Resources for Graduate Students
Student Support Services
A number of academic and student support services are available to all graduate students at Clemson University:
- Graduate Student Life – Operating under the Division of Student Affairs, this is a central body that collaborates with the Graduate School and Graduate Student Government to enhance the overall graduate student life experience.
- Graduate Student Government – Organizes activities for graduate students, supports graduate student organizations, and advocates with the university for the interests of graduate students.
- Center for Career and Professional Development – Clemson University is dedicated to engaging students in career development that will empower them to successfully pursue their educational and professional goals. Services provided by the career center include career workshops, resume writing, career development, job search assistance, and networking.
- Clemson University Writing Lab – The goal of the writing lab is to help all members of the Clemson community become more confident and effective writers.
- Off-Campus Student Services - Find support resources to guide you through searching for off-campus housing, tips for signing a lease and preparing to move in, and resources to support you while you live off-campus.
- The Harvey and Lucinda Gantt Multicultural Center – The Harvey and Lucinda Gantt Multicultural Center is committed to creating diverse learning environments that enhance the intercultural competence of our students. The center supports and advocates for the needs of all students, challenges students to think critically about themselves and their communities, provides engaging experiential learning opportunities and empowers students to be positive change agents.
- Student Financial Aid – The Clemson University Office of Student Financial Aid exists to help students secure the funds necessary to pursue their educational goals at Clemson University through the administration and implementation of federal, state and institutional programs of financial assistance.
- Clemson Home – Mell Hall, located across from Downtown Clemson, is the hub for Clemson Home. Here, students and families can inquire about on-campus housing & dining, solve assignment-related issues, ask questions and learn more about what University Housing & Dining has to offer its residents and families.
- Parking & Transportation Services – Information regarding all types of parking areas, permits, violations and citations. Also information regarding various types of transportation including bus routes and schedules, rental cars, airport shuttles, biking, walking and more.
- Student Health Services – Student Health Services strengthens Clemson University by providing quality medical and mental health care, public health leadership and initiatives that enhance the academic success of our students and promote the health, safety and well-being of the campus community.
- Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) – Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), the mental health department of Student Health Services, offers a wide array of services along a continuum of intensity for various psychological issues.
- Student Accessibility Services – Graduate Students may register with Student Accessibility Services to use services such as academic access letters, assistive technology, communication services, test proctoring center and electronic textbooks.
- Military & Veteran Engagement Student Center – A place to meet other military connected and student veterans, and learn more about Clemson resources.
- Legal Issues or Concerns – All Clemson students are eligible to receive one legal aid voucher per semester. Each voucher entitles the student to one-half hour consultation with a lawyer off campus.
Digital Scholarship Resources
Cooper Library
The Clemson University Libraries hold more than 1.8 million items including books, periodicals, electronic resources, digital media collections, government publications and patents, musical recordings, maps and microforms. Resources include 3,593 print journal subscriptions, approximately 48,000 e-journals, more than 22,800 e-books, and more than 400 online databases. All major journals in our files are available online or through open access. The Libraries maintain dedicated human and in-person and online research resources specific to the broad history discipline. Extensive physical resources for the proposed program are available through Interlibrary Loan and Pascal, which are available to students and faculty without cost.
The Clemson Libraries support for this specific proposed program is both critical and robust. The physical collection contains print resources that include books, journals, microfilm/fiche, maps, and government publications. The digital collections include numerous primary source collections including over 20 Gale databases containing OCR text that can be cleaned and analyzed using the Gale Digital Scholar Lab. Contained in the Special Collections Library are a number of unique collections along with archival specialists who can guide and mentor students. In the main library, students will find the expertise of the Center for Geospatial Studies, which provides instruction on GIS tools and methodology, data visualization, StoryMapping, and cyberinfrastructure. The library also houses the Adobe Digital Studio, a space that lends its assistance in the creation of digital products using the Adobe Creative Suite software, as well as a makerspace that provides space for students to work on physical visualizations of historical projects.
Cooper Library is also home to the Clemson University Press that maintains the university digital repository (TigerPrints), and supports university Open Education Resource (OER) initiatives. The experts in these areas can provide Digital History students with the skills they need to navigate the publication of their digital projects. Finally, the libraries employ a number of metadata experts in the technical services department as well as a dedicated data librarian who can assist students with the documentation of their online projects and with organizing and curating their data. These robust resources and expertise mean that the Libraries also provide excellent opportunities for student internships for this program. While the libraries are currently well positioned to initially support this important program, they are also already planning to grow their role as a hub for data visualization, digital humanities, and interdisciplinary use of technology. A plan is already in place to move a data visualization lab into the library in association with the current GIS lab, and the library hopes to add a Digital Humanities Librarian, whose job it would be to focus on the needs and tools of this program. Special collections is developing a plan for focused collecting and oral history, including topics of diversity, military history, sports history, and agriculture that are already of interest to our students.
Digital History Laboratory
The History Department currently maintains a Digital History laboratory in its campus location of Hardin Hall.
Watt Family Innovation Center
The Watt Family Innovation Center is well-equipped to support the technical, analytical, and distance communications needs for the Digital History PhD program and digital history faculty and students. Watt classroom facilities available for faculty, staff and student use include: reconfigurable room layouts with whiteboard tables and chairs; more than 200 70” and 98” high-definition touch screens; wired and wireless (Solstice software) projection; webconferencing; video teleconferencing (VTC) software (Cisco WebEx Meetings, BlueJeans, Zoom Meetings); lecture capture; and 3D projection. Two Communications Studios provide equipment for professional-grade lecture capture and synchronous distance education.
Specialized spaces in the Watt offer students opportunities to visualize historical objects and projects in various modes. The Watt Makerspace provides students with tools and training to create physical models through the use of equipment such as 3D printers and scanners, laser cutters, CNC machines, and more. The Virtual Reality Immersive Space offers training in development of Virtual Reality products and experiences using various VR headsets (Valve Index, HTC Valve Pro, Oculus Quest, Oculus Rift, Microsoft HoloLens), VR cameras (Samsung Gear 360), and the Vive Tracker. An immersive 3D Digital Art Studio offers an HTC Vive PRO headset, IR Cameras, and Cyber Power PC, featuring software tools such as Google Tiltbrush Studio for digital arts.
The Watt Center offers advanced analytical capabilities through partnerships with industries.
For example, the Watson-in-the-Watt program provides faculty with access to the IBM Watson Artificial Intelligence (AI) platform and assistance in developing AI projects in their research areas. Through an educational partnership with SAS®, the Watt Center provides access and training to use advanced SAS® statistical analytics, visual analytics, data mining, and business intelligence. The Watt actively cultivates industry partnerships for research and teaching; these can provide funding and ideas for digital history projects, for example, through the Corporate Creative Inquiry program.