From: Michael Ernst To: First-year grad students Subject: Feedback from new grads Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 09:48:54 -0800 (PST) I'd like to thank all of you who attended the first year grad student feedback session last week. Some people stayed as long as two hours, and we covered a wide range of issues. If you were not there, or if you didn't have time to raise a topic (or forgot to mention it at the meeting), please feel free to talk to me, Frankye, or Carl Ebeling about it. I can pass along your comments anonymously or with attribution, and likewise for Frankye and Carl, who are just as easy to approach. We've discussed the meeting a bit (I've tried to clarify or explain some issues from the grad student perspective), and we all agree it's important to get as much feedback as possible, both to clear up misunderstandings and to correct real problems. Carl has drafted a memo to the faculty noting many of the concerns and suggesting some concrete actions. Meanwhile, let me make a meta-suggestion: when there is something wrong, please don't just live with it. If you feel at all comfortable with doing so, bring it to the attention of the powers that be: your teachers, your advisor, the system support staff, or Frankye, Carl, or even me. If no one knows there is a problem, it's very unlikely to get solved and might even become larger; at the very least, it will continue to annoy you. At UW CSE we are fortunate to have a faculty that really cares about the students here, and they are extremely approachable. Corny as it sounds, their goal is to make every student succeed, and they do work at it. So let them know how to reach that goal, and don't wait for the annual gripe sessions (though they are an excellent resource when ordinary efforts have failed). -Mike