Lecture
The default option for many - but for that reason, we suggest moving away from it! Consider ‘lecture plus workshop’ instead. This can be a good option if you want it to be a public lecture, with broad appeal to non-academic audiences. One external speaker gives a one hour lecture followed by questions. Traditionally held in a 5 or 5:30pm slot, but we encourage you to consider times within the standard working day too, to make your event more accessible to those with caring responsibilities.
Budget for travel and incidentals for the speaker, honorarium, one night’s accommodation (more if coming from a long way away), a reception with drinks and snacks after the lecture, and a dinner for the speaker and a small number of Brown faculty/students (refer to hospitality policy).
Lecture series
Good if you think your theme will attract a consistent group of Brown participants; less good if you see the individual events as basically independent. Often works best if at the last event, or perhaps even at a follow-up event, you schedule plenty of time for discussion among your Brown group.
Practicalities are much the same as the Lecture option; maybe add a catered lunch for your follow-up discussion.
Lecture plus
A preferred option! The ‘lecture’ model, but the invited speaker also participates in some more informal event, maybe the next day, ideally aimed at graduate students: joining a graduate seminar at which their work is being discussed, presenting a work-in-progress talk, giving a professionalization workshop.
Practicalities much the same as the Lecture option; maybe add a catered lunch for the second event, and consider whether this will require the visitor to stay an extra day.
Roundtable
These have been a big success for CGA! There are lots of possibilities, but one that has resulted in excellent discussion in the past has been a group of three researchers, maybe one external and two internal, who pre-circulate forthcoming work on a theme. The event itself is discussion-based, as the participants or a moderator ask questions about the work, then open the floor for discussion.
The budget is much the same as for the Lecture option.
Workshop
Like a mini-conference. Two or three, or more, invited participants all come to Brown on the same day; usually, they each give a paper and plenty of time is built into the schedule for discussion. A good option for working towards something even bigger, like a grant application or a large-scale international conference. For CGA funding, the papers at least should be open to all Brown people rather than closed-door, but it’s OK to have some closed-door sessions to workshop a grant application or similar.
Budget for travel and incidentals for your visitors, refreshments throughout the day (coffee breaks as well as catered lunch), reception with drinks and snacks, dinner. Honoraria are usually only for a keynote participant who is giving a public lecture at the end of the day.
Conference
We usually fund at least one major conference per year. There are lots of questions that will affect your planning: how many speakers do you want? Invited, or selected after a CfP? How many days of conferencing will you have? Will there be a keynote that is advertised separately? Try mocking up a schedule and thinking backwards from that; and feel free to come to Amy or Lauren to discuss the options early in the planning process.