UChicago Parents Thread

<p>Hi everyone, I’m a current student:</p>

<p>Regarding computers: I’ve always found better deals on manufacturer’s websites or bargain sites like slickdeals.net than with the campus store. As far as technical support: The campus bookstore is an official warranty provider for many brands, my computer (a lenovo) was serviced by them and covered under warranty. So it doesn’t matter whether you buy the actual computer with them or not. </p>

<p>Regarding guest access to campus wireless (iPad or otherwise!): well, my parents never got guest logins–I don’t think that Chicago does them. An easy solution is for the student to to give his/her login information (Cnet & password)! to his/her parents/friend/visitor. I you don’t want your parents having that access to your records, change your password when they leave!</p>

<p>My daughter’s tuition was paid to Chicago two weeks ago. Today, the waived student medical insurance and Stafford loan were credited to my bank account.</p>

<p>[Career</a> services renamed, expanded – The Chicago Maroon](<a href=“Saul Bellow, dead at 89 – Chicago Maroon”>Saul Bellow, dead at 89 – Chicago Maroon)</p>

<p>It is a great improvement.</p>

<p>…</p>

<p>Career services renamed, expanded
The new Career Advancement office adds two programs as part of expansion of services.
by Benjamin Pokross - Oct 5, 2012 1:30 am CDT </p>

<p>The University’s career services office added two new programs, got a new name, and launched a new website this summer, as part of an effort to improve the resources and opportunities offered to students.</p>

<p>The office, formerly known as Career Advising and Planning Services (CAPS), is now called Career Advancement. According to Marthe Druska, Director of Operations and Marketing for the office, the switch came about as the office was absorbed by the Office of Enrollment and Student Advancement.</p>

<p>“The new name is a reflection of the expansion of the office, and of the interest on the part of the University of Chicago to support students’ career ambitions and career development, both while they are enrolled at the University and afterwards,” Druska said in an email.</p>

<p>The pre-professional programs have also been renamed. “Chicago Careers in…” are now referred to as “UChicago Careers in…”. In an e-mail sent to all students, Meredith Daw, Executive Director of the office, said that the name change was to emphasize the connection between the University and the companies who work with Career Advancement.</p>

<p>Career Advancement has also created two new programs intended to meet a greater range of student interests. UChicago Careers in Education Professions provides students with resources to pursue careers in all levels and fields of educational work, from K-12 instruction to research. The program will also continue the offerings of the discontinued Chicago Careers in Higher Education, Druska said.</p>

<p>The other new program focuses on entrepreneurship, providing opportunities for students interested in start-ups, venture capital, and innovation competitions.</p>

<p>Druska added that this series could be beneficial to all students, regardless of their career ambitions. “Because entrepreneurial skills are valued in every industry, all students at the University of Chicago can benefit from the innovation and entrepreneurship programming,” she said.</p>

<p>My son is in the class of 2016. He was awarded with over $2000 federal work study money, but he said he has a very busy schedule, and selected 4 classes. It seems he doesn’t want to get involved in the work study program. I try to push him, but he just doesn’t listen to me. what should I do? Any suggestions?</p>

<p>Have your son speak to someone in the Office of Financial Aid to determine what effect lack of work study funds will have on his tuition payment. Four classes is a full load at UChicago and the quarter system is an adjustment for many students. There is a lot of reading and studying. Perhaps he can find a work study job next quarter once he has settled in.</p>

<p>Just need try a few openings.</p>

<p>It is good news for UChicago. They will have an engineering major very soon.</p>

<hr>

<p>[Vision</a> for molecular engineering takes shape | The University of Chicago](<a href=“Page Not Found | University of Chicago”>Vision for molecular engineering takes shape | University of Chicago News)</p>

<p>By Steve Koppes
Image courtesy of David Awschalom</p>

<p>Matthew Tirrell probably has some idea of what pioneering physicist Albert A. Michelson experienced when University of Chicago founding President William Rainey Harper hired him in 1892 to build a physics department from scratch.</p>

<p>Last year Tirrell became the founding Pritzker Director of the University’s new Institute for Molecular Engineering, which will develop the tools of modern science to address societal problems in fields such as health care, energy, information technology, and the environment. The opportunities are not unlike those that greeted Michelson, who assembled one of the world’s foremost physics programs. Tirrell’s group is taking on the added challenge of helping to build a new field of study just as it is being defined.</p>

<p>“The idea of the Institute for Molecular Engineering is really unique in engineering,” Tirrell says. “It’s a chance to do something special in a clear playing field.”
Scholars at leading edge of technology</p>

<p>The Institute expects to hire at least 24 faculty members within a decade, setting off a flurry of program-building activity rarely seen in academia today. Last June, Tirrell announced the hiring of three founding faculty members in molecular engineering, all of whom, like him, have joint appointments at Argonne National Laboratory, the University’s partner in founding the Institute. These faculty members, in turn, hope to attract still more colleagues to take on the fresh challenge.</p>

<p>Also joining the team in September as the Institute’s executive director was tech industry veteran Sharon Feng. Her duties will include acting as a high-level liaison between the Institute, its partners and industry.</p>

<p>The new faculty appointees are the vanguard of a growing, team-based collaborative enterprise that will explore innovative technologies in nanoscale manipulation and design at and below the molecular scale.</p>

<p>Chemical engineers Juan de Pablo and Paul Nealey, both formerly of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, joined the Institute on Sept. 1. The appointment of physicist-engineer David Awschalom, of the University of California, Santa Barbara, will begin in early 2013.</p>

<p>All three researchers are in various stages of bringing to Chicago the postdoctoral scientists and graduate students that form the core of their current research groups. Further ahead, the Institute will develop courses for graduate and undergraduate students, and formally propose a graduate program.</p>

<p>“This year has been consumed with a really exciting process of identifying and attracting these new colleagues, and that process goes on,” Tirrell told the attendees of a welcome reception held for his new colleagues in July. As momentum continues to build, “the idea of molecular engineering and what the University of Chicago is doing in molecular engineering is really turning heads in the technical world.”
Research to help enrich lives</p>

<p>The Institute has made a temporary home for its administrative and faculty offices on the second floor of the George Herbert Jones Laboratory building, with temporary laboratory space on the first floor of the adjoining Searle Chemistry Building. Construction of the Institute’s permanent home one block north on Ellis Avenue, the William Eckhardt Research Center, is scheduled for completion in early 2015. The Institute will share the Eckhardt Center with portions of the Physical Sciences Division, an arrangement that will encourage interdisciplinary collaboration.</p>

<p>Tirrell envisions what he calls “a translational institute,” one that converts new research into solutions that enrich lives.</p>

<p>“In some sense, all of engineering is translational, but the Institute for Molecular Engineering is especially targeted at translating molecular science into important solutions to engineering problems,” Tirrell says.</p>

<p>Innovation is the watchword in these collaborations. Innovative methods that de Pablo and Nealey jointly developed at Wisconsin for creating nanostructures earned a spot on the International Roadmap for Semiconductors, which identifies technologies critical to the semiconductor industry’s miniaturization goals.</p>

<p>Their efforts capitalize on the ability of certain types of macromolecules to self-assemble into regular shapes, forming useful structures that are similar to those encountered in electronic circuits. They envision that much of the hard work of producing ultra-small nanostructures could be carried out by the molecules themselves, reducing cost and enabling manufacture of new generations of electronic and memory devices.</p>

<p>With complementary backgrounds that span soft and hard materials, biotechnology and nanotechnology, experimental synthesis and computer simulation, all four IME faculty members share ambitious plans that seek to revolutionize modern engineering.</p>

<p>“This challenge of building a new institute from the ground up just doesn’t happen every day,” says Nealey. “It’s a career opportunity that is truly special and unique.”
Building upon strength in the sciences</p>

<p>The Institute marks the University’s debut on the engineering stage, which the new researchers see as a plus because it offers ample room to innovate. At the same time, a star-studded cast of colleagues awaits them on the Hyde Park campus.</p>

<p>“The University of Chicago has great strength in the physical, biological, and medical sciences. We’d like to build on that strength as we develop the new Institute for Molecular Engineering,” de Pablo says.</p>

<p>Awschalom has developed experimental techniques that enable scientists to observe and control quantum states in semiconductors and nanostructures at the atomic scale, extending to individual electrons. Discoveries arising from his research are helping to drive the nascent fields of spintronics (manipulating the spin of electrons for technological applications) and quantum computation.</p>

<p>Quantum information processing involves manipulating quantum states of matter to develop new medical imaging, computation, and communication technologies that have the potential to transcend today’s capabilities. “It’s a very exciting time for undergraduates and graduate students to pursue careers in science and technology,” Awschalom says. “The IME has an opportunity to train a new generation of ‘quantum engineers’.”</p>

<p>It is a dramatic time in theatrical terms as well, because the Institute’s interdisciplinary collaborations will extend into the arts. Creating and developing new theater work inspired by science and technology will be the domain of Nancy Kawalek, who begins her appointment as professor and distinguished fellow in the arts, sciences and technology at the Institute early next year.</p>

<p>Kawalek is the founding director of STAGE—Scientists, Technologists and Artists Generating Exploration at the California NanoSystems Institute at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The STAGE Collaboratory, which Kawalek will move to Chicago, fosters the creation of multimedia theater pieces in which science and technology play prominent roles in content, form, or both.
Making history</p>

<p>Repeating the trailblazing success of Albert Michelson would be a steep challenge. Michelson, who in 1907 became the first American to receive a Nobel Prize in the sciences, recruited UChicago scholars Robert Millikan and Arthur Holly Compton—who both also went on to win Nobels. But whatever lies ahead, Tirrell and his new team believe they are at the brink of another historic opportunity.</p>

<p>“The people we want will really be excited by the special character and uniqueness of the Institute for Molecular Engineering,” Tirrell says. “It’s about making discoveries and making an impact in society. There’s nothing more energizing for a scholar than that.”</p>

<p>Anyone knows of Snell-Hitchcock break-in?</p>

<p>[University</a> to investigate series of dorm break-ins – The Chicago Maroon](<a href=“Saul Bellow, dead at 89 – Chicago Maroon”>Saul Bellow, dead at 89 – Chicago Maroon)</p>

<p>This is in the current edition of the paper.</p>

<p>My son is in Snell-Hitchcock, and he never even mentioned it during Parents Weekend. That news doesn’t make me too happy.</p>

<p>My daughter was a victim of the break in. I did not sleep for two days after it happened, and am still having trouble :(</p>

<p>The Maroon has quite a few details wrong in the article. </p>

<p>I brought up the break in at the Resident Masters reception, which was not a popular thing to do. I am a little perturbed that no one from the University bothered to contact us. We did talk to Megan, one half of the resident head team, (we called her husband Tom, and she returned the call) and she was honest and answered all of our quesions as best she could. Am I wrong to have wanted a call from someone in administration to try to calm my fears? Maybe tell me what steps the university was taking to make sure it never happens again? I realize that my daughter is an adult and we are merely her parents. But I hope no one who has just sent their firstborn off to college 300 miles away has to hear them tell you that a very large hooded figure forcibly broke into the dorm, went up the stairs, opened the door to her room, entered, and took her laptop while she was sleeping. Then he went across the hall and took two iphones from their bedside tables, while they were sleeping! Then he went upstairs and entered a third room, the student woke up and the hooded figure fled.</p>

<p>I am glad that he was only after property, and not a sleeping teenage girl. My daughter is tiny, he could have grabbed her out of her bed and been out of the building in minutes. It is taking all I have inside of me to keep my mother’s hysteria in check on this, and I am mostly succeeding. I grew up in a city, I know that crime happens there, in fact, it can happen anywhere. But…WOW. A stranger was in my daughter’s room, and stole her property. In the middle of the night while she was sleeping, where I thought she was reasonably safe. Not a good feeling. But I’m trying.</p>

<p>UChiMom- that is really very scary. Thank you for providing the details. I’m not surprised you can’t sleep - I wouldn’t be able to either. I hope your daughter is coping okay, and I really hope that they have a plan to deal with this so it doesn’t happen again.</p>

<p>UChiMom,</p>

<p>Yikes! I don’t blame you one bit for being so upset…Scary. Calling my daughter now to remind her to lock her door at night.</p>

<p>YES tell your kids to lock their doors. My daughter was planning on going across the hall to the bathroom to brush her teeth and do the bedtime routine…after she finished a texting conversation with a friend. She fell asleep and never made it to the bathroom, and never locked her door. I think they assumed (and rightly so, I believe) that they were safe in their rooms with all the security proceedures in place downstairs. But he bypassed that, broke in through the “out” door and went upstairs undetected. Locking their dorm room doors is their last line of defense, believe me, I don’t think my kid will ever not lock it again.</p>

<p>I am sorry to hear the story. Chicago should do something to reinforce the safety. At some other colleges, no matter how elite or how normal they are, safety is always a problem. </p>

<p>[The</a> Most Dangerous Colleges To Go To | Elite Daily](<a href=“http://elitedaily.com/elite/slideshows/dangerous-colleges/?slide=10]The”>http://elitedaily.com/elite/slideshows/dangerous-colleges/?slide=10)</p>

<p>Rank in “The Most Dangerous Colleges To Go To” </p>

<ol>
<li>University of Pennsylvania</li>
<li>Temple University</li>
<li>Columbia University</li>
<li>Johnson & Wales University</li>
<li>Washington University in St. Louis</li>
<li>Morgan State University</li>
<li>Rutgers University-Newark</li>
<li>Harvard University</li>
<li>Tufts University</li>
<li>University of Michigan-Ann Arbor</li>
</ol>

<p>Compared to UPenn, Columbia, Harvard, WUSTL, Chicago is relatively safe…</p>

<p>And Snell is the only dorm actually on the main quad! Talk about bold…We picked up the Maroon during Parents Weekend and read the article. I agree that reassuring phone calls to the victims families were in order. I wish I understood why there seems to have been a decision NOT to call.</p>

<p>In my son’s very new dorm, I could barely get in the front door to drop something off (after the official weekend ended; our stay in Chicago was extended by Hurricane Sandy), and it’s my understanding that room door are opened by keycard AND coded keypad. I sure as hell hope that the kids can’t bypass either.</p>

<p>UChiMom, hugs to you and your D.</p>

<p>Mutti, I wish I understood their silence as well. I keep expecting an email…but nothing. I am really not too happy about that.
The intruder broke into Hitchcock, not Snell. I believe it is the oldest dorm on campus, security seemed good when we moved her in, but after the break-in we could see the flaw that allowed this creep to enter. And I honestly believe that this person was familiar with the dorm set up. He bypassed the security portion of the entry, and went right to the exit only door to the left.<br>
In Hitchcock, the room doors use only a key. No keypad or keycard.</p>

<p>Thanks for the hug :-)</p>

<p>UChimom,
Is it possible to send an email to the vice president who is in charge of student life and safety? Complaint will make things work. If parents keep silent, then these administrators will take the break-in for granted. Parents should push them hard, to reinforce the safety and fix the loophole.</p>

<p>Chaudhuri - Yes, that is my plan. I have a draft and it just needs some tweaking but I will send it. Hopefully I will hear back.</p>