For undergrads camping out in the bowels of Cabot Library as they cram for final exams in introductory science courses, help is on the way.
It will come in the form of a $30,000-per-year “study center” initiative tucked inside the $50 million package unveiled Monday by University administrators to bolster the status of women and minorities at Harvard.
The initiative would establish centers staffed by advanced undergraduate tutors, who would be paid $12 an hour and be on-call to assist fellow students taking lower-level courses.
The “study center” proposal is just one of several recommendations from the Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) task force that could significantly impact undergraduate life.
The report also draws plans for dramatic reforms to the freshman advising system for prospective natural science concentrators.
And it calls for the University to take several steps that would help undergraduates find research assistant jobs and campus housing if they choose to stay in Cambridge during the summer months.
LET’S CRAM TOGETHER
According to Howard Georgi, Mallinckrodt professor of physics and co-chair of a student-faculty working group that developed the proposal, at least some of the study centers could be up and running by next year.
The proposal emerged from a series of discussions among undergraduates organized by Mariangela Lisanti ’05, who chaired the WISE task force’s student-faculty working group along with Georgi and Professor of Physics Melissa E.B. Franklin.
The fabled “Physics Night”—an informal weekly event on Wednesdays in Leverett Dining Hall—served as one of the models for the study center plan, according to Georgi, who is the Leverett house master.
“The idea of study centers is not ‘tutoring’—but rather to provide a space, both physical and intellectual, that encourages study groups to form and work efficiently,” Georgi wrote in an e-mail.
According to yesterday’s report, the study centers might be extended beyond the natural sciences to the economics department—where females are also underrepresented in more quantitative courses.
The proposal would not replace the Bureau of Study Counsel’s current tutoring program, under which students receive one-on-one help from more advanced undergraduates, according to M. Suzanne Renna, the bureau’s acting director.
AN ASTRONOMICAL ODDITY
In what appears to be an inexplicable quirk in the task force’s recommendations, the report calls for a study center to assist students in Astronomy 145, “Topics in Astrophysics,” and Astronomy 150, “Radiative Processes in Astrophysics.”
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