| Graduate Student Financial Support
There are many grants available to MA and PhD students through
the university, the Graduate School, the School of Arts and
Sciences, the department, and external sources. It is HIGHLY
recommended that students actively seek out grant and fellowship
support during their time in our program. Below is a list of
some sources of funding available to MA and PhD students in
Spanish and Portuguese. This list is by no means comprehensive,
and students are encouraged to seek out other sources of funding.
Any questions should be directed to the Associate Chair for
Graduate Studies.
Teaching Assistantships
By far the most common form of financial aid that graduate
students in our department receive is a teaching assistantship
(TAship). Recipients of these awards receive the following:
1. Tuition Waiver: The department pays all tuition costs for
its TAs. Domestic applicants who are not Colorado residents
will receive tuition waivers at the out-of-state rate for their
first year of study only. After this year, we will only pay
tuition costs at the in-state rate. For this reason, domestic
students are urged to become Colorado residents by their second
year in the program. International students with TAships will
receive tuition waivers at the out-of-state rate as long as
they are in the program.
2. Monthly Stipend: Students with TAships receive a monthly
stipend for the duration of the academic year. The stipend
increases slightly each year. The total yearly stipend rates
for the AY 2007-08 were: $15,690 for PhD-level students and
$13,002 for MA-level students.
3. Student Health Insurance: Graduate students are required
to have some form of health insurance. Students with TAships
who choose the Golden Buff Student Health Insurance Plan will
have 100% of their premiums paid each semester. Students with
private health insurance (e.g., through their spouse) may waive
the Golden Buff Student
Health Insurance Plan, but they will receive no insurance premium
assistance as part of their TAship.
Students with TAships will have their tuition waived, but
they must pay student fees required by the university. These
fees include full access to the University Recreation Center,
the Career Center, and an RTD bus pass that provides free transportation
on all RTD buses during the academic year. During the AY 2007-08,
these fees came to roughly $700-$800 per semester.
In exchange for these awards, students with TAships teach
one five-unit, lower-division language course (Spanish or Portuguese,
depending on student's skills and experience) per semester.
This teaching responsibility amounts to approximately 18 hours
of preparation, in-class teaching, and grading per week. All
entering graduate students are required to take our one-unit
seminar on teaching methodology and pedagogy, which prepares
them for their teaching assignments. Neither the TA's
teaching schedule nor the methodology/pedagogy seminar will
pose a time conflict with regularly scheduled graduate seminars
offered by our department.
Chancellor's Fellowship
This fellowship provides a monetary award of ~$16,000 plus a full remission
of tuition and fees (a total value of approximately $32,000).
Incoming PhD students who are nominated by their department
compete on a campus-wide basis
for this prestigious award.
Thomas
Edwin Devaney Fellowship
The objective of these fellowships is to recruit outstanding new students
for doctoral graduate study in the humanities and the
arts within the College of Arts and Sciences at the University
of Colorado at Boulder.
The fellowship will cover tuition, fees, and insurance
plus a stipend equivalent to a 50% (.4 FTE) Graduate
Part-Time Instructor appointment
for the first and second years of graduate study. In
addition, new students receiving these fellowships will
be named Center for Humanities and
the Arts Graduate Scholars and Artists. The Graduate
Scholars and Artists Program will include a convocation
dinner hosted by CHA and invitations
to all CHA events. Students receiving a fellowship will
normally receive departmental support after the fellowship
period, and those who pursue
a doctoral degree at CU will be encouraged to compete
for a Thomas Edwin Devaney Dissertation Fellowship to
provide support during their final
year. [more]
Thomas Edwin Devaney Dissertation Fellowship
The objective of these fellowships is to assist students working in
the humanities and the arts within the College of Arts
and Sciences in the continuance and completion of their
doctoral program. Devaney Dissertation Fellowships are
equivalent to the stipend for a Graduate Part-time Instructor
(50% time, .4 FTE) and
a tuition waiver for five hours. In addition, these students
are named
as Graduate Student
Fellows in the Center for Humanities and the Arts; as
such, they would be invited to be full participants in the
work of CHA. Departments will nominate 1-2 students to
compete for this award. Selection generally takes place
in April. [more]
The Center for Humanities and the Arts / Arts & Sciences Fellowship
The objective of these fellowships is to recruit outstanding new students
for graduate study in the humanities and the arts within the College
of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The fellowship
will cover tuition, fees, and insurance plus a stipend equivalent to
a 50% (.4 FTE) Graduate Part-Time Instructor appointment for the first
year of graduate study. In addition, students receiving these fellowships
will be named Center for Humanities and the Arts Graduate Scholars and
Artists. The Graduate Scholars and Artists Program will include a convocation
dinner hosted by CHA and invitations to all CHA events. Students receiving
a fellowship will normally receive departmental support after the fellowship
period, and those who pursue a doctoral degree at CU will be encouraged
to compete for a Thomas Edwin Devaney Dissertation Fellowship to provide
support during their final year. [more]
Diversity Fellowships
These are awarded to underrepresented first-year graduate
students who demonstrate high academic promise. Their
purpose is to increase the diversity of the graduate
student body at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Only students with U.S. citizenship and permanent residents
are eligible. The amount of each award is $2,500. Nominations
are submitted by the departments in February.
Graduate Student Research and Creative Work Awards
This year the Graduate School will make one award presentation
of $1,000 and two runner-up awards of $500 each to students
on the Boulder campus. The competition is limited to
one nomination per department.
Students interested in applying for this award should put together
a dossier with the following information and submit it
to the Associate Chair for Graduate Studies: 1) a CV;
2) list of awards; 3) three reference letters; and 4)
samples of work (i.e., publications). Once all applications
have been received, the Graduate Committee and the department
Chair will select the department's nominee to compete
for the award. If you have any questions about the award,
please call 303-492-7401.
Eaton Graduate Student Travel Grant
The Center for Humanities and the Arts (CHA) is pleased to announce its semi-annual competition for graduate student travel grants. Ten awards of $500 will be awarded on a competitive basis for graduate students in the humanities and arts to support travel to conferences where they will present a paper or, for those in the arts, where the student will perform or display their work. All applications from MA and Ph.D. students will be considered; however, the excellence of the project will be the main criterion for selection. CHA will award four travel grants during the fall semester, and six grants will be available for travel occurring in the spring and summer.
ELIGIBILITY
- The applicant must be a full-time graduate student in good standing.
- The student must be traveling to a conference to present his/her own work.
- The applicant can receive one grant per academic year.
- Departments will be limited to two grants per academic year.
To apply for this grant, please complete the application form and include the materials requested on the application checklist. Submit all materials to Paula Anderson, Center for Humanities and Arts, Macky 201, UCB 280.
Fall Deadline: Friday, 7 November 2007
Spring Deadline: Friday, 1 February 2008
Graduate School Student Travel Grant
The Graduate School offers partial
funding for graduate students to present research findings
at meetings or conferences outside
Colorado. The Graduate School provides a travel grant
of $200 for domestic conferences and $300 for international
conferences. Funds
will be applied directly to the student's tuition
account. If the account balance is zero, a refund check
will be disbursed by
the Bursar's
Office of Financial Aid. The grant is contingent
on account funding by the Graduate School.
Eligibility Requirements:
- The applicant must be a full-time graduate student in good standing.
- The student must be traveling to a meeting or conference to
present his/her own work or work on which he/she is
the primary author.
- The student must be the sole presenter of
the work.
- The student may receive funds from the
Graduate School for travel only once per fiscal year
(July 1 through June 30).
- A student receiving funding
from an outside source (fellowship, stipend, scholarship,
grant, departmental
travel grant) is not eligible.
- Each department
may submit 10 applications annually for consideration.
If you are in doubt concerning eligibility, please contact Gretchen O'Connell
at 303.492.6143. [more]
Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grant
Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grants are competitive awards sponsored
by the Graduate School that support the research, scholarship
and creative work of graduate students from all departments.
All funding is provided by alumni donations.
Grants
range from $100 to a maximum of $1,000 per proposal.
The Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grant competition
is held once a year in the spring semester. Deadlines
tend to be in January, so it's recommended that you begin
preparing your application during the Fall semester.
Helpful links (in PDF format): Application
Tips | Application
Guidelines | Application Form
Emerson/Lowe Dissertation Fellowship
The College of Arts and Sciences, University of Colorado
at Boulder, administers the Emerson and Lowe Dissertation
Fellowships in the Humanities. The purpose of the fellowship
program is to provide outstanding PhD candidates in
the Humanities with financial support to assist in the
process of completing their doctoral dissertations.
Emerson
and Lowe fellowships will provide full support for a
full academic year. This award is the equivalent of a
stipend, fees, insurance, and tuition remission (for
either resident or non-resident) for the academic year.
The number of awards will thus depend upon the residency
status of the awardees. [more]
Bernice Udick Graduate Fellowship
Bernice Udick has consistently made annual gifts of
$8,000 to the University of Colorado Foundation to assist
a woman in the humanities who has been admitted to PHD
candidacy. The purpose of the fellowship is to allow
the candidate time free from other work to complete her
dissertation.
According to the rules of the fellowship, each department
in the humanities may nominate one student for this award.
All eligible students in our department will automatically
be considered as possible nominees. The department's
nominee will be contacted by the Associate Chair for
Graduate Studies in early March.
George F. Reynolds Fellowship
The George F. Reynolds fellowships are among the most
prized awards offered by the Graduate School. George
F. Reynolds, a teacher, scholar, humanist and philanthropist,
who died in 1964,
bequeathed
funds for these yearly, self-perpetuating fellowships
for outstanding graduate students in the humanities. The
fellowship award is equal to the stipend for a Graduate
Part Time Instructor and a tuition waiver
for five hours. The fellowship period is one academic year.
According to the rules of the fellowship, each department
in the humanities may nominate one student for this award.
All eligible students in our department will automatically
be considered as possible nominees. The department's
nominee will be contacted by the Associate Chair for
Graduate Studies in early March.
Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships Program (FLAS)
This US Government program provides generous academic
year and summer fellowships (up to approx. $10,000 per
award) to institutions of higher education
to assist
graduate
students in foreign language and either area or international
studies. The goals of the fellowship program include:
(1) to assist in the development of knowledge, resources,
and trained personnel for modern foreign language and
area/international studies; (2) to stimulate the attainment
of foreign language acquisition and fluency; and (3)
to develop a pool of international experts to meet national
needs.
A student is eligible to receive a fellowship if he
or she: (1) is a graduate student, (2) is a citizen,
national or permanent resident of the United States,
(3) is enrolled in a program of modern foreign language
training in a language for which the institution has
developed or is developing performance-based instruction,
(4) Shows potential for high academic achievement based
on such indices as grade point average, class ranking,
or similar measures that the institution may determine.
NOTE: Students do not apply directly to the U.S. Department
of Education. Students must apply to grantee institutions.
Deadlines vary per program. [more]
Department Summer Fellowship
To apply for this fellowship, applicants must be full-time
graduate students (in good standing) in the Department of Spanish
and Portuguese. MA or PhD students may apply. Applicants
must submit a brief explanation (1-2 pages) of how this fellowship
will help them in their studies and/or research.
Number of awards
per year: 3
Maximum award amount: $2,000
Deadline for applications: March 10
Award announcements: before March 31
Women's Forum of Colorado Foundation
Fellowships
The Women's Forum of Colorado Foundation offers six graduate
scholarships (1@$2,500, 5@$1,000) to be awarded on a competitive
basis. The current deadline is September 1, 2005.
The criteria are: 1) potential to offer unique perspective
in field of study; 2) Compelling rationale for how funds are
to be spent; 3) Past accomplishments; 4) Potential for future
impact; 5) Ability to promote women's interests in field of
study.
Application must be emailed (i.e., as a file attachment).
Send to <WomenForum@aol.com>. Subject line must contain first
and
last
name of applicant
and the
word "application".
Email packet must contain in order:
- Application
- CV (2 page max)
- Scanned copy of letter of acceptance
to graduate school
Questions may be sent to the above email address or called
in at 303.621.9422.
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation/ACLS Early Career Fellowships
Dissertation Completion Fellowships
Fellowships for Recent Doctoral Recipients
The American Council of Learned Societies launched this new fellowship program providing (generous) support for young scholars to complete their dissertation and, later, to advance their research after being awarded the Ph.D. The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation/ACLS Early Career Fellowship Program will award fellowships in two categories: Dissertation Completion Fellowships and Fellowships for Recent Doctoral Recipients. A grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation supports this program. [more]
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