Secretary of the Faculty ~ University of Wisconsin-Madison
HomeSite MapSearch

Go to UW-Madison Home Page


Academic Calendar

Commencement

Committees

Faculty Divisions

Faculty Governance Legislation

Faculty Senate

Lectures

University Committee

Policies and Guidelines for Requesting Lectures Committee Support

  1. About the Lectures Committee
    1. Role of the committee
    2. The Fitch Fund
  2. Eligibility for lecture support
    1. Who may request support
    2. Specific exclusions
  3. Submitting requests
    1. Number of requests
    2. Submission of requests
  4. About the proposed lecture and lecturer
    1. Subjects of lectures
    2. Stature of lecturers
  5. About lecture scheduling
    1. Dates, hours and locations
    2. If changes are necessary
  6. About the budget
    1. Funding
    2. Honorarium
    3. Travel expenses
    4. Per diem expenses
    5. Other lecture expenses
    6. Arrangements for international speakers
  7. Responsibilities of the sponsoring unit
    1. Local arrangements
    2. Publicity
    3. Attendance reports
  8. Lecture co-sponsorship
    1. General information
    2. Lectures sponsored by registered student organizations
  9. Suggestions

 


  1. ABOUT THE LECTURES COMMITTEE

    1. ROLE OF THE COMMITTEE

      The Lectures Committee supports departments, academic programs and student organizations that bring distinguished lecturers to the UW-Madison campus. Lectures are intended to enrich the general intellectual and cultural life of the university community. The committee itself does not initiate lecture arrangements. Rather, it receives and acts on requests from eligible university groups that are interested in inviting outstanding speakers to the campus.

      The financial support the committee provides is made possible by grants from general university funds, the Anonymous Fund, the Knapp Bequest, the Meiklejohn Fund, and the Fitch Fund. Because the committee's funds are very limited, we expect that applicants will seek funding from other sources before requesting the support of the Lectures Committee. (Note that it is not appropriate to request support from the agencies that have made grants to the committee.) Further, commitment by the sponsoring units to provide partial financial support for the lecture will strengthen the request.

      If the Lectures Committee approves a request for lecture support, the committee will help publicize the lecture through campus posters, announcements in Wisconsin Week, and the university's on-line calendar of events. The committee expects to provide these services and will not grant requests for support of lectures to be publicized without them. All lectures that the committee supports must be readily accessible to the university community, open to the public and free of charge.

    2. THE FITCH FUND

      The William Fitch Scholarship Fund is available "to bring to Madison prominent business people to give lectures on the American free-enterprise system." The Lectures Committee administers these funds in the same fashion as regular lecture series funds. While the same regulations apply, use of these funds is not charged against a sponsoring unit's credit for the use of regular Lectures Committee funds. In other words, whereas the committee normally supports at most one lecture per semester for any one unit (as detailed in section III.A.), if the lecture topic meets the Fitch Fund's requisite criteria, the unit remains eligible to receive support for another lecture taking place during the same semester as the Fitch Fund lecture.

      The committee wants to bring availability of support by this fund to the attention of all potential applicants. We believe that virtually any department, academic program or student organization could qualify for support through the Fitch Fund, so we encourage applicants to consider this avenue.

  2. ELIGIBILITY FOR LECTURE SUPPORT

    1. WHO MAY REQUEST SUPPORT

      Units eligible to request funding are: 1) academic departments; 2) officially recognized interdepartmental programs, centers, and institutes that have an identifiable student constituency; and 3) student organizations formally registered with the Office of the Dean of Students.

      The Lectures Committee will consider on a case-by-case basis requests from university-based centers and institutes, but only when 1) the center or institute is closely integrated with student programs and 2) the application includes evidence to indicate substantial student interest in the proposed lecture.

      Registered student organizations are eligible for committee support only when an academic department endorses their request and agrees to co-sponsor the lecture. As described in section VIII, an academic department that endorses a request from a student organization is in no way restricted from submitting its own request for lecture support. Any student organization interested in requesting committee support must review the document Requesting Lectures Committee Support by Registered Student Organizations prior to submitting a lecture request.

    2. SPECIFIC EXCLUSIONS

      No subdivision of a department is eligible for committee support. The committee will not support a "guest" or substitute lecturer for a university course[1] under any circumstances. The committee will not support a lecture presented as part of a program that requires registration and/or charges an attendance fee unless that lecture is made free and open to the public.

      [1] Lectures Committee funds are intended only for specially organized lectures. These lectures should take place outside a regularly scheduled class or departmental forum. The committee is not opposed to having the lecturer participate in additional academic activities such as presentations in classes, discussions with undergraduate and graduate students, meetings with faculty, etc. On the contrary, the committee will be pleased to see the sponsors making as good use as possible of the lecturer's visit. It should be clear, however, that none of these activities could be entertained as substitutes for the lecture financed through the Lectures Committee. It is also important to remember that this committee cannot be responsible for funding these additional activities.

  3. SUBMITTING REQUESTS

    1. NUMBER OF REQUESTS

      The Lectures Committee attempts to distribute funding equitably to groups across the campus. To this end, the committee will allow any eligible unit, as defined in section II.A., to submit a maximum of two lecture requests per academic year, with the provision that the proposed lectures cannot take place during the same semester. A unit that does not request support for a summer or fall semester lecture is not entitled to request support for two spring semester lectures in lieu of not requesting support for a lecture in a previous semester. Likewise, a unit that does not intend to request support for a spring semester lecture is not entitled to request support for two fall semester lectures.

      Numerous departments, programs and/or student groups on the campus have significant shared interests. We encourage these groups to collaborate to (in effect) expand the number and scope of lectures available to their members.

    2. SUBMISSION OF REQUESTS

      The committee will consider requests for support as long as funds are available. We urge applicants to submit requests as soon as possible and well in advance of the date of the proposed lecture. Each year the committee has had to deny a number of requests because they were submitted too late. The committee cannot accept rush requests.

      Send completed requests for support directly to the committee's support staff in room 133 Bascom Hall. A completed request includes the original plus 8 copies of the Lectures Committee Support Request Form and all attachments. When possible, make double-sided copies of the request to conserve paper. In addition, fill out and attach the Submission Checklist to the face of the original Support Request Form.

      The committee reviews new requests once each month throughout the calendar year. Requests are due by the 15th day of the month. Incomplete requests will not be distributed to the committee until all required information and attachments are supplied. The committee will adhere to the following distribution schedule:

      If the date of a proposed lecture occurs in: Submit the application: [2]
      January any time prior to November 15
      February any time prior to December 15
      March any time prior to January 15
      April any time prior to February 15
      May any time prior to March 15
      June any time prior to April 15
      July any time prior to May 15
      August any time prior to June 15
      September any time prior to July 15
      October any time prior to August 15
      November any time prior to September 15
      December any time prior to October 15

      [2] N.B.: Applicants need not wait until the due date to submit a request; indeed, the committee urges applicants to submit requests as early as possible to ensure funding availability.
          When inviting an international speaker, be sure to allow sufficient time for the visa application process. See section VI.F. for more information.

  4. ABOUT THE PROPOSED LECTURE AND LECTURER

    1. SUBJECTS OF LECTURES

      As stated in UW-Madison Faculty Policies and Procedures, the function of the Lectures Committee is to consider "requests for lectures of general interest that are not primarily supplementary to or extensions of programs of instruction provided by colleges, schools, or departments." Consistent with FPP, the committee looks forward to supporting lectures of general interest to members of the university community.

      Since undergraduate students compose the majority of the university community, we urge sponsoring units to choose lecture topics and speakers that are of interest to undergraduates. Subjects of interest to upper-level undergraduates and graduate students also will be considered. Subjects chosen should appeal to persons outside, as well as those inside, the sponsoring units. In all cases, the subject of the lecture should be consistent with the professional standing of the proposed lecturer.

      The committee is interested in how the proposed lecture will contribute to the general intellectual and/or cultural life of the university community. Highly technical lectures or lectures appealing to a restricted audience should be supported by grants from institutional or research funds. Address requests for such lectures to the dean of the appropriate college or school, rather than to the Lectures Committee.

      The committee will entertain requests for lectures that are of an unusual nature, such as those given in a language other than English, only if the application includes adequate justification.

    2. STATURE OF LECTURERS

      The Lectures Committee supports bringing speakers of proven distinction to the UW-Madison campus. Requests for support must include evidence (written in English) of the lecturer's qualifications and professional standing. Such evidence should state the lecturer's educational background and cite specific examples of authored publications, exhibitions, films, awards received, or other pertinent works or achievements. This may take the form of: an abbreviated curriculum vitae; a resume; a biographical sketch; an entry from Who's Who; or any similar documentation in which the proposed lecturer's professional credentials are readily apparent.

      Evidence of the proposed lecturer's qualifications and professional standing may not exceed 2 pages in length. The committee believes that a concise document (comparable to those submitted to external funding agencies) should communicate this information adequately. The proposed lecturer's full c.v. will not be accepted for review.

      Specific exclusions: The committee does not provide funds for lecturers, however distinguished, who lecture under contract for commercial agencies or who earn their living as professional lecturers.

  5. ABOUT LECTURE SCHEDULING

    1. DATES, HOURS AND LOCATIONS

      Sponsoring units should schedule lectures so as to maximize attendance by the diverse university community, especially undergraduates, as well as by the public audience. The committee will accept applications for lectures scheduled to occur during the fall and spring semesters as well as during the eight-week (DHH) summer session. When selecting a lecture date, give careful consideration to cycles in the university's academic calendar. Lectures proposed during vacations, near vacations (e.g., Thanksgiving week, the Friday before Easter), during or near examination periods, or on a major religious holiday will not be approved without compelling justification. The lecture must be held at a location on or immediately adjacent to the campus, one that is easily accessible to the general student audience and is wheelchair accessible. The lecture must be open to the public and without charge.

      Schedule the lecture for a time when student attendance is possible and likely, usually 12:00 noon or later. A proposed lecture time before 12:00 noon requires compelling justification. Lectures proposed on Friday evenings or on weekends generally will not be approved. Similarly, a lecture proposed for the same time as another committee-supported lecture will not be approved unless the scheduling conflict is absolutely unavoidable.

      In a recent analysis of attendance data from 627 lectures given between fall 1995 and fall 2004, we found that early afternoon (between 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m.) and early evening (between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.) lecture times were more likely than other times during the day to attract audience participants. We also found that lectures on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays tended to attract larger audiences than lectures on Mondays and Wednesdays.

    2. IF CHANGES ARE NECESSARY

      If the date, time, and/or location of a lecture must be changed from what is submitted on the Support Request Form, a written request and justification for the change must be submitted to the chair of the Lectures Committee. Prior authorization for changes is required. If prior authorization is not obtained, the Lectures Committee may withdraw its support of the lecture, and the sponsoring units will bear the full financial responsibility for its costs.

      If it becomes necessary to change the date of an approved lecture, the new date must fall within the same academic year for which the lecture was approved. If this is not possible, the lecture request will be considered null and void. Should the sponsoring unit still desire support for the lecture, the unit will need to submit a new request.

  6. ABOUT THE BUDGET

    1. FUNDING

      The Lectures Committee expects that applicants will seek funding from other sources before requesting committee support. The committee is able to maximize the number of lectures it supports each year because of commitments by the sponsoring units to provide partial financial support for a lecture. Thus, the committee is more favorable to funding requests that present evidence of such support.

      The financial support the committee provides is made possible by grants from general university funds, the Anonymous Fund, the Knapp Bequest, the Meiklejohn Fund, and the Fitch Fund. Although the level of funding from these sources has been steady in recent years, it is subject to change annually. Consequently, financial support of lectures is always contingent upon the committee's annual budget.

      In recent years, the committee has provided an average of $900 to $1,000 per lecture. This figure includes honorarium, travel and per diem expenses.

    2. HONORARIUM

      The committee uses a variable honorarium system for recognizing lecturers. An applicant may request an honorarium of $0, $300 or $600. Higher honoraria may be considered for exceptional lecturers[3]. When requesting support for a lecture, the applicant must specify the honorarium level requested. If the requested honorarium is above the $0 level, the applicant must justify the level requested, as described below. Note that the sponsoring units may use other funds to supplement the honorarium requested from the Lectures Committee.

      Evaluation criteria and expectations identified below should guide the applicant's selection of an honorarium. These serve as the bases of the committee's evaluation of the appropriateness of the honorarium level requested. The committee will adjust the honorarium (upward or downward) based on the applicant's documentation.

      Honorarium evaluation criteria include: 1) the extent to which the proposed lecture addresses a topic of general interest; 2) the level of interdisciplinary support for the lecture; 3) the audience size realistically anticipated; and 4) the stature of the speaker. The lecture request must include evidence speaking to each of these points.

      The committee's expectations for materials submitted with the lecture request depend upon the honorarium level requested. When a higher honorarium level is requested, the committee also expects the applicant to include more comprehensive plans for: 1) publicizing the proposed lecture; and 2) attracting students (particularly undergraduates) to the proposed lecture.

      Contrasting examples may help illustrate appropriate honorarium levels in actual lecture requests. A $0 honorarium lecture might: be of interest primarily within a single department/program; have perhaps one co-sponsor; have interest limited to faculty and graduate students; anticipate an audience of less than 50 persons; and have no special publicity planned. In contrast, a lecture requesting the maximum $600 honorarium might: be on a topic of broad interest throughout the university community; have several co-sponsors; have the lecturer address the lecture topic at a level readily accessible to non-specialists; anticipate an audience of more than 100 persons; and include a plan for active, campus-wide publicity. (Note that these examples are presented for illustration only. They should not been seen as prescribing the content of any specific lecture request.)

    3. [3] Requests for higher honoraria for exceptional lecturers require compelling justification.

    4. TRAVEL EXPENSES

      Requested airfare should be firm (not rough) estimates. Fares should be based on economy class, 30-day advance purchase. The committee urges applicants to exhaust every effort to obtain special fares. Savings obtained in this way in prior years have enabled the committee to sponsor several additional lectures. Travel expenses in excess of $1,000 are the responsibility of the sponsoring unit. Please include copies of 3 online airfare estimates with application, if applicable. Airfare estimates must be included at the time of submission to be considered for funding.

    5. PER DIEM EXPENSES

      The committee has a general policy of granting only a 1-day per diem at the rate of $100. The per diem is intended to cover the lecturer's meal and lodging expenses and applies only to the date of the lecture, not to the lecturer's entire stay on campus. Like the honorarium, the per diem can be supplemented by the sponsoring unit through other funds.

      The committee recommends that the sponsoring unit make the lecturer's lodging arrangements in order to secure the state rate for lodging. Consider using an on-campus facility such as the Friedrick Center, Lowell Center, Memorial Union or Union South, all of which provide quick and easy access to the campus.

      While the committee's policy is to grant a 1-day per diem, if the lecturer provides other services of a public (i.e., university-wide) nature on another day, the sponsor may request additional per diem expenses. In such cases, the applicant must detail and fully justify the request for additional per diem.

    6. OTHER LECTURE EXPENSES

      All other lecture expenses (e.g., room rental, receptions, dinners, etc.) are the responsibility of the sponsoring unit. If agreeable to the speaker, the sponsoring unit may make arrangements with DoIT to record the lecture using streaming media for future listening and/or viewing over the internet. Although the Lectures Committee cannot pay the expense for this service, the committee will be pleased to add a link to the recorded lecture on its web site.

    7. ARRANGEMENTS FOR INTERNATIONAL SPEAKERS

      Sponsoring units that wish to invite international speakers to the campus should be advised that such speakers are covered by special federal laws related to: 1) travel and immigration documentation; 2) payments that can be made by the university; and 3) the speaker's U.S. tax liability. Enforcement of these laws has changed in recent years and become more stringent; the committee does not control this situation and has no ability to override it.

      Because the process for securing necessary travel documents can be relatively complex and lengthy, the sponsor should contact the Office of International Faculty and Staff Services (265-4000) at least three months in advance of the speaker's visit if the visa application process is not otherwise underway. An international speaker's visa class dictates the individual's eligibility to receive payment for giving a lecture and to receive reimbursement for travel expenses; therefore, it is critical that the speaker obtain an appropriate visa.

      All international speakers must provide the university with either a Social Security Number (SSN) or a United States Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN). Direct questions about the SSN/ITIN to the committee's support staff.

  7. RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE SPONSORING UNIT

    1. LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS

      The sponsoring unit is responsible for making all local arrangements for bringing the speaker to the campus and for the lecture itself. To reserve lecture rooms on campus, contact the Timetable and Classroom Scheduling Office at 262-6345. To reserve lecture rooms in the Memorial Union or Union South, contact the Wisconsin Union's Central Reservations Office at 262-2511.

    2. PUBLICITY

      The Lectures Committee creates and distributes to the each of the lecture's sponsoring units posters announcing the lecture. The sponsor usually gives a copy of the poster to the speaker. The committee assumes responsibility for putting up posters on public bulletin boards and kiosks around campus and for sending an announcement of each lecture to University Communications to be included in Wisconsin Week and in the university's on-line calendar of events.

      The sponsoring unit is responsible for all publicity other than this. Contact University Communications (262-3571) for publicity assistance. Use departmental and other specialized electronic mailing lists, which can be highly effective in attracting potential audience participants. Recognize the support of the Lectures Committee in all such publicity.

    3. ATTENDANCE REPORTS

      Immediately following the lecture, complete and return the lecture attendance report. This report solicits attendance figures and other information about the lecture for the committee's annual report to the Faculty Senate.

  8. LECTURE CO-SPONSORSHIP

    1. GENERAL INFORMATION

      The Lectures Committee requires units that initiate lecture requests to secure the co-sponsorship of at least one other department, program, or student organization to assure wider publicity and to make the best use of limited resources. This is an explicit change from previous years when the committee merely encouraged co-sponsorship. Soliciting multiple co-sponsoring units will strengthen the lecture request even further. In cases of co-sponsorship, only the initiating unit will be "charged" for sponsorship. The chair (or equivalent) of each co-sponsoring unit must write a supporting letter that documents the nature of any monetary or in-kind support that the co-sponsoring unit will provide. Applicants must include the letters of co-sponsorship with the lecture request.

      A department making plans for its own lecture may wish to invite a registered student organization to co-sponsor a request that the department initiates. The committee encourages such efforts as they may result in increased student interest and attendance at the lecture.

    2. LECTURES SPONSORED BY REGISTERED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

      Like departments and area programs, registered student organizations may request support from the Lectures Committee, but student organizations must obtain co-sponsorship from an academic department. The committee encourages departments to give full consideration to proposals that student groups may bring to them for co-sponsorship.

      The chair of a department acting as a co-sponsor with student organizations must write a letter endorsing the request from the student organization. That department will be responsible for handling the financial disbursements of the lecture expenses (i.e., honorarium, per diem, and travel). As in other cases of co-sponsorship, a department co-sponsoring a request by a student organization will not be "charged" for sponsorship.

      The document Requesting Lectures Committee Support by Registered Student Organizations details special considerations related to lecture sponsorship by student organizations. Any student organization wishing to sponsor a lecture must review this document prior to submitting a lecture request.

  9. SUGGESTIONS

    The Lectures Committee invites suggestions from interested individuals regarding ways to improve the quality and efficiency of its services to the university community. Communicate suggestions to the committee's support staff or to any committee member.

 

2008-2009 LECTURES COMMITTEE

Mark Covaleski
Susan Dibbell
Cecilia Ford
Raymond Guries
Kevin Kurdylo
George Phillips, Jr.
Jeanette Roberts

COMMITTEE SUPPORT STAFF

Joni Brown
Office of the Secretary of the Faculty
133 Bascom Hall
262-3956

 

RELATED LINKS
Lectures Committee Support Request Form
Requesting Lectures Committee Support by Registered Student Organizations
List of Scheduled Lectures


Home | Site Map | Search | Contact Us
Academic Calendar | Commencement | Committees | Faculty Divisions
Faculty Governance Legislation | Faculty Senate | Lectures | University Committee
UW-Madison Home Page | UW-Madison Web Search

Office of the Secretary of the Faculty, University of Wisconsin-Madison
133 Bascom Hall, 500 Lincoln Drive
Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1380
(608) 262-3956

©1998-2007 University of Wisconsin Board of Regents
All rights reserved.