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Information for
IAP Coordinators
and Administrators
Encouraging Activities
The
Role of the IAP Department Administrator
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The
Role of the IAP Department Coordinator
Since IAP is "by, for, and about the MIT community,"
the role of the local IAP Department Coordinator is to encourage colleagues
in his or her department, laboratory, center, office, or student group
to offer and to attend IAP activities.
Subject and Activity planners should keep
in mind the following objectives:
- Create programs appealing to freshmen.
- Try new teaching methods and learning
formats that may improve the regular academic program.
- Offer short courses and seminars for credit,
as well as publicize opportunities for independent study.
- Develop more Institute-wide activities
to create a sense of community at MIT.
- Promote student-faculty interaction.
As the Coordinator, you serve as the source
of information about IAP resources, policies, and procedures for your
department, group, office, etc. Academic departments are encouraged
to organize both for-credit subjects as well as not-for-credit activities.
To that end, you should be familiar with IAP
guidelines, including pages 48 and 49 of the MIT
Bulletin, and About IAP.
- Advise activity leaders on the details of
organizing, such as the availability of rooms and funding.
- Help students seeking independent projects
by identifying faculty or other resource people who can advise them.
- Together with your IAP Department Administrator,
review all departmental offerings for appropriateness.
Encourage
Faculty, Colleagues, Students and Alumni to Offer IAP Activities
- Make announcements at meetings, create posters
and flyers, and send memos and e-mail messages to encourage people (especially
students!) to organize activities
- Talk to students -- not just majors, but freshmen,
upperclass students and alums from your department and in other areas
as well.
- Look at last year's Guide on-line at IAP
'00 For-Credit Subjects and at IAP
'00 Non-Credit Activities by Sponsor.
- Meet with last year's Department Coordinator
to find out what activities were most popular.
- Suggest activities that give the MIT community
an opportunity to learn more about the work of your department and to
meet the people behind the scenes in one or more informal sessions.
- Suggest offerings related to hobbies, outside
interests, musical talents, travelogues.
- Ask your departmental student group or honorary
society to sponsor an activity.
- Suggest that faculty experiment with curriculum
development. Urge them to use IAP to explore a section of one of their
regular courses in greater depth.
- Have a faculty member devise an independent
project to be listed in the Guide as a department activity for students.
The
Role of the IAP Department Administrator
The IAP Department Administrator is
the central person in an academic Department, Lab, or Center responsible
for submitting all IAP information to the Web for both departmentally-sponsored
credit subjects and non-credit activities. Only the IAP Department
Administrator is authorized to submit and update credit-bearing subjects
for the IAP website.
Basic responsibilities
of the IAP Department Administrator
- Submit your department's for-credit and non-credit
offerings via the IAP Posting Forms
- With your IAP Department Coordinator, review
and approve all offerings and on-line postings that list your Department,
Lab, or Center as a sponsor prior to being submitted to the IAP web
page. This ensures that all information is correct and appropriate
to the objectives and guidelines for IAP.
- Make sure that faculty and students involved
in projects or classes for academic credit know the policies regarding
taking subjects for credit.
- Be sure to submit grades by the deadline
to be announced.
For guidelines on determining undergraduate
credit-bearing subjects see How to Determine the Correct Number of
Units.
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