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Virginia Sea Grant Graduate Students, Virginia Institute of Marine Science Lab Technicians, and Research Experienced Undergraduate students prepare the geological sediment samples for further analysis on July 10, 2018 at the VIMS Coastal Geology Lab, Gloucester, Virginia.
The research team collected the sediment samples with a vibracore system that they constructed on VIMS beach.
(photo: Lisa Sadler | VA Sea Grant)
Hundreds of graduate students held an organizing rally on the University of Pennsylvania campus April 26, 2023.
Why? Their website (organize@getup-uaw.org) explains:
"We are graduate student workers at the University of Pennsylvania forming a union to improve our working conditions at Penn and to strengthen our collective voice as teaching and research assistants locally and nationally.
As graduate student workers, we make essential contributions to the world-class teaching and research conducted at Penn. However, many of us still struggle to pay high housing and other costs in Philadelphia, lack secure rights in the workplace, and face increasing uncertainty about our futures given the precarious nature of higher education and unstable regulation of visas and work authorization for international student workers.
We have already seen the power of organized graduate student workers at major institutions to dramatically improve their working conditions through unionization with United Auto Workers, including graduate student workers at Columbia, Harvard, and NYU. By building on the experiences of our peers at other universities, we can continue to raise standards for graduate student workers across U.S. higher education.
We join a growing national movement of student workers and other academics forming unions to improve our lives and our work. Graduate student workers organizing with the UAW across the country have made a difference advocating for science research funding, fair visa and immigration policies, and better working conditions in all academic institutions."
Bill Kem talks with Carolina Moller, graduate student working on FSG funded work, at a marine biotech poster session
Hundreds of graduate students held an organizing rally on the University of Pennsylvania campus April 26, 2023.
Why? Their website (organize@getup-uaw.org) explains:
"We are graduate student workers at the University of Pennsylvania forming a union to improve our working conditions at Penn and to strengthen our collective voice as teaching and research assistants locally and nationally.
As graduate student workers, we make essential contributions to the world-class teaching and research conducted at Penn. However, many of us still struggle to pay high housing and other costs in Philadelphia, lack secure rights in the workplace, and face increasing uncertainty about our futures given the precarious nature of higher education and unstable regulation of visas and work authorization for international student workers.
We have already seen the power of organized graduate student workers at major institutions to dramatically improve their working conditions through unionization with United Auto Workers, including graduate student workers at Columbia, Harvard, and NYU. By building on the experiences of our peers at other universities, we can continue to raise standards for graduate student workers across U.S. higher education.
We join a growing national movement of student workers and other academics forming unions to improve our lives and our work. Graduate student workers organizing with the UAW across the country have made a difference advocating for science research funding, fair visa and immigration policies, and better working conditions in all academic institutions."
Hampton University final year architecture student and Virginia Sea Grant research fellow Ashley Montgomery discusses being a part of Hampton University's Sea Level Rise Program next year.
The program is a collaborative effort with Hampton University's Department of Architecture and Old Dominion's Civil Engineering Department working with neighborhoods, especially in Norfolk, who deal with chronic flooding. The program develops strategies to address flooding and urban design issues throughout Hampton Roads. Tuesday, June 25, 2018 (Photo | Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
Virginia Sea Grant Graduate Students, Virginia Institute of Marine Science Lab Technicians, and Research Experienced Undergraduate students prepare the geological sediment samples for further analysis on July 10, 2018 at the VIMS Coastal Geology Lab, Gloucester, Virginia.
The research team collected the sediment samples with a vibracore system that they constructed on VIMS beach.
(photo: Lisa Sadler | VA Sea Grant)
Students in the Impact MBA program present their final business pitches before Commencement. December 15, 2022
Scripps oceanographer Walter Munk (right) and Scripps Director Harald Sverdrup at Munk's graduation, 1946. Credit: Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives, UC San Diego Libraries.
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the AERO Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Students work in a group session during the first Inter-Policy School Summit, hosted by the Harris School, with more than 30 students from top public policy schools from around the country, held at International House on the University of Chicago campus on Saturday, Mar., 4, 2017, in Chicago. (Photo by Joel Wintermantle)
The dog stands alone (bottom image) after a UC San Diego pedestrian remover automatically removed the man walking the dog (top image) and filled in the hole with building, grass, curb and sidewalk.
Image credit: Google Street View / UC San Diego
Read more at: www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?...
The 2023 Graduate School Exposition was held on April 11, 2023, in the Doudna Fine Arts Center on the campus of Eastern Illinois University. (Brejona Hutchinson)
Potato fields, the core of Bengali agriculture.
Third-year graduate student Chris Coleman-Smith spent five weeks in India in December and January using a $3,000 grant from the American Physical Society and the Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum.
Hundreds of graduate students held an organizing rally on the University of Pennsylvania campus April 26, 2023.
Why? Their website (organize@getup-uaw.org) explains:
"We are graduate student workers at the University of Pennsylvania forming a union to improve our working conditions at Penn and to strengthen our collective voice as teaching and research assistants locally and nationally.
As graduate student workers, we make essential contributions to the world-class teaching and research conducted at Penn. However, many of us still struggle to pay high housing and other costs in Philadelphia, lack secure rights in the workplace, and face increasing uncertainty about our futures given the precarious nature of higher education and unstable regulation of visas and work authorization for international student workers.
We have already seen the power of organized graduate student workers at major institutions to dramatically improve their working conditions through unionization with United Auto Workers, including graduate student workers at Columbia, Harvard, and NYU. By building on the experiences of our peers at other universities, we can continue to raise standards for graduate student workers across U.S. higher education.
We join a growing national movement of student workers and other academics forming unions to improve our lives and our work. Graduate student workers organizing with the UAW across the country have made a difference advocating for science research funding, fair visa and immigration policies, and better working conditions in all academic institutions."
Hundreds of graduate students held an organizing rally on the University of Pennsylvania campus April 26, 2023.
Why? Their website (organize@getup-uaw.org) explains:
"We are graduate student workers at the University of Pennsylvania forming a union to improve our working conditions at Penn and to strengthen our collective voice as teaching and research assistants locally and nationally.
As graduate student workers, we make essential contributions to the world-class teaching and research conducted at Penn. However, many of us still struggle to pay high housing and other costs in Philadelphia, lack secure rights in the workplace, and face increasing uncertainty about our futures given the precarious nature of higher education and unstable regulation of visas and work authorization for international student workers.
We have already seen the power of organized graduate student workers at major institutions to dramatically improve their working conditions through unionization with United Auto Workers, including graduate student workers at Columbia, Harvard, and NYU. By building on the experiences of our peers at other universities, we can continue to raise standards for graduate student workers across U.S. higher education.
We join a growing national movement of student workers and other academics forming unions to improve our lives and our work. Graduate student workers organizing with the UAW across the country have made a difference advocating for science research funding, fair visa and immigration policies, and better working conditions in all academic institutions."