Students on the Government Department's Undergraduate Affairs Committee say they will suggest increasing the number of women concentrators, and instituting measures to make the department less "intimidating" at next month's meeting of the student-faculty group.
In addition to calling for increased diversity among concentrators, the committee plans to propose establishing a "mentor program" between senior faculty and undergraduates, allowing concentrators to bypass more than two of the four required introductory courses, and finding a means of evaluating departmental offerings not covered by the CUE guide.
While the department did not have figures on the gender distribution among concentrators, the size of the department and its reputation as a highly competitve concentration are scaring many students--particularly women--away, according to students on the committee.
"Our main concern is solving the image problem of the department," said Daivd Gillis '89, the Lowell Houise representative to the committee. "We want to make the department less intimidating."
The "mentor program," which would resemble the one currently in place in the History department, would assign a limited number of students to senior members in the department willing to volunteer.
The faculty would be available to advise students about issues "other than what courses a student should take," said Gregory R. Schwartz '89, Leverett House representative to the committee. "There are a lot of opportunities at Harvard and [one] has to think why there isn't more student-faculty contact."
The committee, chaired by Government Head Tutor Mark A. Peterson, meets regularly with senior faculty members, including Government Chairman Robert D. Putnam.
Read more in News
Studying Fiends Camp Out in Cabot LibraryRecommended Articles
-
Departments Beef Up Advising in Wake of ReportLast year's Committee on Advising and Counseling issued by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences report has inspired some departments
-
concentration CASH-INLinguistics concentrators dine together three times a year, once each semester and in December. Those taking phonology courses are permitted
-
English Department Nearly Doubles Advising ScoreIn 1997, the Department of English Languages and Literatures scraped the bottom of the advising barrel, receiving a score of
-
Reforming the Gov. DepartmentGovernment concentrators have long complained about their introductory course requirements. Students and Faculty in the department have worked together to
-
Switching to VESAlmost three years ago, I arrived on this campus with the enthusiasm that any first-year brings. In addition to my
-
Bio Department Chooses Students For Curriculum Studies CommitteeThree biology students were selected last night as representatives to the Biology Department's Committee on Undergraduate Students and Studies. Katherine