All astronomy graduate students (and physics students working in the Astronomy Department) share in some of the various duties that keep the department going. At the beginning of each semester the Small Council Rep holds a meeting of all of the graduate students and jobs are assigned (if you don't attend, you might not like the job you get).
The rules regarding jobs are
For reference, the previous year's job-holders are found here: 2020-21 Student Jobs List
The job descriptions below should include:
Also note that the Chair requests that a rough summary of all grad-student-led events that need funds for the year be given to them in the Fall.
- Nothing currently in this section!
Note: currently out of date.
The department projectionist makes sure that the weekly colloquium speakers can project their talks. This involves getting and setting up the projector (if there isn't one already in the room where the talk is to be held), ensuring the speaker is setup with a microphone before the talk, maintaining the laser pointers, and asking the speaker at tea if there's anything they need. (Note: the laser pointer requires 1.5V alkaline batteries, NOT rechargeable batteries (they don't have enough voltage). You can use the alkaline batteries in the bag). The projectionists should also bring an extra projector (and assorted equipment, if available) to colloquium. Finally, it is the responsibility of outgoing projectionists to train the incoming projectionists. This requires weekly work (just before colloquium) and is usually held by two first year students per semester.
This is a very big job requiring the combined efforts of at least three, if not four, students, though the workload is somewhat dependent on how many students are admitted (and how many of those choose to visit) - which is unfortunately something we don't know until the spring.
The department sends out its offer letters for Spring admissions typically in early February. As soon as this occurs, at least one member of the hosting committee needs to e-mail each one of them, inviting them to come visit and providing travel and visitation information, offering to answer questions, etc. - that is, generally serving as the primary representative of the department before their visit. Once students begin making travel arrangements, the committee has to be sure to keep careful tabs on everyone's arrival and departure dates, and ask/beg/plead the other students in the department to serve as hosts during their stay and provide transportation to and from the airport. The prospectives' days must also be planned out in advance, including faculty meetings (this means contacting faculty to arrange visits) and perhaps a handful of fun activities, such as a visit to SF. When the students arrive on campus, the committee is in charge of making sure the plans are actually executed as planned, including making sure all hosts are aware of the schedules of their prospectives. Meals are usually not planned well in advance (except the occasional special meal such as a women's lunch), but someone on the committe should be in charge of recruiting students ahead of time for each potential meal, making sure that there are neither too many nor too few current students coming along to talk with the new prospectives.
This large role breaks down into numerous smaller roles, including:
Typically, an effort of this size also requires one person to be designated as being the master planner as well, in addition to any lower-level responsibilities.
Every Tuesday at 3:30 the department gathers to eat baked goods in the lounge. The TAFT Czar does NOT provide the food (perhaps excepting the first day of the semester). The Czar merely wrangles OTHERS to do it and emails them the day before to remind them to do it or has a robot do it. One lucky student per semester gets this cushy job.
Each week, traditionally on Friday afternoons, we host an hour-long seminar that's explicitly open to only graduate students and postdocs (including visiting students or postdocs), but is not open to any faculty. The idea is to create a space where we students / postdocs can come together and share ideas, practice presentations, and build a community among ourselves without the stress / inhibitions / et cetera that comes along with the involvement of full professors. You can certainly invite undergrads to the seminars as well, if there's interest.
The long-standing tradition is to schedule one grad student and one postdoc to each give a short presentation with time for questions after each. The GSPS coordinator's job is to make sure we fill up the schedule of presenters, maintain the web page with the talk schedule, announce the seminar each week over the student and postdoc email lists and make sure attendance stays healthy, introduce the speakers each time, reserve the room, and be a host for the event. In the fall, it's a good idea to sign people up for the whole fall semester plus January; then in January, sign people up for the rest of the spring. (Also in the fall, try to get the email addresses of new postdocs to contact them as well, because they often have just arrived and aren't on the postdocs list yet but are interested in giving talks.) People sometimes like to go out for beer afterwards, and in some past years there have been funds for beer and snacks. Please see the GSPS web page for more description/motivation of the seminar series.
The Graduate Assembly is the arm of the student government specifically dedicated to graduate students. It receives graduate student fees and distributes them to various worthy projects around campus, including providing money for graduate students to attend conferences. The undergraduate student body, ASUC, technically represents graduate students as well, but is dominated by undergraduates (and, historically speaking, petty party politics and bickering). If you're used to ineffectual student government, the GA may surprise you. To be the GA rep, you must serve on a GA or campus committee, such as the New Building Committee (so whoever holds this job might want that one, too, since they have to serve on a committee, anyway). Committee time requirements can be as low as a few hours per month. The GA meets once a month for 2-4 hours and provides food. Your main duties will be to attend the GA and committee meetings and keep the other grad students apprised of goings on. Astronomy is allowed one GA delegate as well as an alternate, who may also be a committee member (not required) and can only vote if the delegate is not present.
Educate! Agitate! Organize!
The United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2865 is the union representing over 12,000 Academic Student Employees - Tutors, Readers, and Teaching Assistants - at the nine teaching campuses of the University of California. As for all employees, wages, benefits, workload, grievance procedures, and fair hiring processes are important issues of concern for graduate and undergraduate students working at the UC. Through the Union, we have the right to bargain with the UC over our working conditions and to have a say in the policies that affect us.
The Berkeley unit of AGSE represents the larger number of students in the UC system and it is part of the UAW Local 2865. The AGSE/UAW Berkeley meets once a month for ~2 hours and usually the topics are contract enforcement and outreach updates. Sometimes the job is more exciting like awakening consciences of regular citizens about an specific proposition (i.e. trying to reduce the budget for education; attacks on human rights like sweatshops or criminalization of 5 year old kids or some other nonsense propositions supported by some pathological politicians… ).
The meetings are held in the UAW 2865 Berkeley office at 2372 Ellsworth Street. Time requirements can be as low as a few hours per month. Your main duties will be to attend the meetings and keep the other grad students appraised of goings on. The annual meeting to discuss the strategies to reinforce the contract to pursue quality education is very instructive and fun. Someday all humans will have universal and free quality education.
The Mentor Master oversees the mentor system; look at that page or the detailed list of duties for more details. This job should be passed on in June rather than August. In late June/early July, the Mentor Master asks students to volunteer to act as mentors to incoming students, then (with input from the previous year's prospective hosting committee) pairs volunteer mentors with mentees. The Mentor Master holds a mentor/mentee kickoff lunch for incoming students the day before the Graduate Division's orientation, and a similar lunch for second-year students a few weeks into the school-year. Through the rest of the year, the Mentor Master's responsibility is to keep track of significant events in first- and second-year's schedules (e.g. upcoming 201 midterm, choosing next semester's classes), and send appropriately-timed reminders to the mentors to make arrangements to meet with their mentees. The Mentor Master checks in with mentees at the end of each semester to make sure the pairing is working, and also acts as back-up mentor if a mentee needs “menting” and their mentor is unavailable.
The outreach coordinator's main job is to run and organize the two biggest public outreach events the department participates in, Bay Area Science Festival (at AT&T Park in San Francisco), and Cal Day (UC Berkeley campus). This involves handling the logistics with the actual event organizers, and gathering volunteers to help. Note, Astro Night is now so large it has it's own coordinator, but the Outreach Coordinators can also help with the Astro Night coordinator as needed.
There are many other smaller outreach events throughout the year that the outreach coordinators organize, depending on availability and interest (of both the department and the public). Some examples include but are not limited to public talks at the Berkeley Public Library, elementary school department visits, and talks to Bay Area astronomy clubs.
Anybody in the department can come up with outreach events beyond the regularly scheduled ones– Astro Night began this way. The outreach coordinators are more than happy to help members of the department advertise and organize the outreach events they want to host.
[NOTE: This position used to be Public Liaison. As of 2019 we no longer have the “Ask and Astronomer” page on the website so we generally don't receive these types of requests anymore. Old job description: The de facto job of the public liaisons is two-fold. Firstly, the liaisons are contacted by whoever staffs the front desk of the department whenever a visitor calls (in person, by phone, or through e-mail) and asks to speak to an astronomer. This includes the media, grade school students, meteorite finders, curious callers from Sweden and, best of all, lunatics. The liaisons are given total authority to deal with these callers as the liaisons see fit. The second task is to handle any requests from the small percent of faculty who know about the liaison position. Some of our more visible faculty get more requests for interviews, class projects, and talks than they care to address, and some of these faculty will e-mail the liaisons to deal with these concerns. These can be dealt with by anything from a short phone conversation to an annual half-day field trip for a horde of 5th graders. Often the liaisons are also involved in other Public Outreach on behalf of the Astro Dept. This includes being part of Science@Cal, heading our department's Cal Day activities, finding people from our department to speak to amateur astronomy clubs in the area, etc. Basically the liaison are in charge of all public outreach aspects of the Department. Prospective undergrads and grads who visit the department may also get sent to the liaisons (though prospectives looking to go into the undergrad program should probably be forwarded to the Undergrad Liaison and prospectives looking to go into the grad program should probably be forwarded to the Hosting/Admissions Reps according to which semester it is).]
Every week we have Astronomy & Physics social hour, typically on the 6th floor of Campbell Hall, where we enjoy great weather, company of fellow grad students, and inexpensive beverages. As a result, the astronomy social hour coordinator is a very important position. As you may have noticed, Campbell Hall access is tightly regulated, so you are essential to ensuring that this event can occur on the best balcony on campus. You are also responsible for procuring beverages and setting up and cleaning up social hour. You will work closely with three physics social hour coordinators, as set-up requires multiple pairs of hands. While it is nice if you have a car, it is by no means a requirement, as you only really need 1-2 cars among the 4 coordinators. Traditionally this position is filled by first-year students, as it provides a great opportunity to meet some of your fellow graduate students in the physics department. Another perk of the job: as social hour coordinator, you do not have to pay for your beverages.
The department ski trip is an annual weekend-excursion usually held in January, February or March. The destination usually alternates between North and South Lake Tahoe. The primary activities are downhill skiing and snowboarding; some people often go cross-country skiing or snowshoeing as well. The responsibilities of the organizers are:
The Sierra Conference has a rich and storied history dating back to 1968. It began as a somewhat legitimate conference for California astro grads by California astro grads, featuring invited speakers, poster sessions, three course dinners, and live bears. Over the years it became more of a casual camping trip designed to “encourage collaboration and networking within the astronomy community in California.” As cliched as the wording is, it definitely strikes a chord: building a network and community of other left coast astronomers by enjoying the fun and beauty surrounding us. Unfortunately the event became only lightly attended and was abandoned in ~2015.
Thankfully it was revived in the past year thanks to a grant from UCSC and a multi-campus team of organizers. The Sierra Conference has been restructured to serve specifically the UC astronomy graduate student community, featuring a more balanced mix of recreational and scientific activities. In addition, discussions on grad student life, department climate, and the UC astronomy community are held. Notes from the past conference can be found here (this will be a link eventually). The past conference had 12 attendees from 7 UC's but is looking to expand to ~30 attendees from all 8 UC's with astronomy departments. It is generally held near the end of the Summer just before the start of classes so that first years might attend as well. The Sierra Conference will most likely continue to take place in Sequoia National Park as it is conveniently located for both northern and southern UC's.
At minimum, the UCB Sierra Conference coordinator will serve as the point person for the Sierra Conference at Berkeley. This entails advertising the event and planning the logistics of attending (i.e. arranging transportation, camping equipment, and food for the Berkeley contingent). However, it is preferred that UCB Sierra Conference coordinator also participate in the planning of the event which is done in collaboration with organizers at the other UC campuses (via Slack). This can include raising funds, scheduling and booking a campsite, designing an abstract booklet, leading discussions, and contributing to the longevity and long-term goals of the Sierra Conference.
A separate, updated Sierra Conference wiki/webpage in the works but here are some links to old Sierra Conference info. Here is the quick and easy guide to an awesome Sierra Conference. Also there now exists the Sierra Conference central page, with info on current/past/planning stuff for sierra conferences. There is a link for this page off of the start page of the badgrads wiki.
Our department has a glorious but inconsistent tradition of creating UC Berkeley Astronomy Department themed t-shirts and selling them. Though this job is a good one and department schwag is awesome and fun, the below job description should be considered extremely flexible and open to each new volunteer's personal interpretation of the job.
The overall plan is that, once per year, the T-Shirt coordinator runs a design call (write up a design brief, get department input) for T-shirt designs. You then need to coordinate with Brandye, Brad, Maria, and the UC branding team to find designs that fit the UC-mandated requirements. From there, run a competition in the department to decide on the new design. Brandye will then set up a shop for the winning design with approved vendors, and you just need to remind people to order and pick up shirts.
The cosmic gardener is in charge of the rooftop garden. The primary responsibility is watering the plants every few days. Watering only takes ten minutes, but since it happens multiple times a week, the job is actually quite time-consuming. Longer-term responsibilities include occasional feeding and pruning of plants, and maybe someday harvesting a lemon. For information on garden history and care of individual plants, visit the “the cosmic garden” page. The gardener should have easy access to the roof; knowledge about what makes plants happy is a plus.
SWPS (Society for Women in the Physical Sciences) is a resource for Berkeley graduate and undergraduate students in the physical sciences (physics, astronomy, geology, planetary science, and related fields). The goal is to create a friendly and supportive environment in these departments for all students and to particularly encourage women and minorities. SWPS offers workshops, networking opportunities, social activities, outreach projects, and “survival guides” for undergraduate majors.
SWPS Rep serves as one of the three primary SWPS coordinators, who oversee the many activities that SWPS participates in, including their mentoring program, community outreach programs, and large social events. As the Astronomy Dept. SWPS coordinator, you are responsible for organizing one SWPS dinner per semester, keeping the list of Astronomy female grads, postdocs, and undergrads up-to-date, advertising SWPS events in the department, and helping with the organization of other large SWPS events as much as possible.
Since this job can be a large time commitment, SWPS typically provides an honorarium of $200/year, although this is not guaranteed.
For more information, see the SWPS webpage.
The small council was created in Fall 2015 by (the then-brand-new department chair) Eugene Chiang. The small council is a group of people who work to keep lines of communication open between all of the different occupants of Campbell Hall.
Each major component of the department is represented by at least one person. The group meets all together with the department chair more-or-less monthly to talk about department-wide issues, disseminate information, and share issues of concern. As of 2015/2016, in addition to the chair, the council included the faculty member responsible as the head grad student adviser, the faculty member responsible as the head undergrad student adviser, an undergraduate major, a post-doc, and someone from the administrative staff.
The responsibilities of the Small Council representative are to attend these meetings, to present the discussions from those meetings to the rest of the graduate students when they are relevant to the whole student body, and to act as a conduit of information and discussion between the students and the others at the small council meetings. This job replaces the Faculty Representative job.
The Small Council representative is also tasked with running the yearly Fall Jobs meeting (see the old Faculty Representative description for some advice on how to do that). It is a responsibility of the chair (and the head graduate advisor) to choose a student that will take on this role. (It's not like the other graduate student jobs in this regard.)
This involves meeting with the Climate Committee usually at least once a semester to stay up to date on how the department is in terms of accessibility, issues that may need addressing, and any new initiatives to coordinate or sponsor. The faculty liaison usually initializes the meeting times, but it is important for representatives from all department levels (UG, G, PD, faculty, and staff) to be involved and present.
When the department holds a search to hire new faculty, a graduate student is selected by the faculty to serve on the Search Committee.
The Undergraduate Liaison acts as an advisor and mentor to the undergraduate astronomy majors, especially in helping them get involved with and complete research projects and apply to grad school. Throughout the year, the Undergraduate Liaison should visit the undergrad lab, make a concerted effort to get to know the majors, and update and maintain the Astronomy Undergraduate Research Resources (AURR) webpage. The undergrad liaison should also work closely with Amber Banayat regarding events for undergrads; our responsibility lies more on informing undergrads about academic career paths, whereas Amber and the university are more in charge of industry career paths. In general, the undergrad liaison should stay on top of general undergrad/grad student mentoring opportunities, for example, the monthly UAS-sponsored undergrad/department lunches. A rough calendar of other major duties follows:
The Wiki Master is in charge of the BADGrads wiki. They should bother others to keep the content of the wiki up to date. See the page on wiki administration for more information. The most important task of the Wiki Master is to help make user accounts for people. DokuWiki knowledge is useful too, but not necessary. If something goes horribly wrong and the Wiki Master can't figure it out, Bill Boyd can assist.
The librarian is responsible for the books that were once housed in the reading room, and, while we are in HFA, are in the graduate lounge. This means keeping (or putting) the books in some semblance of order, so that people are able to find books when they need them. It also includes maintaining the catalog, and reminding people to return books that have been out for awhile. When the library is in good shape, this is a pretty easy job. When the move to HFA has thrown everything in to disarray, it is fairly time consuming.
Needs updating: in New Campbell Hall the library is transforming into a reading room on the 5th floor.
Ay300 / Ay375 is the pedagogy course for the department. It has been taught by graduate students for almost the last decade. The job holders are responsible for creating lectures, activities, and discussions that convey the fundamentals of how to be an astronomy GSI as determined by the University of California at Berkeley Graduate Council. This job is determined before the jobs meeting. It is the responsiblity of the current Ay300 instructors to find instructors for the next school year. This job receives as 12.5% GSI position if there are two instructors, and a 25% GSI position if you teach the course alone.
2016: description needs updating.
Each week, we meet with the colloquium speaker so students can have an informal opportunity to meet the speaker and ask questions about their research and career, or anything else on people's minds. Responsibilities of this job include:
This job requires small weekly tasks in addition to attending and leading the meeting for fall and spring semesters, and can be handled by 1-2 students.
This talk series increases the exposure of UCB Astronomy undergrads, grads, and postdocs to a variety of career opportunities outside academia (any job except R1 university Prof.). Two to three times per semester we invite a UCB alum, who did their PhD in astronomy, to tell us how they got from grad school to their current job. The talk is informal and very interactive. The speaker spends 15-20 min telling us about their path and the remaining 40 minutes is Q&A. Thanks to strong faculty support, especially Eugene, Mariska, Imke, we have funding to cater the event. We bring in food during the last 20 min so we can eat, mingle, and keep the time commitment to 1 hour!
Movie Night is a semi-monthly gathering with screenings of astronomy or space-themed films and free pizza, snacks, and soda. The primary responsibility of the Movie Night Overlord is to screen a movie every other week (usually in Campbell 131) and send an email to the Movie Night mailing list informing them of what movie is going to be screened. Also, posters are to be made and put up before each movie night, pizza and other food is to be ordered, and reimbursements submitted (food is funded by the department). Further, at the beginning of each semester, a semester movie schedule is be selected, a corresponding semester movie poster is to be created, and the budget for the semester is to be agreed upon with the department.
(As of 2015/2016, a couple of movie nights were organized by various department members throughout the year, going out to a movie as a group, or presenting them with the projector in room 131, or presenting them using the 9-panel display on the 3rd floor. However, the regular movie nights were retired after 2015/2016 and weren't revived until 2018/2019.)
These jobs basically don't exist anymore. Such is the way of the world. Their descriptions are kept below in case someone wishes to know more of what used to be, or is inspired to build something new from the rubble of the old.
The big job! Colloquium Tea is a weekly event held in the lounge where the department gathers with the speaker and eats. Colloquium involves a lot of work, including acquiring funds, shopping in the days before colloquium, preparing the colloquium tea, and cleaning up. This job should be held by 3-4 second year students per semester, and at least one of them should own a car.
[*Also note that during years when the department is recruiting new faculty, there will likely be extra colloquia during the Spring semester. Thus extra people should hold the Tea job for semesters with job searches, if at all possible.*]
Each fall the department has a picnic. It involves grilling some food, lawn games, tug of war and just hanging around outside with colleagues, friends and family. The last few years its been at a picnic spot in Tilden near the Little Farm sometime around the end of September or beginning of October. The tasks involved are:
As of 2014/2015, the department picnic was fading away. In Spring 2016, the Prospective Visit Organizers/hosts organized a picnic during the time when prospectives were visiting. In addition to the prospective picnic, beginning Fall 2018 this was reincarnated as a department “welcome back” BBQ held in Campbell, after 1 min slides colloquium.
The faculty representative runs the grad student jobs meeting, attends faculty meetings (except closed meetings), and brings to the faculty any student concerns that come up. Here is a to do list for the jobs meeting:
In 2015/2016, the Faculty Rep job was transformed into the newly-defined Small Council Representative job.