From the Annual Meeting 2005 column of the November 2004 Perspectives
![]() |
Pre-Meeting Events at the Annual Meeting |
Workshop for Directors of Graduate Studies and Department Chairs
Note: Participation in this free workshop is limited to directors of graduate studies and to chairs of history departments with graduate programs. The contents of the workshop are subject to change, so please visit the 2005 Online Program for an updated program and list of presenters. Advance registration is required, no later than December 6, 2004. Contact Miriam Hauss at mhauss@historians.org to register or for more details.
Thursday, January 6, 1:30 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom.
- Welcome by Patrick Manning, Northeastern University, and vice president, AHA Teaching Division
1:45–2:30 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom. Session 1. Making Numbers Work for Your Graduate Program
- Data trends in graduate
history education: What do the AHA, the federal government, and other investigators
already
know about
your graduate programand how can this information help
you?
- An
update on the National Research Council’s ranking
of doctoral programs.
- Best practices in data collection at
the departmental level.
- The new AHA clearinghouse of information about doctoral programswhat will it mean for your department?
2:30–3:15 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom. Session 2. Adventures in the Graduate Curriculum
- The challenge of the introductory
seminar for graduate students.
- What do qualifying/comprehensive/general
exams actually test?
- Making graduate curricula coherent.
3:15–3:45 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom. Break and Informal Discussion
3:45–4:30 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom. Session 3. Graduate Students as Partners in Graduate Education
- More effective
mentoring and advising.
- Keeping the lines of communication
open.
- Using student and alumni surveys to improve your graduate program.
4:30–5:00 p.m. Sheraton, East Ballroom. Session 4. The Role (and Future) of the History Department DGS
- What every DGS ought
to know before s/he starts the job.
- Master’s programs
vs. doctoral programs: What difference does it make to the
role of the DGS?
- What can the AHA do for the history DGS in the future?
5:00 p.m. Sheraton, West Ballroom A. Reception
Orientation to the AHA Annual Meeting
Thursday, January 6. 3:00–5:00 p.m. Sheraton, West Ballroom B.
The AHA annual meeting can be overwhelming and even alienating for many first-time participants. If you would like a head-start on the meeting, some insight into what really happens at the annual meeting, and the chance to meet a few other historians facing the same challenges, we invite you to this special orientation session with many of the AHA members and staff who help put this meeting together.
- Introduction and
Overview: Robert Townsend, AHA
- Topics:
How the AHA Program Committee Operates and Develops the Annual Meeting Program,
by Paul Freedman, Yale University, and chair, 2005 AHA Program Committee, and Barbara Weinstein, University of Maryland at College Park, and co-chair, 2005 AHA Program CommitteeAdvice from the Local Populace: What to See and Do…and How to Live Cheaply,
by Maureen Murphy Nutting, North Seattle Community College, and chair, 2005 AHA Local Arrangements CommitteeHow to Navigate the AHA Job Register,
by Richard E. Bond, recent PhD and former AHA Job Register staffInsider View: How an Annual Meeting Comes Together,
by Sharon K. Tune, AHA convention director - Questions and Comments: The Audience.
The Social Side of the Annual Meeting,
by Debbie Ann Doyle, AHA convention assistant and recent PhD
Copyright © American Historical Association
Last Updated: January 23, 2008 11:28 AM

.jpg)