User:Philtweir/Structure of a Cambridge College

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Colleges of the University of Cambridge function largely autonomously from the University of Cambridge, undertaking a degree of responsibility for the academic and pastoral welfare of the university students and faculty. The colleges have their own research and teaching staff as well as a combination of resident university staff, postgraduates and undergraduates. As a consequence of the organic growth of this relatively uncommon arrangement, the colleges have developed structures and terminology specific to collegiate universities.

Master

Dean

Senior Tutor

Common Rooms

Fellow

A college Fellow is a senior, elected member of the college with a component say in the running of the college.[1] Fellows may receive accommodation or a stipend from the college.

Director of Studies

A college Director of Studies is a Fellow of the college with overarching responsibility for a student's academic progress, the assignment of supervisors and advice regarding the university's academic provisions.[1]

As such, a Director of Studies fulfills a role equivalent to a college Tutor elsewhere, who is instead responsible not for a student's academic welfare, but for their pastoral care. It is not usual for a student's Tutor to simultaneously act as their Director of Studies.[2]

It is common for a Director of Studies to be responsible for all or some of the students taking courses in their field. Where no Fellow of the college is engaged in a particular subject, students taking the relevant Tripos papers may be assigned to a Director of Studies at another college, or to a willing Fellow outside their area.[citation needed]

Supervisor

A Supervisor of students is usually a postgraduate member, academic staff member or freelance graduate of the university employed by a college to teach individuals or small groups of students in a given paper.

References

  1. ^ a b University and Colleges - How the University works; Glossary of Cambridge Terminology, University of Cambridge, retrieved 15 Feb 2011
  2. ^ Frank H. Stubbings (1995), Bedders, Bulldogs and Bedells: a Cambridge glossary, Cambridge University Press, p. 36