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Assistantships and Financial Aid
for Graduate Students
The
department offers a stipend to all full-time Ph.D. students who
demonstrate satisfactory progress toward that degree and satisfactory
work in teaching or research duties associated with the
financial support. This stipend includes fringe benefits
and waiver of tuition and is detailed in the acceptance letters
sent out by the Department. Financial support from the Department
is awarded on a yearly basis but it is not guaranteed. For 2007-2008
academic year, graduate assistant stipends are listed below. In
addition, most graduate students will receive Summer support.
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9
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- For
the graduate assistant with at least the baccalaureate
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$19,384
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- For
experienced graduate assistants
with at least the master’s
degree or its equivalent in the field of
graduate study. (Equivalency
consists of twenty-four credits of appropriate course
work beyond the baccalaureate, together with admission
to a Ph.D. program)
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$20,396 |
- For
students with experience as graduate assistants
who have at least the master’s degree or its equivalent
and who have
passed the general examination for the Ph.D.
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$22,676 |
Students
may receive financial aid from one or more of the following sources:
- Teaching
Assistantships.Teaching assistantship appointments are made
on a yearly basis and run from August 23 through May 22. These
appointments are made at the discretion of the Department Head.
A student must maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or better in
order to remain eligible for financial support. Teaching assistant
duties are assigned by the TA committee. International graduate
students who are employed as teaching assistants will be required
to demonstrate oral English proficiency by passing the PhonePass
test upon arrival on campus. Those who do not score high enough
on the test must then do the following in their first year:
- A. Participate in either one or more of the
UConn English as a Second Language
oral proficiency programs or a suitable alternative English
instructional program
approved by the Dean of the Graduate School and
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B. Achieve a passing PhonePass SET-10 with
an overall score of 65+ (and a minimum Pronunciation score
of 55+), within two academic semesters after initiating
graduate study to be eligible to continue teaching. Students
receiving an Overall score of 57-64 must receive a Pass
on the TEACH test to be certified to teach.
- Research
Assistantships. The research assistantship
stipend is the same as that for teaching assistantships. Funds
for research assistantships are generated by extramural grants
and the responsibility for the administration of these funds
rests with the faculty member to whom the grant was made.
- Doctoral
Dissertation Fellowships. Doctoral Dissertation
Fellowships of $2,500 per semester (or summer) are awarded by
the UConn Research Foundation. A student may receive the fellowship
only once. Students who have completed the General Examination
apply for this Fellowship by submission of a proposal describing
their thesis research (often a copy of one's dissertation prospectus)
to the Department Head. Details of application procedure, content
of proposals, deadlines, etc. are available from the UConn Research
Foundation located in the Graduate School offices. Students
should discuss Fellowship application with their advisor.
- Federal
Work-Study. Financial support from the
Federal Work Study Program is administered by the University
and available for support of full-time domestic graduate students,
especially during the summer months. As one might expect from
a federally sponsored program, the application procedure is
complex. Most graduate students who are United States citizens
or permanent residents are eligible. These funds are awarded
based on need, and we insist that all eligible
students apply. Applications are made in early spring.
- Charles
E. Waring Memorial Scholarship. The Waring
Scholarship will be awarded to outstanding graduate students
in chemistry at the University of Connecticut. Winners will
be selected annually from among those students who have completed
two or three semesters of graduate study and who have qualified
for Ph.D. candidacy. The Scholarship will be awarded by the
Graduate Affairs Committee based on courses taken and grades
earned at the graduate level as well as academic and research
progress. The Scholarship will be $250.
- Travel
Awards. Graduate
students who have successfully completed their general examination
(i.e. are a dissertator) will have $1,000 will be placed in
an account for their travel to national and international meetings.
Graduate student dissertators will be subject to the same campus-wide
travel rules as faculty and staff. However, their department
head and major professor must approve the travel by the graduate
student. Graduate students will not need to file any forms before
or after their travel with the Graduate School. It is recommended
that these funds be used only for travel to meetings at which
the graduate student is presenting his/her research.
- Teaching
Assistantship Awards. Each year, Masterton
Awards are given to the five most outstanding graduate teaching
assistants. These awards consist of $400 each. Four of these
awards are awarded to people teaching general chemistry and
one award for other courses. Awards are made in the Fall and
recipients can only receive the award once. Another award, sponsored
by the Division of International Students and Scholars, is also
given yearly to the international teaching assistant from the
University community who has demonstrated outstanding teaching.
- Extraordinary
Expense Awards: Extraordinary Expense
Awards in amounts up to $500 are awarded by the UConn Research
Foundation. A student may receive the fellowship only once.
Students who have completed the General Examination and
have had their dissertation prospectus accepted by the Area
Review Committee and the Executive Committee of the Graduate
School apply for this Award by submission of an application,
including a budget, to the Research Foundation. Details of application
procedure, allowed expenses, deadlines, etc. are available from
the UConn Research Foundation located in the Graduate School
offices.
- Federal
and Industrial Fellowships: Doctoral students are eligible
for many graduate research fellowships from different government
and industrial sources. Deadlines are usually in November or
January. Information and applications are generally available
from the Office of Sponsored Programs or by contacting the programs
directly.
- National Science Foundation - Graduate
Research Fellowships (GRFP)
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GRFP
1818 N Street NW
Suite T-50 Phone: (866) 673-4737
Washington, DC 20036-2479 e-mail: info@nsfgrfp.org
http://www.nsfgrfp.org/
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- National Institutes of Health
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Office of Extramural
Research
6701 Rockledge Drive, Room 6207
MSC 7910 Phone: (301) 435-0714
Bethesda,MD20892-7910
e-mail: grantsinfo@od.nih.gov
http://grants.nih.gov/training/extramural.htm
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The Fellowship Office,
Keck 576
National Research Council
500 Fifth Street, NW Phone: (202) 334-2872
Washington, DC 20001 e-mail: infofell@nas.edu
http://sites.nationalacademies.org/PGA/FordFellowships/index.htm
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NDSEG Fellowship
1818 N Street NW
Suite 600 Phone: (202) 331-3546
Washington, DC 20036 e-mail: ndseg@asee.org
http://ndseg.asee.org/
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National Physical
Science Consortium
NPSC
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USC – RAN
3716 S. Hope, Suite 348 Phone: (800) 854-6772
Los Angeles, CA 90007-4344 e-mail: npschq@npsc.org
http://www.npsc.org/
Other programs and an opportunity to sign up for email
alerts can be found at:
http://www.asee.org/fellowships
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- For additional information on fellowships,
you may contact the Office for Sponsored Programs:
http://osp.uconn.edu/studentfunding.php
Phone: (860) 486-3622
e-mail: osp@uconn.edu
Other forms of financial aid are available. Refer to the Graduate
Catalog (Assistantships, Fellowships and Other Aid section).
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