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CW + 1956 Collab Edition

In this first-ever collaborative issue between Nineteen-Fifty-Six and The Crimson White, we bring you stories of frustration and hope, change and stagnation, raging against the machine and working to change it from within. We hope you enjoy reading it as much as we enjoyed making it for you.

In this first-ever collaborative issue between Nineteen-Fifty-Six and The Crimson White, we bring you stories of frustration and hope, change and stagnation, raging against the machine and working to change it from within. We hope you enjoy reading it as much as we enjoyed making it for you.

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“As a woman with traditional gender<br />

roles, I was concerned that pursuing<br />

a doctorate would be incapacitating<br />

me as a wife and mom,” Nichols<br />

said. “Because it’s a totally different<br />

basket of challenges.”<br />

Nichols noted that for graduate<br />

students like her, who are not just<br />

students but parents too, some of these<br />

extra challenges center on balance.<br />

“The thing to remember is [that] I<br />

can have a family, a rewarding and<br />

enriching marriage, motherhood,<br />

career and doctoral degree. I can have<br />

all of those things,” she said. “In fact,<br />

I can have all of those things at the<br />

same time maybe, but I have to choose<br />

what’s going to not be on my plate in<br />

order to pursue all of those things.”<br />

GSA recognizes the role balance<br />

plays in the lives of grad students and<br />

seeks to leverage resources to help<br />

them as much as possible.<br />

Nichols said GSA has connected her<br />

with other graduate students while<br />

also providing tailored support. She<br />

mentioned programs like Sitters<br />

for Service, a babysitting program<br />

for graduate students with children<br />

that was temporarily closed due to<br />

COVID-19. Kelly said programs like<br />

this were important because “aside<br />

from academically, we want the whole<br />

person to be successful.”<br />

DEFINING COMMUNITY<br />

Kelly said when trying to foster success<br />

for graduate students, it’s important<br />

to acknowledge that the graduate<br />

student body looks remarkably<br />

different from the undergraduate<br />

student demographic, and so do its<br />

needs.<br />

According to college enrollment<br />

and student demographic statistics<br />

compiled by EducationData, 18.7%<br />

of graduate men and women are<br />

single parents, 5.8% are married<br />

and 4.9% work full-time.<br />

While finding a home-work balance<br />

can be daunting, the sheer depth of<br />

financial constraints on graduate<br />

students can’t be overstated.<br />

“We aren’t just students in the everyday<br />

capacity,” Kelly said. “We are part of the<br />

core of the University as instructors,<br />

we are in the classroom also delivering<br />

knowledge and we are the main engine<br />

for research on campus.”<br />

Graduate students often rely on<br />

teaching or research assistantships<br />

to cover the cost of their tuition and<br />

are sometimes awarded stipends<br />

for living expenses. But Kelly said<br />

that money isn’t always adequate<br />

for the amount of work that is<br />

done and the cost of living.<br />

“There is a huge tradeoff,” Kelly said.<br />

“We have a lot of students who are<br />

in programs that keep their [offcampus]<br />

jobs and decide to take<br />

a smaller course load.”<br />

In an informal survey conducted by<br />

The Crimson White, around three in<br />

10 graduate students reported having<br />

a second job. Though the majority did<br />

not, a few students said that was only<br />

because they didn’t have the time for<br />

one.<br />

“The ratio of work to payments is<br />

[100] to [zero],” said Kayla Ballard,<br />

a graduate student in the college of<br />

education.<br />

She said for graduate students<br />

to be financially stable, it is<br />

“absolutely” important for them<br />

to have a second job.<br />

While full-time graduate students<br />

grapple with the pressure to secure<br />

an off-campus job to supplement<br />

their stipend, the challenge lies in<br />

juggling a full course load and an<br />

outside job without compromising<br />

educational performance.<br />

Survey respondents echoed<br />

their dissatisfaction with the<br />

stipend rates and called for an<br />

increase in funding packages that<br />

commensurate with their value.<br />

“The payment can definitely be<br />

increased,” one graduate student<br />

surveyed said. “After tax is removed,<br />

the amount I get is barely enough,<br />

especially now with increase<br />

in rent rates.”<br />

Graduate students have not only<br />

encountered problems with finances.<br />

Housing placement and affordability<br />

also pose an issue for some.<br />

“A lot of [graduate students] moved<br />

to Tuscaloosa to pursue their degree,<br />

and sometimes it’s hard to find<br />

affordable housing and function<br />

with a job that allows you to pay a<br />

mortgage, rent or a lease for a condo or<br />

apartment,” Kelly said.<br />

The GSA housing committee is<br />

committed to helping graduate<br />

students find adequate and affordable<br />

housing. Kelly said the GSA housing<br />

committee provides resources for<br />

graduate students to find housing<br />

that fit those diverse needs.<br />

“There are people who start graduate<br />

school later in life, who are already<br />

married and they have kids,” Kelly said.<br />

“They want to find a neighborhood<br />

that is suitable for kids, married life,<br />

and that has good schools.”<br />

Baggett, who is pursuing a doctoral<br />

degree in aerospace engineering and<br />

mechanics, directly works with the<br />

housing committee. She explained<br />

how the housing committee has been<br />

giving graduate students an outlet to<br />

communicate with each other about<br />

housing opportunities, and “giving<br />

graduate students the basis for<br />

community outreach.”<br />

Baggett said one way that the housing<br />

committee helps graduate students<br />

find housing is through surveying<br />

and connecting graduate students<br />

to online resources, like housingoriented<br />

social media pages and<br />

virtual property tours.<br />

“These are opportunities for graduate<br />

students to inform other graduate<br />

students about where they’re<br />

15

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