this sort at once fulfills our moral
obligation to help graduate students advance in their lives and careers and
makes UK’s College of Arts and Sciences a more attractive place for prospective
students to pursue a graduate degree. Program development and planning will be overseen by a program director and a diverse
committee that includes faculty, administrators, alumni, local businesspeople,
and current graduate students. Over the course of the 2016-2017 academic year
the committee will systematically consider six topics and develop program
initiatives and longer-term strategies to transform the humanities PhD.
|
|
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (Chapel Hill, NC 27599-1350) Mark Katz (Project Director: February 2016 to April 2022)
ZA-250710-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Re-envisioning the Humanities PhD
Four major themes in UNC’s planning work: Careers, Collaboration,
Curriculum and Dissertation, and Data. These will be explored both in closed meetings of subcommittees and the larger
planning committee, as well as in a series of public conversations. One of the
subcommittees will also organize an alumni conference.
"Re-envisioning the Humanities PhD" is a year-long initiative that will
constitute UNC-Chapel Hill’s first campus-wide conversation on graduate
education in the humanities. To be launched in fall 2016, it will include a
series of public discussions, a data collection project, an alumni conference,
and a white paper. This application is submitted with the intention that, with
the benefit of a Next Generation Humanities PhD Planning Grant, this initiative
will lead to far-reaching and much-needed change, and in the process offer a
national model of creative, collaborative reform.
|
|
Wayne State University (Detroit, MI 48201-1347) Elizabeth Victoria Faue (Project Director: February 2016 to June 2018)
ZA-250715-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 2/28/2018
|
The Value of Humanities in the Global City: Rethinking Culture and Opportunity in Detroit
A planning process at Wayne State University that builds faculty buy-in for
rethinking graduate education by creating a cohort of “Next Generation Faculty
Fellows.”
The Wayne State NEH Planning Grant will build faculty support for
rethinking the future of graduate education in the Humanities and train faculty
to become mentors for the Next Generation of Humanities
PhDs. A series of workshops on six central topics
will bring members of Wayne State faculty into public dialogue and enhance
knowledge of new scholarship and best practices. Focus
groups will provide data needed to inform the planning committee of faculty and
other stakeholder group opinions throughout the planning cycle.
|
|
Georgia State University Research Foundation, Inc. (Atlanta, GA 30302-3999) Brennan Collins (Project Director: February 2016 to April 2022)
ZA-250719-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
GSU Next Generation Humanities Planning Grant
Planning at Georgia State University focused on several themes, including:
1) creating and funding non-teaching-based research assistantships at the
University and with local employers; 2) establishing an advising and mentoring
program with industry, arts, and NGO-based alumni partners; 3) collecting
alumni data; and 4) developing a digital humanities certificate and/or degree
program.
Georgia State University’s intention is to build an infrastructure
capable of encouraging and sustaining deep transformations in the training of
humanists and in the attitudes of students, faculty, and administrators.
|
|
Fordham University (Bronx, NY 10458-9993) Eva Badowska (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250723-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$24,957 (approved) $24,957 (offered) $24,957 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 9/30/2017
|
The "Living Humanities" Ph.D. for the 21st Century
Planning at Fordham University around six topics to
prepare the university to institute wide-ranging changes in its humanities
doctoral programs. These have a Jesuit focus and include new curriculum,
advising and mentorship structures, and a focus on community engagement.
Fordham University seeks a Next Generation Humanities PhD Planning Grant
to develop a Humanities PhD model that aims to make doctoral education in this
area forward-looking for future scholars and provides “living” links between
doctoral education, community engagement, and multiple careers. We will focus
on six planning themes identified through extensive discussions among faculty
and students: Revitalize Learning Outcomes; Inhabit the New Learning Ecosystem;
Mentor the Whole Person: Career-wise Counsel, Promising Partnerships;
Incorporate Service and Community Engagement; Ensure Access and Inclusion; and
Cultivate and Curate a “Living Humanities” PhD model.
|
|
Penn State (University Park, PA 16802-1503) Eric Hayot (Project Director: February 2016 to February 2020)
ZA-250725-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2018
|
Holistic Rethinkings of the Humanities PhD: Seminars, Dissertation, Internationalization, Fellowships
Penn State’s plans to institute
wide-ranging changes in its humanities doctoral programs.
Penn State
University's College of the Liberal Arts proposes to rethink the humanities PhD
along four major lines: 1) moving beyond the graduate seminar; 2) internationalizing
training and placement; 3) alternatives to the dissertation; and 4) piloting
extra-academic training in a new fellowship program. A Core Committee that includes
the university Provost, the College Dean, a member of the university Board of
Trustees, as well as faculty, administrators, and graduate students will
oversee four working groups. The project goal is to develop a new fellowship
program that would, by including the advances of all four groups, also pilot a
significant new structure for the humanities PhD.
|
|
University of Rhode Island (Kingston, RI 02881-1967) Kathleen T. Davis (Project Director: February 2016 to December 2017)
ZA-250731-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $25,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
|
Humanities at Large
Planning at the
University of Rhode Island (URI) around four topics: 1) potential approaches to stimulate collaboration between programs,
departments, and schools; 2) methods for initiating partnerships with non-academic
institutions; 3) exploration of altered formats or requirements for the PhD dissertation;
and 4) identification of humanities PhD alumni in various fields to advise or
mentor graduate students.
The University of
Rhode Island aims to develop cross-disciplinary and
experiential learning for humanities doctoral students in five key areas. As the state's flagship
research university and a land and sea grant institution, URI has strong historical commitments to the coastal environment and recently extended to the health
fields. The
committee aims to secure partnerships, internships, new collaborations, and
innovative curricular changes that will prepare doctoral students to expand
their career aspirations and to bring the fruits of humanities learning to all
aspects of civic life.
|
|
SUNY Research Foundation, Binghamton (Binghamton, NY 13902-4400) Florenz Plassmann (Project Director: February 2016 to present)
ZA-250732-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $13,286 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
|
Transforming Scholarly Preparation in the Humanities at the Doctoral Level
Planning
activities at the State University of New York at Binghamton (SUNY Birmingham) that
include thematic considerations of student internship and assistantship
programs, management of student skill development, alumni mentoring programs,
and methods for increasing faculty acceptance of non-academic careers.
SUNY Binghamton proposes to discuss, explore, and develop five avenues for improving doctoral
education in the humanities and help doctoral students translate what they
have learned into successful careers, including 1) systematically developing
internships and non-academic assistantships on campus; 2) expanding Harpur
College’s undergraduate Liberal Arts to Career Externship (LACE) program to
include opportunities for PhD students; 3) guiding PhD students in the design
and maintenance of Individual Development Plans; 4) establishing roundtables
and mentoring programs with alumni who have non-academic careers; and 5)
increasing faculty acceptance of non-academic careers. We also propose to
explore several additional and currently less-developed ideas.
|
|
Loyola University, Chicago (Chicago, IL 60611-2147) Patricia Mooney-Melvin (Project Director: February 2016 to July 2018)
ZA-250740-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $21,968 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 12/31/2017
|
Charting Career Pathways: Enhancing and Sustaining Doctoral Education in the Humanities
Thematic
working groups at Loyola University of Chicago (LUC) that are focused on revising
admissions guidelines, curricular and professional development, career guidance
and mentoring, and humanities assistantships in the field.
This
project will engage in planning activities to develop programming to enhance the
ability of humanities PhD students to be prepared for and envision multiple
career pathways. The goals are to 1) create opportunities for students to see
themselves possessing multiple career possibilities; 2) deepen and broaden the
nature of advising and mentoring; 3) develop a robust career guidance program; 4)
sharpen students’ communication skills; 5) gain experience outside of academe
while in school; 6) shape recruitment messaging; and 7) explore curricular
possibilities. These goals will be accomplished through pilot workshops for
humanities faculty and graduate students, revision of graduate student
recruitment messaging, development of “Humanities Communicators” programming,
alumni-student mentoring, and curricular and advising revisions.
|
|
University of California, Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, CA 93106-0001) John Majewski (Project Director: February 2016 to November 2017)
ZA-250742-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
|
[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $16,400 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2017
|
Training for Non-Academic Careers in a Research-University Setting
Planning at the University of California, Santa
Barbara (UCSB) around four topics: 1) strategies to achieve faculty support for the
project; 2) consideration of altered formats or requirements for the PhD dissertation;
3) potential for developing new courses and curricula; and 4) initiation of
partnerships with non-academic institutions.
We envision a
core planning committee organizing a series of eight events designed to instigate
discussions in each of our humanities departments. These discussions
will focus on issues such as: how doctoral curricula can incorporate
internships or other experiences that train students for varied professions;
the possibility of new forms of dissertation production; training in metaprofessional
skills that can be used in multiple settings; and the construction of networks
of alumni and other professionals that can facilitate opportunities for our
graduate students.
|
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University of California, Berkeley (Berkeley, CA 94704-5940) Anthony Cascardi (Project Director: February 2016 to May 2019)
ZA-250746-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
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[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $24,999 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 7/31/2018
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NEXT GENERATION HUMANITIES AT BERKELEY
Planning at UC Berkeley around seven topics: 1)
analysis of peer institutions and organizational infrastructure; 2)
considerations of academic innovation; 3) the challenge of changing graduate
student expectations; 4) student career development opportunities; 5)
exploration of partnerships and internships; 6) professional learning
communities for graduate students; and 7) program evaluation.
Diminishing tenure-track opportunities and the changing nature of work
and careers call for academic innovations and new support structures for
humanities PhDs. The University of California at Berkeley (UC Berkeley) proposes
a planning effort for the study, assessment, and recommendation of structural
changes to the formal and informal elements of doctoral education. Our planning
framework is built upon seven areas of inquiry investigated by a critical
combination of senior campus officials, strategic partners, and current PhD
students. Under the guidance of deans and chairs, the planning work will result
in the substantive change of the humanities PhD from a specific form of
research apprenticeship to a means of developing well-placed leaders able to
meaningfully apply the critical tools of humanistic inquiry to a variety of
fields.
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CUNY Research Foundation, Graduate School and University Center (New York, NY 10016-4309) Jennifer Furlong (Project Director: February 2016 to July 2018)
ZA-250622-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
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[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $24,601 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
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The New PhD: A Renaissance of Public Education
Planning
activities at the Graduate Center at the City University of New York encompass
three planning themes: 1) ways to integrate multiple career outcomes from the beginning of students’ experience in graduate school; 2) collecting and
publicly disseminating data about retention rates and students’ post-doctoral
career paths; 3) initiation of partnerships with non-academic
institutions.
PhD
students join Graduate Center humanities PhD programs because they want to
explore big ideas at the core of humanities, understanding issues of social
justice, historical contexts, and ethics. The goal of this project is to provide
them with the tools to use their ideas and training to make a positive impact
in our global society. This proposal convenes two groups, both a smaller, core
group and a larger planning group, of faculty members, alumni, current
students and administrators to discuss three pivotal issues at the Graduate
Center: our humanities doctoral curriculum, how we track our humanities PhD
career outcomes, and how we partner and network with alumni and employers to provide our students with a firm foundation for pursuing a range of
careers. In doing so, we will lay the groundwork for transforming the training
given to humanities PhDs.
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University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (Milwaukee, WI 53211-3153) Jason Puskar (Project Director: February 2016 to April 2022)
ZA-250623-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
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[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$24,890 (approved) $24,890 (offered) $24,890 (awarded)
Grant period:
8/1/2016 – 5/31/2018
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Transforming the Culture of Post-Doctoral Humanities Careers
Thematic
convenings at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee designed to expand career
options for doctoral students particularly through the lens of curricular
development, faculty training to learn how to mentor beyond the academy, and the
creation of alumni advisors.
This
project will plan for a major overhaul of career preparation for humanities
doctoral students at UW-Milwaukee. We recognize that current career training is
too narrowly focused on academic employment, as many
doctoral graduates eventually pursue other careers. The project brings together
a planning committee of more than 20 people, and includes faculty from the
humanities and humanistic social sciences at UWM, upper administration
including the provost and the dean of the Graduate School, graduate students
from humanities fields, administrative staff, faculty from the UWM School
of Business, alumni working in non-academic careers, and
representatives from business and non-profit sectors. We intend to divide
the planning into three areas, each overseen by a separate subcommittee:
Curriculum Development, Faculty Education, and Alumni Support.
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Princeton University (Princeton, NJ 08540-5228) Anthony Grafton (Project Director: February 2016 to July 2018)
ZA-250624-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
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[White paper]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $17,033 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 12/31/2017
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Transforming Graduate Education in the Humanities at Princeton
Thematic
convenings at Princeton University that define a new vision of doctoral
training, develop a curriculum with expanded scope, and promote careers outside
the tenure-track.
While
Princeton’s humanities graduate students are increasingly interested in careers
outside the tenure track, few departments provide formal support for these
career paths. In recent years, a subtle but significant shift has taken place
at Princeton, with individual faculty members advocating for curricular change,
and administrative units launching new programs for professional development.
Princeton wants to build on this momentum by
bringing together a wide range of stakeholders to brainstorm a new model of
doctoral training in the humanities. This work would result in an
implementation plan for broadening the career preparation of humanities PhDs by
focusing on three overarching goals: 1) developing new curricular options; 2)
expanding career resources and services; and 3) transforming Princeton’s
graduate culture to promote a wide range of career options.
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Washington University (St. Louis, MO 63130-4899) Jean M. Allman (Project Director: February 2016 to December 2017)
ZA-250633-16
Next Generation Humanities PhD (Planning)
Challenge Programs
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[White paper][Grant products]
Totals (matching):
$25,000 (approved) $25,000 (offered) $17,346 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2016 – 8/31/2017
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Cohorts, Courses, Qualifications, and Careers: Reconceptualizing the Humanities PhD at Washington University
Thematic
convenings that will focus on creating humanities cohorts, designing coursework
in line with employment outcomes, and providing post-ABD training and target
advising.
The
Center for the Humanities plans to fully reconceptualize doctoral training in the humanities
at Washington University. Efforts will focus on four core questions: 1) How
can we stimulate collaboration among departments to grow inclusive
humanities cohorts, from recruitment to completion? 2) What kinds of new
curricula would better prepare humanities graduate students for the widest
range of career outcomes? 3) What opportunities might be provided in the last
year of graduate training to equip students for jobs outside of the
academy, particularly in the public sphere? 4) What kinds of new resources
might we offer to support the multiple career trajectories of
humanities PhDs? A Central Planning Committee of twelve will coordinate the
investigations of four Working Groups, each focused a core
questions to develop an action plan at the close of the grant period.
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