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21. What is the climate of support for students of color, women, gay students, and international students in department and on campus?
Funding
Financial aid for doctoral study is quite different than for undergraduate study. It is typically not granted based on need. Funding for the student (tuition, fees, and stipend for living expenses) is different than funding for research (travel, supplies). Often funding for summer months is not part of funding. In some cases, particularly in the sciences, funding is tied to the advisor, and is both student and research funding are part of working in that advisor’s lab and on their research projects.
Typically a student is supported by a variety of mechanisms over the course of their program. The common methods are:
Fellowships: This is a stipend that allows you to do your own research and coursework without any specific work (teaching or research assistantship) obligations. This give a student freedom, but may not give them collegial connections or community. Many are competitive, and will involve writing applications and proposals.
Traineeship: These are most common in the biological sciences. Like a fellowship, there are few explicit work obligations, although you may be working in various labs on "rotations."
Research assistantship: This is pay for work done on a research project. These are most common in science fields, in which most students are funded on RAships for most of their time in school. An RAship implies some work obligation – which may be work directly related to the student’s dissertation or may not. RAships are an excellent mechanism for learning how to do good research.
Teaching assistantship: Like an RAship this is pay for work assisting in an undergraduate course. These can be excellent for developing knowledge and skills for teaching, particularly if attention is paid to helping and teaching you as a TA.
Loans and personal assets. Often students find themselves without funding (this is particularly true in humanities fields) and must rely on personal assets (savings, family, partners) or student loans.
22. What is the mix of funding (traineeships, fellowships, RA and TA ships)? Is it competitive or assured? How many years are students funded?
23. What is the level of financial support for tuition, fees, stipend, and research funding?
You need to understand how are doctoral students funded in this department. Is funding guaranteed or competitive? What opportunities for summer funding are there? If your degree takes longer than average, can you find financial support? How successful are department members at winning fellowships for dissertation support?
How are student’s research expenses paid for? Does the advisor’s research grant cover the expenses? If so, do the funders constrain the choice of topics? If not, what other resources are their to fund research? Do students often pay the expenses themselves?
24. What are expenses (housing, health care, child care, cost of living)?
The cost of living varies dramatically from place to place. Understand what you can expect to pay for rent, parking, food, vacation travel, computers, books and the like. How many years will be in graduate school, and what financial resources do you have for dealing with minor (books, car repair, clothes, dental care) and major (unexpected illness of self or family member, pregnancy) financial emergencies?
25. How many students go in to debt? How much?
What level of debt are you carrying from undergraduate education? Can you afford to add to your debt load? |
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