Highlights from Announcements 12/5/22

Birds perch in a tree in front of McGraw Tower
Noël Heaney/Cornell University

Campus Update

Spring Checklist and Personal Responsibilities: Deadline December 15

Cornell will require all students to complete the Spring Checklist, submitting arrival date, contact information, and address for the spring semester. The checklist is now live and all students–undergraduate, graduate, and professional–must complete the checklist no later than December 15 (via the Daily Check). Failure to do so will result in an enrollment hold.


Registrar

Spring Status Deadlines

  • Students planning to be on leave for the spring semester must request leave of absence status NOW
  • Students planning to be engaged in full-time study at least 100 miles away from campus for the spring semester must request in absentia NOW

Contact the Graduate School (gradstudserv@cornell.edu) with questions or concerns.


December Recognition

December Graduates University Recognition Ceremony

The Cornell University Recognition Ceremony for December ’22 Graduates will be held in Barton Hall on Sunday, December 18 at 10 a.m.

If you plan to attend please review all the information on the Cornell Commencement website.

Here are specific items for you to review:

  1. Pre-order your cap and gown by November 13. (Note: this deadline has passed.)
  2. RSVP to participate in the ceremony by December 15.
  3. Tickets for guests: Guests will not need tickets for entry to the event. We encourage up to four guests per graduate. Graduates must RSVP to participate in the event and indicate number of guests attending.

Ph.D. Hooding Reception

The Graduate School will hold a private hooding reception for new Ph.D. graduates at G10 Biotech immediately prior to the December 18 Recognition ceremony. Ph.D. graduates are invited to attend this ceremonial hooding, in which a faculty member places the hood over the shoulders of the graduate to signify their success in completing their graduate program. 

Dean Boor will perform the hooding of our new graduates. Alternatively, graduates may invite their advisors or committee members to attend and perform the hooding.

Graduates should wear their appropriate cap, gown, and hood. Faculty members may wear their regalia, but it is not required.

Graduates and their advisors do not need to RSVP to attend this special event.

Coffee and pastries will be served, and family and friends are welcome to attend.

Please contact Sarah Day, sd756@cornell.edu with any questions.


Policy Reminder

Reminder on Vacation and Holiday Policies

As we approach the end of the fall term, winter break, and the new year, please set aside time to relax, connect with loved ones, and recharge. Funded graduate students are typically not expected for perform assistantship duties over the eight days of winter break (12/25/22-1/1/23). If time-critical duties (animal care, ongoing research projects, etc.) are required during this period, you should coordinate with your supervisor to arrange equivalent days off at another mutually agreeable time.

  • Cornell policy provides funded graduate students 10 paid weekdays of vacation time per year, in addition to 13 university holidays.
  • Days on which classes are not in session but the university is open (e.g., January intersession, spring break) are not automatic holidays for graduate students appointed on assistantships. Coordinate with your advisor if you wish to extend your winter break beyond January 2 using vacation time.

More information about the graduate student vacation policy can be found on the Vacation Time for Assistantships policy page.


Student Spotlight

Sylvana Ross wears a Cornell sweatshirt and holds an insect-catching net over her shouldersSylvana Ross is a doctoral student in entomology from Cincinnati, Ohio. She attended the University of Cincinnati as an undergraduate and now studies the genetic variation between urban and natural ant populations at Cornell.

Read more about Sylvana Ross.

All spotlights.


Kudos!

Ph.D. Candidate Published in Nature Ecology & Evolution

new paper published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, co-authored by natural resources and the environment Ph.D. candidate Rachel Neugarten, shows that conserving 30% of the Earth’s land and 24% of coastal waters would sustain 90% of nature’s contributions (food, clean water, climate regulation, and many other benefits) to people in every country.


Ph.D. Candidate Published in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering

Chemical engineering doctoral candidate Alexandra Khlyustova published a paper in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering. This paper uncovers the potential of amphiphilic thin films that outperform traditional hydrophilic materials at the solid-liquid-air interface, the location most prone to biofilm formation by motile bacteria.