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TEACHING
AND RESEARCH ASSISTANTSHIPS
Graduate
College Regulations
College of Education Policies
Department Guidelines
GRADUATE
COLLEGE REGULATIONS
Information
on scholarships and fellowships is available from the Graduate
College and on page 12 of the Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College.
Faculty
Research Assistantships. Faculty research assistantships
are awarded to qualified graduate students and serve two purposes:
(a) to provide research service to professorial members of
the academic staff and (b) to provide apprenticeship experience
for graduate students who are in training in research. Not
more than twenty hours of service per week are required of
a half-time assistant. Other part-time service is scaled in
proportion, and a limited academic schedule is permitted.
Appointments are ordinarily made for the nine-month academic
year, but appointments may be made for other periods of time
by special arrangement. Stipends vary with the qualifications
of the appointee and the amount of service rendered. Faculty
research assistants appointed by the Graduate College pay
their own fees (Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College).
Graduate
Teaching Assistantships. Graduate teaching assistantships
serve two purposes: (a) assistance in the instructional program
of the University and (b) the preparation of future college
teachers…(Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College).
Eligibility
for Scholarships, Fellowships, and Research Assistantships.
Scholars, fellows, and faculty research assistants on the
Graduate College budget must be registered as regular students
in good standing in order to hold such appointments. Appointments
will be terminated when registration and/or student status
is terminated. In no instance may a student be promised or
tendered an appointment until after approval for admission
to the Graduate College by the director of Admissions (Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College).
Credit.
No academic credit is allowed for the teaching or research
service for which the student receives payment as a graduate
or a faculty research assistant (Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College).
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COLLEGE
OF EDUCATION POLICIES
(This
information is quoted from Manual
of Rules and Regulations of the Graduate College).
Graduate
assistantships in the College of Education are intended to
provide graduate students with experiences that add breadth
and depth to their graduate education. These appointments
typically involve duties in teaching, research, or service,
activities which fulfill the College’s mission.
The also provide a valuable educational experience for graduate
student as well as a source of support during their graduate
studies.
The
following policies apply to all teaching assistantships, research
assistantships, and fellowships administered through the College
of Education.
1.
Students enrolled in advanced degree programs in the College
of Education are eligible for appointment as graduate assistants.
(Under exceptional circumstances, students outside the College
are eligible; a DEO and the Dean of the College of Education
must approve such exceptions.) In an effort to support
as many graduate students as possible, students are routinely
awarded no more than a half-time appointment in the College
of Education. Typically, students with appointments
in other colleges will be awarded assistantships through our
College only when the total University appointment is equal
to or less than a 50% appointment (20 hours per week.)
Any exceptions to this 50% rule must conform to Graduate College
policies. Following Graduate College policy, the adviser
and the DEO will submit, prior to the offer of an appointment
that results in a total appointment greater than .50, a request
for exemption from the 50% rule. The request is made
directly to the Graduate College and copied to the Dean’s
Office.
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2.
Students holding graduate assistantships through the College
of Education are expected to make regular progress toward
the completion of an advanced degree program. Graduate
College regulations allow students holding half-time appointments
to register for a maximum of 12 credits each semester.
The College of Education requires graduate students holding
graduate assistantships to register for a minimum of 6 credits
each semester. Graduate students who are studying for
their comprehensive examinations or who have completed their
plans of study may request an exception to this minimum requirement.
The student's advisor and the DEO must approve all such reductions
in advance and notify the Dean’s Office. In the
case of Special Graduate Assistantships funded by the Iowa
Testing Programs, the Director of the Iowa Testing Program
must also give approval. Students who have completed
their comprehensive examinations may select special post-comprehensive
registrations approved by the Graduate College. Currently,
students who have passed their comprehensive examinations
and have completed their programs of study may choose a post-comp
registration with the approval of their advisor.
3.
For a half-time appointment, approximately 20 clock hours
per week are expected in performing assistantship duties.
The 20-hour limitation policy covers all duties required of
a graduate assistant including scheduled times in classrooms,
laboratories, or studios, as well as time required for preparation
of assigned duties, grading students' work, scheduled office
hours, and additional time required for meeting with and advising
students. For appointments that are less than 50%, the
time is proportional (for example, 10 hours a week for quarter-time).
The
limitation on hours is intended to apply to graduate students
who are adequately prepared to assume their assistantship
duties. Graduate assistants who need to review material
or to master techniques ordinarily expected of persons assuming
TA or RA duties would, in general, pursue such extra work
outside of the normal hour limitation. In addition,
the limitation on workload is intended as an average to be
applied over an entire semester or an academic year.
All policies concerning vacation, time-off, health insurance,
and the like are addressed in the current collective bargaining
agreement, copies of which are available.
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Teaching
Assistants
As a general "rule of thumb", 5 clock hours of preparation
time are allotted for each hour of class time when a new course
is being taught; 3 hours of "preparation time" are
allowed if the assistant has taught the course before.
The following are general guidelines. Variations to
accommodate different enrollments and other College and course-specific
factors are to be expected.
General Guidelines
- A
one-half time teaching assistant should teach 9 semester
hours across an academic year.
- A
one-half time teaching assistant should teach no more than
6 semester hours in any given semester.
- The
teaching load should be no more than 3 semester hours in
any semester in which the teaching assistant is teaching
a course he/she has not taught before.
- If
it becomes necessary to have a teaching assistant teach
courses he/she has not taught before in both semesters of
an academic year, the total teaching load in “Item
a” above would be reduced from 9 to 6 semester hours.
- One-quarter
time assistants should teach 3 semester hours each semester
with some adjustment to be made if it is the first time
he/she is teaching a course.
It is important to stress that these are guidelines, not absolute
rules; they can be adapted to accommodate special cases that
might arise as a function of class size or special instructional
needs. What accommodations can be made, however, will
of necessity depend not only on what might be judged to be
the "ideal" instruction but also on the reality
of limited resources in the College. For example, contact
hours for discussion leaders as compared to teaching assistants
having full responsibility for a course are expected to be
heavier.
4.
Each graduate assistant's performance must be reviewed annually,
no later than April 15th, by the faculty or staff supervisor
and the Department chairperson or appropriate administrator
prior to a decision on renewal of the assistantship.
This review should consider competence in performing the responsibilities
of the assistantship. The substance of the review should
be conveyed to the graduate assistant in a face-to-face meeting
or in writing.
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In addition, the supervisor and administrator should consider
the programmatic needs that the assistantship fills in the
area. Although every attempt will be made to help eligible
graduate assistants find support, funds are usually committed
on an annual basis only, with no presumption of renewal. Being
eligible for an assistantship does not guarantee that a student
will receive an assistantship or an assistantship renewal.
Usually,
eligibility for renewal of College of Education graduate assistantships
will conform to the following guidelines:
-
Graduate students in a master's degree program will be eligible
for two years total of College of Education Assistantship
support.
- Graduate
students in a doctoral degree program will be eligible for
four years of College of Education assistantship support.
However, students completing a masters and Ph.D. degree
in the same program of study will be eligible for no more
than five years of College of Education support from start
to finish.
- Support
received from other colleges does not affect eligibility
for College of Education support
- Where
it is evident and is certified by the faculty advisor and
the DEO that the recipient of a graduate assistantship has
made acceptable progress toward an advanced degree, but
circumstances beyond the immediate control of the student
have created an extended completion date, and where it is
in the student’s and the College’s best interest,
the Administrative Council will review and advise and the
Dean will decide whether to grant a one-year extension of
eligibility.
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5.
To ensure that the conditions of the assistantship are followed,
the DEO and the Office of the Dean monitor graduate assistantships.
Offers of assistantships are to be made in writing to the
student and should contain:
-
Starting and termination dates
- A
job description
- The
amount of the stipend
- Designation
of the supervisor
- The
status of the graduate student with regard to the number
of assistantship award renewals remaining, if specified.
- Any
contingencies affecting the award, for example, second semester
of a teaching assistantship contingent on satisfactory performance
in the first semester
- A
copy of this policy and policies describing graduate student
benefits
- Reference
to the collective bargaining agreement as the governing
agreement for assistantships
The student's written acceptance of the offer should indicate
agreement with these conditions. The appropriate administrator
and the Office of the Dean file appointment forms. They
also file termination forms when the appointment is completed.
6.
The stipend for graduate assistantships is established annually
and is followed consistently. The stipends received
by graduate assistants in the College of Education are generally
not tax exempt.
7.
Questions about these policies may be addressed to students’
advisers, Department Executive Officers, or Department and Dean’s
Office staff.
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DEPARTMENT
GUIDELINES FOR GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS
Graduate
assistantships in the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership
Studies are governed by the regulations of the College of
Education and the Graduate College.
Department
Guidelines. In addition to the regulations of the College
of Education and the Graduate College, the Department has five
principles of policy regarding assistantships. The principles
are:
The
Department affirms its long-standing commitment that once
a student is placed on an assistantship, every effort will
be made to maintain the assistantship until the student
completes the degree for which he or she enrolled, to a
maximum of four years.
To
maintain an assistantship, each student must demonstrate
satisfactory performance in the assistantship and satisfactory
progress toward their degree.
In
the assignment of assistantships, EPLS will function as
a department, which maintaining an equitable distribution
of lines among the several EPLS graduate programs.
Each
assistant is to be supervised by an individual faculty member.
Students
will be assigned only to assistantships for which they demonstrate
reasonable competence.
Kind
of Assistantships. The Department ordinarily has both teaching
and research assistantships. The teaching assistantships are
for 7B:180 Human Relations for the Classroom Teacher. Research
assistantships vary among the faculty and according to the
availability of funds and needs of the Department. In general,
most assistantships in the Department are quarter-time.
Applications.
Application forms for assistantships within the Department are
available from the Department Office. The completed form should
be returned to the Department Secretary.
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