There are three forms: the Registration Form (due March 20), the Funding Application (priority deadline January 30), and the Talk Application (due February 28).
All conference attendees must fill out the Registration Form, anybody requesting travel funding must fill out the Funding Application, and anybody who wants to give a presentation must fill out the Talk Application. Graduate student attendees are encouraged to fill out all three forms.
We will do our best to make sure as many people as possible give talks. You are highly encouraged to fill out the talk application. If you prefer to give a lightning talk (5 minutes) and be included in the poster session, you may put that in the talk application.
Registration Form
https://forms.gle/SNcaBmVHVT79X7Jc8 (not yet open)
If you did not register but would still like to attend, you can register at the check-in desk.
Funding Application
Application: PDF Download, DOCX Download
Upload Completed Applications: https://forms.gle/fhuFxEyUTSA1urur9 (now closed)
Priority Deadline: Monday, January 29 Friday, January 30. All applications received by the priority deadline should receive a response. Late applications may be emailed to the organizers.
Only currently enrolled graduate students (master's or PhD) are eligible for funding. Undergraduates and other early-career researchers are welcome to attend the GSCC but are ineligible for funding.
If accepted, you will be told a dollar amount of funding. After the conference, receipts should be submitted for eligible expenses incurred (e.g. plane tickets, hotels). Reimbursement will be sent for such expenses up to the dollar amount stated. More details about this process will be included in the acceptance email.
For the funding support form, we require a signature from an advisor at your university (research advisor, school-assigned academic advisor, director of graduate studies, head of math department, etc).
Talk Form
https://forms.gle/ZyDk9tnvWS9sWe6B8
Strict Deadline: Saturday, February 28Â
Any graduate student who has done or is doing research in any branch of combinatorics is encouraged to apply to give a presentation about their research. Undergraduates and other early-career researchers who have already done significant (graduate-level) research in combinatorics may also apply to give a talk.
We hope to accept most applications. The presentation length will probably be around 20 minutes (TBD). Presentations may be given either by slideshow or whiteboard.