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Alumnae Whitaker to Speak at New Doctoral Hooding
Ceremony By BRIAN MacPHERSON CHAPEL HILL -- A new tradition will become
part of this year's commencement weekend at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill when the inaugural Graduate School doctoral
hooding ceremony takes place on May 17 on Polk Place. The featured speaker will be Dr.
Beth Elise Whitaker, who received M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees in political science from Carolina and now serves
on the faculty of UNC-Charlotte. The 10 a.m. event, scheduled the day prior
to the annual campus-wide ceremony in Kenan Stadium, will honor a
long-standing tradition in graduate education that symbolizes the
completion of doctoral training. It is designed specifically to recognize
students who receive their doctoral degree through the Graduate School,
said Dr. Linda Dykstra, school dean. Each graduate participating in this ceremony
will be called to the stage and will have the hood of the commencement
regalia conferred by his or her adviser or dissertation committee
chair. Family and friends will be invited to attend. "I believe a ceremony such as this will
bring greater visibility to a very important aspect of Carolina's
education mission -- doctoral training," Dykstra said. "Almost
a third of our students are graduate students, and the contributions
they make to the university are significant. Since each doctoral student
will be hooded by their major faculty adviser, this ceremony also
provides a way to acknowledge the central role that our faculty play
in doctoral education." The decision to hold a hooding ceremony was
a cooperative effort, she said. Chancellor James Moeser's support
moved the initiative forward; Executive Associate Provost Bernadette
Gray-Little carried the proposal to the Dean's Council and to faculty
across campus; and the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council
endorsed it. "In addition," Dykstra said, "there was a great deal of support from individual doctoral students as well as from the Graduate Student Federation and its current president, Branson Page." The hooding ceremony will include all students who receive their doctoral degrees from the Graduate School and will include all Ph.D. and Dr.PH. students. The School of Public Health also offers the Dr.PH. degree, and these students will be included in the hooding ceremony, she said, but professional doctorates will not be a part of this ceremony as these degrees are not awarded through the Graduate School. Whitaker's return to Chapel Hill to speak will help focus attention on her successful Graduate School record. As a Carolina graduate student, Whitaker was a Lovick P. Corn Dissertation Fellow in the Graduate School's prestigious Society of Fellows. Her research focused on the impact of the approximately 1.3 million refugees from Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire), who fled to communities in northwestern Tanzania. She spent two years in Tanzania, looking at the costs and benefits of the African refugees' presence in that country. After graduating from Carolina, Whitaker moved to Washington, D.C., where she served as a senior research assistant for the Africa Project at the Brookings Institution. Now an assistant professor in the department
of political science at UNC-Charlotte, Whitaker is one of two former
Carolina graduate students who sits on the university's Graduate Education
Advancement Board. The board is responsible
for championing the cause of Carolina graduate education and to increase
support for graduate students. The new hooding ceremony also comes in the same year the Graduate School is celebrating its 100th anniversary. (For details on the school's centennial celebration, go to http://www.ais.unc.edu/sis/admissions/grad/centennial/index.html.) Rain site for the hooding ceremony is Carmichael Auditorium.
Photo URL: To download a head-and-shoulders photo
of Whitaker, go to: Hooding ceremony Web Page: http://www.unc.edu/commencement/hooding.html
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