Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowships

This award opportunity is made available through the Ford Foundation Fellowships administered by the Fellowships Office .

Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowships provide one year of support for individuals working to complete a research-based, dissertation-required Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) or Doctor of Science (Sc.D.) degree that will prepare them for the pursuit of a career in academic teaching or research. Practice-oriented degree programs are not eligible for support. The fellowship is intended to support the final year of writing and defense of the dissertation.

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2023 Predoctoral, Dissertation, and Postdoctoral Fellowship Awardees and Honorable Mentions

Predoctoral, dissertation, and postdoctoral scholars have been awarded fellowships in the 2023 Ford Foundation Fellowships competition administered by the Fellowships Office.

  • View the 127 Awardees for 2023
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No publications are associated with this project at this time.

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Description

Scope of the award.

Dissertation Fellowships provide one year of support for individuals working to complete a research-based, dissertation-required Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) or Doctor of Science (Sc.D.) degree that will prepare them for the pursuit of a career in academic teaching or research. Practice-oriented degree programs are not eligible for support. The fellowship is intended to support the final year of writing and defense of the dissertation.  

Award Details

Fellowships can be held at any fully accredited not for profit U.S. institution of higher education offering a Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree in an eligible discipline. A limited number of dissertation fellowships will be awarded for the 2024-2025 academic year and will include these benefits:

  • One-year stipend: $28,000 
  • An invitation to attend the 2024 Conference of Ford Fellows, a unique national conference of a select group of high-achieving scholars committed to diversifying the professoriate and using diversity as a resource for enriching the education of all students
  • Access to Ford Fellow Regional Liaisons  (PDF, 132 KB) , a network of former Ford Fellows who have volunteered to provide mentoring and support to current Fellows
  • Access to other networking and mentoring resources   
  • Application deadline:  December 12, 2023 at 5:00 PM Eastern Standard Time (EST) 
  • Supplementary materials deadline: January 9, 2024 at 5:00 PM EST

Application and supplementary materials deadlines: The online application system will close promptly on the deadlines stated above. All required materials must be successfully submitted online by these deadlines in order for an application to be considered for review. Applicants should take the time zone into account if they or their letter writers will be submitting materials from a different time zone. It is strongly recommended that applicants and letter writers submit their materials well in advance of the deadline. Out of fairness to all applicants, we regret that we cannot consider requests for extensions for any circumstances for anyone (applicants or letter writers) who is unable to successfully submit their materials by the stated deadlines.

  • Notification of 2024 awards: March 2024
  • Expected fellowship tenure start date: June 1, 2024 (for 12 months) or September 1, 2024 (for 9 or 12 months)  

Eligibility

All applicants must:

  • Confirm holding a previous Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship;
  • U.S. citizen or U.S. national
  • U.S. permanent resident (holder of a Permanent Resident Card)
  • Individual granted deferred action status under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program, 1 Indigenous individual exercising rights associated with the Jay Treaty of 1794, individual granted Temporary Protected Status, asylee, or refugee
  • Demonstrate an intent to pursue a career that includes teaching and research at a U.S. institution of higher education; 
  • Be enrolled in a research-based Ph.D. or Sc.D. program at a not for profit U.S. institution of higher education.
  • Expect to complete the Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree in a period of 9-12 months during the 2024-2025 academic year; 2
  • Have completed all departmental and institutional requirements for their degree, except for writing and defense of the dissertation by December 12, 2023;
  • Upload a signed Verification of Doctoral Status Form  (PDF, 92 KB) by the January 9, 2023 Supplementary Materials deadline ;
  • Provide evidence of superior academic achievement (such as grade point average, class rank, honors, or other designations); and
  • Not have already earned a prior doctoral degree at any time, in any field.

Receipt of the fellowship award is conditioned upon each awardee providing satisfactory documentation that they meet all the eligibility requirements.  

Dissertation fellowship awards will not be made for work leading to terminal master’s degrees, the Ed.D. degree, the degrees of Doctor of Fine Arts (D.F.A.) or Doctor of Psychology (Psy.D.), or professional degrees in such areas as medicine, law, and public health, or for study in joint degree programs such as the M.D./Ph.D., J.D./Ph.D., and M.F.A./Ph.D. This program does not support the Ph.D. portion of a joint/concurrent/articulated program.

[1] Eligibility includes individuals with current status under the DACA Program, as well as individuals whose status may have lapsed but who continue to meet all the USCIS guidelines for DACA. 

[2] Dissertation Fellows are expected to spend the majority of their time working on the writing and defense of the dissertation. Applicants enrolled in a program that requires an internship in addition to completion of a dissertation are not eligible for the Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship if they plan to participate in a full-time paid or unpaid internship during the fellowship year . Applicants who undertake internships required for degree completion  after  completion of the dissertation are eligible to apply. On the Eligibility page of the online application, applicants should enter the date they expect to complete all requirements for the dissertation, and in the Proposed Plan essay, they should clarify, for the reviewers’ benefit, the timeline for their dissertation work during the fellowship year and the subsequent requirement for an internship.  

Conditions of the Fellowship

Dissertation Fellows are expected to be enrolled in a full-time program leading to a Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree in an eligible discipline. Dissertation awards are intended to support Fellows who will be spending the majority of their time writing and defending the dissertation during the fellowship year. Participation in full-time paid or unpaid internships or other paid activities, even if required for degree completion, should not be undertaken during the fellowship year.

Those who accept a dissertation fellowship must agree to the stipulations in the Terms of Appointment for Ford Foundation Fellows that accompany the award notification.  

How to Apply

Application process  .

The deadline for online application submissions is December 12, 2023 at 5 PM Eastern Standard Time (EST).

  • To ensure a complete application, applicants should carefully follow the  Application Instructions  (PDF, 202 KB) .
  • Applicants can also follow step-by-step instructions for navigating the online application (PDF, 435 KB) .
  • Applicants will receive a confirmation e-mail once their application has been successfully submitted.  

Required Supplementary Materials

The deadline for the online submission of required supplementary materials is January 9, 2024 at 5 PM Eastern Standard Time (EST).

  • Applicants will be able to upload transcripts and the  verification form  (PDF, 92 KB)   only after they have submitted the main portion of their online application . Letter writers will be able to upload letters as soon as they have received the notification link sent by the applicant up until the Supplementary Materials deadline.
  • To ensure their application will be considered for review, applicants should carefully follow the instructions for required supplementary materials  (PDF, 168 KB) .
  • Applicants may share the instructions for the expected content of letters  (PDF, 171 KB)  with their letter writers. These instructions will also be available to letter writers once they gain access to the online application. Applicants must send request notifications to their letter writers through the online application.
  • Applicants will not be required to re-submit their application by the Supplementary Materials deadline. After the deadline has passed, applications will be checked for completeness to determine if they can be forwarded to the review panel.

All application materials become the property of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and will not be returned. Applicants should retain copies of all submitted application materials for their personal records.

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Selection process.

Applications will be evaluated by review panels of distinguished scholars selected by the National Academies. The review panels will use all materials included in the application as the basis for determining the extent to which applicants meet the eligibility requirements and the selection criteria.  

Selection Criteria

The following will be considered in choosing successful applicants: 

  • Evidence of superior academic achievement
  • Degree of promise of continuing achievement as scholars and teachers 
  • Capacity to respond in pedagogically productive ways to the learning needs of students from diverse backgrounds 
  • Sustained personal engagement with communities that are underrepresented in the academy and an ability to bring this asset to learning, teaching, and scholarship at the college and university level 
  • Likelihood of using the diversity of human experience as an educational resource in teaching and scholarship 
  • If applicable, how experience as a member of an underrepresented group through discrimination, inspiration, resilience, etc. may inform participation in the fellowship
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Dissertation Completion Fellowships

Types of fellowships, eligibility, selection criteria, award amount, how to apply, application guidelines.

Dissertation Completion Fellowships support final-year doctoral students. These non-service fellowships allow students to focus exclusively on their research and writing without service obligations. Fellows are expected to defend their dissertation by the end of the academic year.

Submit Application »

General Dissertation Completion Fellowships

  • Non-service fellowship
  • Supports dissertation research and writing

Royster Society of Fellows (SOF) Dissertation Completion Fellowships

  • Supports interdisciplinary learning and engagement
  • Opportunities for mentoring, leadership, and professional development

Royster SOF Dissertation Completion Fellowships are endowed through the generous gifts of many friends of the University, most notably Dr. Thomas S. and Mrs. Caroline Royster Jr.

Royster SOF Special Purpose Dissertation Completion Fellowships:

  • Membership in the Royster Society of Fellows
  • Includes the Jessie Ball duPont Fellowship for Adolescent Studies

Submit only one application. Select the fellowship(s) you are interested in being considered for on the application form and submit the required supporting materials as appropriate. You will be considered for all fellowships that you select on your application.

Eligibility criteria apply to all Dissertation Completion Fellowships. You may not combine the Dissertation Completion Fellowship with other funding without permission from The Graduate School.

You are eligible if:

  • You are a fully-enrolled, degree-seeking doctoral student in a residential program administered by The Graduate School.
  • You are engaged full-time with writing your dissertation.
  • You are able to complete your dissertation within the fellowship term.

Royster SOF 5-Year Fellows are NOT eligible to apply for continued support through a Dissertation Completion Fellowship.

Before applying, you must:

  • Complete course requirements
  • Pass written and oral preliminary exams
  • Have your Dissertation Prospectus formally approved

You cannot apply for both a Dissertation Completion Fellowship and an Off-Campus Dissertation Research Fellowship at the same time.

Your application will be reviewed according to the following criteria:

  • You have a strong graduate academic record.
  • Your application materials are understandable to a general audience outside of your field.
  • Your research design is clearly outlined and appropriate.
  • Your research will contribute to and advance the scholarship within your field.
  • There is confidence you will be able to complete your dissertation by the end of the fellowship term.
  • Your program has minimal resources to support you during the fellowship term.
  • You will be an involved and contributing member of the Royster Society of Fellows (for Royster SOF applicants only).

View an in-depth description of the review and selection process.

The fellowship provides a stipend, tuition, fees, and health insurance for one academic year (fall and spring semesters only). Royster SOF fellowships may also provide funds for professional travel.

Depending on funding, this award may change from year to year.

Each program may nominate up to three students for consideration.

Deadline The nomination deadline each year is in late February . -->

Check with your department for an internal deadline. You must submit your application early enough for your department to submit their nomination to The Graduate School by the nomination deadline. Deadlines are posted on the funding deadlines calendar.

  • View Frequently Asked Questions about the online award application .
  • Prepare an abstract, research description, research workplan, statement of research significance, and curriculum vitae . If appropriate, prepare a Royster SOF interest statement . Arrange for a letter of recommendation from your dissertation advisor. Be sure to follow the application guidelines .
  • Before submitting your application, we suggest you get feedback on your materials from a person outside of your field.
  • Submit your materials to The Graduate School Award Online Application .
  • Once you submit your application, your recommender will receive an email notice to submit a letter of recommendation through the online system.
  • Once your letter of recommendation is submitted, the fellowship and award approver(s) for your department will receive an email notifying them that your application is eligible for nomination.
  • Your department must nominate you to The Graduate School by the deadline .
  • We will notify awardees in April.

We will not consider your application if you exceed any of the page limits and/or you do not follow the proper format.

In addition to the online application, a complete application includes the following:

Format: No more than ½ page. Double-spaced, 12-point font, 1-inch margins, numbered pages, your name on each page.

  • Briefly summarize your research

Research Description

Briefly describe your dissertation research and your progress toward completion.

Address your research description to an audience of intelligent reviewers who may not be familiar with your field. Clearly explain the importance of your research to a lay audience. Do not use jargon or technical, field-specific terminology.

Format: No more than 3 pages. Double-spaced, 12-point font, 1-inch margins, numbered pages, your name on each page.

Depending on your field of study, include:

  • A summary of key literature
  • General concepts
  • Frame of reference for your study
  • Your research questions
  • Description of the data or other materials which will be/have been collected and analyzed
  • Methods of collection and analysis
  • Design considerations
  • Description of any necessary approvals, such as Human Subjects Review

Research Progress, Work Plan, and Timetable:

Format: No more than 1 page. Double-spaced, 12-point font, 1-inch margins, numbered pages, your name on each page.

  • Describe your research progress to date and your planned sequence of tasks to be completed, with estimated timetable.

Significance of your Research:

  • Explain the significance of your research to your field of study

Curriculum Vitae

Format: No more than 2 pages. 12-point font, 1-inch margins, numbered pages, and your name on each page.

  • Include recent professional activities, awards, honors, courses you have taught, and research publications/presentations.
  • Departmental funding received
  • External funding (please note if received or pending)
  • Because University funding is limited, we encourage you to apply for external funding, and such efforts will be viewed positively by the reviewers.

Citations (optional):

  • May be included for important references
  • Can be either footnotes or endnotes
  • Can be single-spaced
  • Must be within the three-page limit of the Research Description

Royster Society of Fellows Interest Statement:

*Required only if you are interested in being considered for the Royster Society of Fellows*

  • Include a statement addressing your interest and ability to contribute as an active member of the Society of Fellows.

Letter of Recommendation from your Dissertation Advisor

Indicate the email address of your recommender in your application. Please note that only a single recommendation letter will be accepted. If you have joint advisors, they must submit a joint letter of recommendation.

Once you submit your application, your advisor will receive an email notice to submit the letter of recommendation. We can only accept letters of recommendation through the online system. Recommenders cannot submit letters directly to The Graduate School or to your department.

Instructions for recommenders: Each letter of recommendation should be no more than 4,000 characters (spaces included), which is approximately 600 words or one single-spaced page.

Address the letter of recommendation “To the Fellowship Committee.” Include:

  • The quality of the student's research
  • A rating of the student’s overall ability and potential based on the your knowledge of other students in the field
  • The likelihood that the student will complete the dissertation during the award period
  • The likely contributions of the student's research to the field
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Graduate School Fellowships Office [email protected]

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Stanford Dissertation Fellowships

The Stanford Humanities Center and the School of Humanities and Sciences collaborate to administer two Stanford humanities dissertation fellowships: the Stanford Humanities Center Dissertation Prize and Mellon Foundation Dissertation Fellowships. Stanford students submit one application to be considered for one or both of these fellowships. Applicants for these fellowships are typically in the 5th or 6th year of their doctoral program.

(You can find more information about the Stanford Humanities Center Next Generation Scholar fellowships, which are open to students in year 7 or above only,  linked here .)

Applications for 2024–2025 fellowships are now closed.

Eligible applicants may apply to the SHC Dissertation Prize/Mellon Dissertation fellowships  or  Next Generation Scholar fellowship, but not  both  NGS and DP/Mellon in the same application cycle. 

Fellowship Opportunities

The SHC Dissertation Prize Fellowships, endowed by Theodore and Frances Geballe, are awarded to doctoral students whose work is of the highest distinction and promise. The fellowship stipend includes three academic quarters of funding (fall/winter/spring). In 2023-24 the funding amount was $38,700; the exact amount for 2024-25 will be announced pending final budget confirmation by January 2024. The recipients of these fellowships have offices at the Humanities Center and take part with other graduate as well as undergraduate and faculty fellows in the Center's programs, promoting humanistic research and education at Stanford. The SHC Dissertation Prize Fellowships also provide an additional $2,000 in research funding.

The Mellon Dissertation Fellowships, which are generously funded by the Mellon Foundation, are awarded to advanced doctoral students whose work is of the highest quality and whose academic record to date indicates a timely progression toward completion of the degree. The fellowship stipend includes three academic quarters of funding (fall/winter/spring). In 2023-24 the funding amount was $38,700; the exact amount for 2024-25 will be announced pending budget confirmation in January 2024.

Frequently Asked Questions

The SHC Dissertation Prize and Mellon Dissertation Fellowships are awarded to advanced graduate students, based on accomplished work of the highest distinction, and on the promise of further outstanding achievements in the humanities. Applicants must have:

  • advanced to candidacy;
  • completed all requirements for the doctoral degree with the exception of the dissertation and the University Oral Examination (when a defense of the dissertation);
  • an approved dissertation reading committee;
  • a dissertation proposal approved by their committee;
  • a strong likelihood of completing the degree within the tenure of the fellowship;
  • reached TGR status by the beginning of autumn quarter of the fellowship year;
  • completed supervised teaching, if required by their department, before the tenure of the fellowship.
  • Outside employment must be aligned with university policy and approved by the home department (including the Humanities Center for SHC fellowships). Please be in close contact with your home department, H&S office, and/or the SHC before confirming any teaching assistantships or accepting other employment or fellowships.
  • SHC DP fellows are expected to take part in the daily life of the Center for the duration of their fellowship (i.e. attend lunches and weekly seminars). Next Generation fellows are encouraged but not required to be in regular physical residence at the Center.
  • Mellon fellowship: there is no on-campus requirement akin to the expectations for SHC fellows. However, Mellon dissertation fellows are subject to University residency expectations and departmental residency requirements—i.e., having a Mellon does not exempt a student from these residency expectations.
  • Applicants who have previously held one of these fellowships are not eligible to reapply for that same fellowship.
  • Applicants who have not previously held a Stanford dissertation fellowship will be given the most serious consideration.
  • SHC Dissertation Prize Fellowships are open to applicants from the School of Education.
  • The fellowships provides tuition support at the TGR rate regardless of whether a student has moved to TGR status. If the student is not yet TGR at the start of the fellowship, the department may provide supplemental funds to cover tuition shortfall.
  • Students who are TGR or in a graduation quarter status must enroll in the appropriate zero unit TGR course.
  • These fellowships awards are not deferrable to future years or to the summer quarter  

Applications must be submitted via our online application system and must be in English. Access to the system opens in the fall quarter and closes on February 4, 2024, 11:59 PM Pacific time. We discourage the submission of additional materials with the application and cannot circulate these to the committee or return such materials.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received, and will be notified of the fellowship competition outcome in late March/early April.

  • Contact and biographical information about the applicant
  • A curriculum vitae (C.V.)
  • Current unofficial transcript (download from AXESS)
  • Detailed timetable for the completion of the degree (e.g. dissertation outline detailing status of each chapter)
  • Statement of the dissertation’s scholarly significance: Provide a concise explanation of the ways in which the project is a significant contribution to its area of study. Assume the audience to be academics who are not specialists in the field. (250 word maximum)
  • A brief description (no more than 1,000 words) of the dissertation
  • Two reference letters - one should be from the applicant’s advisor: Please ensure that faculty recommenders have reviewed the proposal and timetable (including status of chapters) in advance and are well prepared to discuss this in their letters. Referees are encouraged to submit letters through our online application system. Referees who wish to submit their letter of reference via email may send them to  [email protected] . Reference letters must be received at the Center by the application deadline - consideration of letters received after that date cannot be guaranteed.

A selection committee representing humanities departments and programs will review and rank the applications on the basis of the following criteria:

  • the evidence of intellectual distinction;
  • the quality and precision of the dissertation proposal;
  • the applicant's timely progress toward the degree;
  • the likelihood of completing the degree within the tenure of the fellowship;
  • in the case of SHC applicants, the likelihood of the applicant contributing to, as well as benefiting from, the programs of the Humanities Center.

For more information contact  Kelda Jamison , the Humanities Center fellowship program manager.

The application deadline for 2024-25 will be 11:59 pm Pacific time, February 4, 2024.

For more frequently asked questions, click  here .

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Graduate Fellowships, Grants and Awards

Information about Berkeley and extramural fellowships, grants and awards including deadlines and applications, can be found in the table below.  

Additional options: 

There are many fellowship options national wide to help cover the costs. We have compiled a list of national fellowship databases to aid in your search.

The Graduate Division provides fellowship awards for entering doctoral students to programs to aid in the recruitment of outstanding doctoral and masters students, including those who will enhance the diversity of the graduate student population at Berkeley. These fellowships are awarded at the departmental level as part of the admissions process.

File your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by March 2, 2015 , the deadline for California residency eligibility for 2015-2016 fellowship and grant proposals.

Fellowships, Grants and Awards Coordinated by the Graduate Division (University and Extramural)

Fellowships and awards coordinated by uc berkeley.

UC Berkeley coordinates awards outlined below. To learn more about these awards, contact the program department directly.

Extramural Fellowships

Extramural fellowships are those awarded by governmental agencies, private foundations, and corporations. Applying for extramural fellowships can be a lengthy and time-consuming process. Begin your search early, at least one year before the intended onset of funding. Prospective students applying for extramural fellowships should consult The Grants Register and the Annual Register of Grant Support at their campus or local library for information. A partial list of extramural fellowships and deadlines appears below. Some of the deadlines are approximations based on competitions from the previous year. To learn more, explore our list of fellowships databases .

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Completion Fellowship

The Graduate College Completion Fellowship is a merit-based award to support degree completion of outstanding graduate students enrolled in one credit for their last semester or last year of a doctoral, MFA, or terminal degree campus-immersion graduate program. This is a competitive fellowship award; all applications are reviewed by faculty and selected based on required application materials listed below.  Students must be nominated by their academic unit.

Each department may submit no more than two (2) nominations per program. 

About this Award

Award Details

  • Fall - $12,300 plus tuition for 1 credit hour
  • Spring - $12,300 plus tuition for 1 credit hour

NOTE:  ASU student health insurance - funding for the premium is provided by the academic unit for the awarded term(s).  Mandatory fees, program fees, or any other fees are not covered as part of the fellowship

Terms of Award

  • Recipient should enroll for a maximum of 1 credit hour each semester of award
  • Recipient should not be appointed as a TA/RA or hold any other form of employment within the university
  • Academic unit commits to providing an award for ASU health insurance premium during the time of award
  • Recipient should be able to finish degree according to the timeline submitted in their application

International awardees should consult with the ASU International Students webpage for current immigration regulations on last semester enrollment or email them at [email protected] .

[email protected]

Academic Year 2024-25 Nomination Deadline:  Friday, March 1, 2024

Note: Schools should submit no more than two nominations per program. Submission deadline is 5:00 p.m. local time.

Eligibility

In order to be eligible to receive this award:

  • Student must be enrolled in an on-campus immersion doctoral, MFA, or other terminal degree program.
  • Student will have completed all course work, exams, and/or oral comps for their degree and will only need to register for 1 credit hour in each awarded term.
  • Student must be in good academic standing with a minimum 3.0 GPA.
  • Student should not plan to hold a TA/RA position or any other form of campus employment during the award term(s).

Note: Students should not be nominated for more than two terms. Recipients can not hold a TA/RA position or any other form of campus employment during the award term.

Submission Procedures

Graduate Faculty Program Director, or designee, submits  Graduate College Completion Fellowship nomination form  and uploads a single pdf of the complete application packet to the dropbox link provided in the application form. Application packet must include the following, all of which will be evaluated by faculty review committee:

  • Student written two-page statement which outlines: students' research/project in layman's terms, significance and impact of research/project, how research/project aligns with and advances the ASU  design aspirations
  • Timeline, an outline with a clear indication of the time needed for completion, no more than two (2) pages single spaced
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • Letter of support from dissertation/thesis/project committee chair
  • Departmental Support Letter (evaluation from Academic Unit signed by Department Chair/Director) including: additional commentary of nominee's contributions to the department/college/discipline, confirmation of timeline viability,  normal time to degree for the program, as well as their commitment to providing the recipients’ ASU health insurance premium (1-2 pages)

Once the nomination form has been submitted, an automatic confirmation email should be sent from the Graduate College immediately.  If you do not receive an email confirmation of the nomination, please email [email protected].

After the submission deadline, all eligible applications will be reviewed by a minimum of two faculty from various disciplines across the institution.

Please allow up to six (6) weeks from the deadline date for recipient announcement notifications from the Graduate College. Once recipients have been selected, academic units will be notified by email.  Academic Units are responsible for notifying the student.

Any questions should be submitted to [email protected]

Additional Information

Each fellow is personally responsible for individual taxes related to this award. Additional information regarding tax issues related to awards can be found on the  tax considerations  webpage. Specific questions should be directed to a tax advisor or contact the ASU Financial Aid and Scholarship Services.

An "overaward" is when a student's need-based awards exceed their financial need, or the total of the awards exceeds the cost of attendance. If a student has been over awarded, federal regulations require ASU to adjust their awards which may result in a reduction in awards or a bill. Need-based aid includes grants, scholarships, Federal Work-Study, Federal Perkins Loans, and outside resources (i.e., faculty/staff tuition benefits, scholarships, stipends, etc.). Non-need-based aid includes unsubsidized Federal Stafford Loans, Federal Graduate PLUS Loans, and Private Education Loans. Questions regarding overawards should be directed to the ASU Financial Aid and Scholarship Services.

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2024 Dissertation Completion Fellowship Recipients

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The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES) awarded four graduate students from Harvard University a Dissertation Completion Fellowship to conduct research on Europe during the 2024-2025 academic year.

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Natalie Behrends (History) - British ideas of tropical space between 1870 and 1935

Sherah Bloor (The Study of Religion) - Anatomy of the Invisible

Anna Vichkitova (Slavic Languages) - Diverse forms of Soviet post memory

Sudarshana Chanda (History) - Ethno-racial categorization of people in British Malaya

* This list was last updated on May 22, 2024.

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Dissertation Completion Fellowships (DCF)

Dissertation Completion Fellowships are funded by the Graduate School at Michigan State University and are intended to expedite the completion of strong dissertations by providing students additional funding and thus time to dedicate to the completion of their dissertations. The College may provide a small number of additional College-funded DCFs.

Eligibility

  • Students must be positioned to submit the final versions of their dissertations to the Graduate School within one year of receiving the fellowship (for a Spring 2024 DCF, the dissertation must be submitted by Spring 2025).
  • Students must have their “comprehensive exam passed date” entered in Grad Plan by Friday, November 10, 2023 at noon to be eligible for a spring or summer DCF via this competition.
  • The deadlines for proposal defense are new this year. Please note we are sharing these deadlines well in advance so that all are aware. If a student is not going to be eligible for a DCF, these deadlines allow them time to make arrangements for other funding and allow the College to repurpose the DCF to a student not originally funded. They also allow funds to be disbursed on the timeline required by the Graduate School.
  • Students must be writing a solo-authored dissertation, not a collaborative dissertation.
  • Students who have already defended their dissertation and are engaged in revisions at this time are not eligible for a DCF.
  • Students who plan to defend their dissertation in late spring and complete revisions during summer are only eligible for a DCF in spring, not a summer DCF. Summer 2021 was the last summer where that practice was permissible.

Terms of award

  • Spring DCF: $9,000 fellowship.
  • Summer DCF: $7,000 fellowship.
  • Both Spring and Summer fellowships are funded and disbursed by the Graduate School (or possibly the College) in Spring or Summer semester. The funding differential between Spring and Summer reflects length of time for work.
  • Under federal law, a student must be enrolled in at least one credit during the semester they receive the fellowship. 1
  • While receiving a DCF, a student may not hold more than a quarter-time assistantship or other appointment consisting of more than 10 hours of work/week. Additionally, a student who works full-time, whether at MSU or elsewhere, is welcome to explain how this funding will create additional release time for them from their full-time employment, during which they will focus on their dissertation.
  • A student may receive only one DCF during their time at MSU.

1 If a student plans to receive the fellowship during summer semester, the student must be enrolled during summer semester. If a student will not be enrolled during summer, then the fellowship will be initiated in late spring for use during the summer. If and only if issuing the fellowship during the spring would have an adverse impact on the student’s financial aid, the College will pay for 1 credit of summer enrollment so that the fellowship may be disbursed during summer.

Submission, selection, and key dates

  • Students submit applications to their department by a deadline announced by the department.
  • Departments may require students to submit the dissertation director’s statement, or may allow the dissertation director to submit the statements directly to the department.
  • Departments review and rank the applications; departments submit these rankings to the College by Friday, December 1, 2023, at noon.
  • The Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs selects recipients based on departmental ranking and allocation of fellowships across the College.
  • By mid-December, the Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs notifies recipients and departments/programs of decisions.
  • By mid-December, the Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs notifies the Graduate School of the recipients; the Graduate School makes the award in Spring or Summer (if College-funded, the College makes the award).

Application requirements

  • Discuss the dissertation research, overall 
  • Include a timeline for completion with major benchmarks
  • MSU transcript for all PhD program coursework.
  • Reaffirm (a) the proposal and (b) the timeline for completion
  • Summarize the dissertation’s strengths

Selection Criteria

  • Please inquire with your department for more information used in ranking decisions.
  • The Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs reviews select applications to confirm their completeness as indicated above in “Application Requirements.”
  • The Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs allocates awards roughly proportionally to the number of full-time doctoral students in each department; the Office defers to departments’ rankings of nominees within departments.

Additional Information

  • During summer 2021, students beginning their dissertation writing process became eligible for DCFs for the first time. Students cannot be simultaneously eligible for a DCF and an SRF.

Call for Applications

  • " alt="dissertation completion fellowship" target="_self"> Committee on Dissertation Completion Fellowships

isa Dissertation Completion Fellowship

The International Studies Association (ISA) invites applications for a new graduate student fellowship for 2024-2025. This award is targeted at students in the later stages of their PhD program (typically the final 2 years). The fellowship is intended help students offset the costs incurred as a result of research and writing activities necessary for the successful completion of the dissertation. The ISA Dissertation Completion Fellowship is open to applicants from across the social sciences and humanities working in the broad field of International Studies.

While the fellowship is open to all eligible graduate student members of ISA, the committee particularly encourages applications from groups, genders, and nationalities that have been historically under-represented in the field of International Studies. Applicants may request up to $5000 to cover expenses related to the costs of carrying out the final stages of dissertation research and writing. It is the committee’s sole discretion to award lesser amounts than requested, as they deem appropriate. Preference will be given to students without access to other sources of funding to assist with dissertation completion.

Funds may be used only to support dissertation completion; however, the committee takes a broad interpretation of such expenses. Examples of activities that could receive funding include (but are not limited to): transcription, short-term travel for additional field research, archival research costs, survey costs, interview costs, translation costs, copy-editing or proofreading. Living expenses, such as rent and child-care may be considered acceptable expenses, particularly if they can reduce the need to teach or take on other work to allow the proposer concentrated time for dissertation completion. The funds may not be used for payment of tuition. The applicant should make clear in their proposal how the specified activity or resource for which funding is sought will assist in the successful completion of their dissertation.

Eligibility Criteria

  • Applicants must be members of ISA to apply and must maintain their membership during their fellowship year.
  • Applicants must be doctoral candidates or the equivalent by the time the award is received. Applicants may apply before achieving candidacy, but they cannot receive funds without proof of candidacy or equivalent confirmation of permission to proceed to PhD thesis/dissertation.
  • Applicants must be working on a topic in the international studies field.
  • Preference will be given to applicants from underrepresented groups within ISA.
  • The committee will prioritize proposals from applicants who are unable to acquire resources to complete their project from other sources. Applicants should identify all current sources of funding and clearly identify funding shortfalls.
  • All funds must be expended in a single fiscal year (running July 1 to June 30).
  • Awardees must submit a 500-word final report to the committee chair that details how the funding supported their dissertation completion by 60 days after the end of the fiscal year (September 1).
  • The committee reserves the right to redistribute funds to other applicants at their sole discretion in such cases where additional funding has been received since acceptance.

Application Materials

Students must submit the following for consideration:

  • A 1000-1500 word proposal laying out the dissertation project.
  • A one-page statement detailing all financial support received through the PhD program, including institutional and other sources, such as granting agencies. This should also include a statement of financial need. At the time of disbursement of funds, a student must disclose any further funding received after the time of acceptance.
  • A one-page narrative budget detailing the different kinds of expenses foreseen, and justifying how funding for these expenses will advance dissertation completion.
  • A current CV.
  • A letter of recommendation from the student’s dissertation major advisor, which should be submitted separately with the applicant's name in the subject line. Advisors are asked to comment on the student’s financial need in their letters.
  • Proposals are due by September 1 each year and awards start on July 1 of the following year.

Submission Process & Deadline

Applications open on July 1, 2023 and should be submitted directly to the ISA Dissertation Completion Fellowship Committee at [email protected] by September 1, 2023 . The applicant's last name should be clearly specified in the subject heading. Do not submit any application materials before July 1st .

Any questions about the application process, or the Fellowship more broadly, should be directed to [email protected] .

Committee Members

Melody Fonseca (University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras) - Chair Jessica Auchter (Université Laval) Arjun Chowdhury (University of British Columbia) Stéphanie Martel (Queen's University) Ida Bastiaens (Fordham University)

ISA Membership Required

You are not an ISA member or are not logged in to your ISAnet account. Your ISA membership must be current and in good standing to apply for this fellowship.

Join or Renew

All application materials must be submitted electronically to [email protected] on or before September 1, 2023 .

Questions? Contact Committee Chair Melody Fonseca .

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  • Summer Grants

Dissertation Completion Fellowship

SOCIETY OF FELLOWS 2024–25 DISSERTATION COMPLETION FELLOWSHIP 

Applications are once again invited for the Society of Fellows Dissertation Completion Fellowship. 

We expect to offer one fellowship for the 2024–2025 academic year, with stipends beginning in Summer 2024. Research during the SoF Fellowship may be carried out at the University or elsewhere. Applicants must be prepared to complete their dissertations within the period of their fellowship tenure and aim for conferral of the degree no later than August 2025. 

The award consists of $35,000 plus health insurance and UVA fees.

Eligibility: The competition is open to all present and past SoF Junior Fellows pursuing the Ph.D. who will have completed all degree requirements except the dissertation by the application deadline.

Deadline: Friday, February 16, 2024

Applicants should submit by the deadline of February 16th:

1. A single Word file titled ‘SoF Diss Proposal YOUR NAME,’ which includes:

a) a  proposal  of no more than three double-spaced pages that speaks to a learned non-specialist

b) a one-page  timeline  for the completion of the dissertation and the defense

c) [optional] up to three additional pages of images, musical scores, or other similar supporting non-text materials 

d) a  bibliography  of no more than two pages

e) a  curriculum vitae  

2. A single word file titled ‘SoF Diss Sample YOUR NAME,’ which includes:

A  completed chapter  of the dissertation (that is neither the introduction, nor the conclusion, nor the literature review)  or a published paper .

3. A  transcript  labeled ‘SoF Diss Transcript YOUR NAME.’ 

In addition, the following supporting materials should be submitted by individual faculty no later than the deadline of February 16:

4.  Two letters of recommendation

5. A  statement  from the Director of Graduate Studies or the Department Chair attesting to the viability of the proposed timeline for completion and defense.

Applications and recommendation letters should be sent electronically to Charles T. Mathewes, Secretary of the Society of Fellows at [email protected] no later than February 16.

A committee of SoF Senior Fellows will review applications following these  criteria :

  • The potential of the project to advance the field and to make an original and significant contribution to knowledge.
  • The quality of the proposal with regard to its methodology, scope, theoretical framework, and grounding in the relevant scholarly literature.
  • The feasibility of the project and the likelihood that the applicant will execute the work within the proposed timeframe.
  • The scholarly record and career trajectory of the applicant.

University of Pennsylvania

dissertation completion fellowship

2022 Dissertation Completion Fellowship Recipients

The Graduate Division extends its congratulations to the recipients of 2022's Dissertation Completion Fellowships. As the name implies, the Dissertation Completion Fellowship is intended for students who will complete their dissertations during the fellowship year. DCF awards are made on the basis of academic excellence, as evaluated by members of the SAS Committee on Graduate Education. 

Alexandra Brown , Romance Languages (Hispanic Studies) David Buchanan , English Erin Busch , Music Santiago Cunial , Political Science Tommaso De Robertis , Romance Languages (Italian Studies) Maxwell Dietrich , Ancient History Christopher Fritschi , Chemistry Elijah Gunther , Mathematics Alexandra Kralick , Anthropology Nikita Kuzmin , East Asian Languages & Civilizations Dixon Li , English Qiuyue Liang , Physics & Astronomy Richard Lizardo , History Zachary Loeb , History & Sociology of Science Nicholas Millman , English Zhuoliang Ni , Physics & Astronomy Ida Nitter , Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations Benjamin Oyler , Music Dotno Pount , East Asian Languages & Civilizations Xincheng Qiu , Economics Leah Samples , History & Sociology of Science Orion Staples , Chemistry Eugenia Ulanova , Comparative Literature Menyang Zhao , Sociology Naomi Zucker , Anthropology

  • Instructions for Dissertation Completion Fellowships

Purpose and eligibility, application instructions, and more

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Instructions for 2023–2024

A dissertation completion fellowship (DCF) is assured to all eligible candidates in the Harvard Kenneth C. Griffin Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in fields in the humanities and social sciences. Before following these instructions, students must review information on the dissertation completion fellowships  page and dissertation completion fellowships  policy.

Purpose and Eligibility

Please see the dissertation completion fellowship requirements on the Policies website for complete eligibility requirements. 

Students are not eligible for a Harvard Griffin GSAS dissertation completion fellowship if they have already received a dissertation completion fellowship, whether from Harvard Griffin GSAS or an alternative late-stage writing fellowship from any other source, internal or external to Harvard.

Application Instructions for Students

Please note that the instructions for Harvard Griffin GSAS completion fellowships are also required for Graduate Prize Fellows, Presidential Scholars, and Ashford Fellows. The research centers and Harvard Griffin GSAS share a single application deadline of February 10, 2023, and a standard CARAT application form; application materials for individual centers and Harvard Griffin GSAS will vary. For instructions for the participating research centers, be sure to consult the entries for the individual centers to which you are applying on the DCF webpage . All instructions and accompanying forms are available on the  dissertation completion fellowships  page.

The following application materials must be submitted in CARAT by the Harvard Griffin GSAS deadline:

  • Application form (automatically generated by CARAT).
  • Two faculty confirmation forms noting receipt of two dissertation chapter drafts or the equivalent; one form to be completed by the principal dissertation advisor and the second by an additional advisor. The form is also to be signed by the student applicant, who will upload the two signed evaluation forms into CARAT. Note that this form replaces the formerly required letters of recommendation. 
  • Dissertation abstract (one-page double-spaced) along with a Table of Contents indicating progress status for each chapter or article.

Conditions and Terms of the Award

  • All registered students in Harvard Griffin GSAS, in fields in the humanities and social sciences, who meet the eligibility requirements will receive dissertation completion funding, with specific funding sources to be named as a final step.
  • Awards are intended to be held for the entire academic year and to be confined within a single academic year. Students are expected to complete the dissertation during the completion fellowship year; this will be the final year of Harvard Griffin GSAS funding even for students who do not finish during the fellowship year. In addition, after holding a dissertation completion fellowship, students will be limited to no more than one additional academic year of registration in Harvard Griffin GSAS.
  • Since this guaranteed fellowship is intended for students who are truly at the completion stage, students who apply for a research fellowship are expected to withdraw from the completion pool at the time of applying for the research fellowship; otherwise, receipt of a research fellowship may be counted as supporting the completion year, regardless of the stated purpose of the fellowship, and students will be ineligible to re-enter the completion pool the following year.
  • The dissertation completion fellowships ordinarily may not be combined with grants from other sources, although exceptions are made for smaller grants. Also as noted, they are intended to be held for the entire academic year and must be confined within a single academic year.
  • During the dissertation year, no concurrent teaching is permitted; other forms of employment are also excluded.

Please Note: Students who enter the Harvard Griffin GSAS dissertation completion fellowship pool must apply for all other internal and external completion fellowships for which they are eligible, either from a Harvard source such as a research center or departmental fellowship, or an external funding source. Students must accept the alternative non-Harvard Griffin GSAS award. In the event that the alternative award is less than the standard Harvard Griffin GSAS stipend and tuition and health fees, Harvard Griffin GSAS will supplement to make up the difference. Over and above a possible top-up, a possible bonus may be offered for receiving an alternative award. Presidential Scholars, Graduate Prize Fellows, and Ashford Fellows need not take the step of applying for alternative funding.

Instructions for Departments

We ask department administrators to submit to Harvard Griffin GSAS a list of department applicants in alphabetical order. This is to be compiled within five days after the standard deadline of February 10, 2023,  and emailed to [email protected] .   The department administrator can log in to CARAT to access their department’s list of applicants and completed applications. The list should also be circulated to the department chair and DGS. This will ensure that Harvard Griffin GSAS and the departments are all on the same page as to who is applying for the dissertation completion fellowship.

Additional Considerations

Students at times have difficulty deciding on readiness for a completion fellowship. They let the DCF deadline go by, putting off producing the required chapter or article drafts, only to discover at a later date that they would in fact be ready to complete the dissertation during the upcoming academic year. Making an assessment of readiness is something that should entail close consultation between the student and the dissertation advisor. We, therefore, urge advanced students and their departments to make sure that this consultation takes place, doing so well in advance of the Harvard Griffin GSAS February deadline, perhaps in December or January. At that time, students and advisors should also plan a strategy for having the required two chapter or article drafts ready by the deadline.

Fellowships & Writing Center

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Notes From a Writer's Desk: From Text to Text

The Fellowships & Writing Center (FWC) recently held two talks as part of our annual April Speaker Series: “The Translator as Reader and Writer”; and “Moving from the Dissertation to the Book.” [...] While these talks might seem to bear little similarity, a common theme emerged: the transformation of one form of text into another.

Notes From a Writer's Desk: Code for Writing

Being well-written is a merit as valid for coding as for writing. Conversely, some writing foibles prompt me to think, “A computer will not be able to understand this!” It occurred to me that coding principles and best practices can actually help to promote more lucid writing. 

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Karan and Jiang Awarded Soros Fellowship for New Americans

The merit-based graduate school program, founded 26 years ago, celebrates the achievements and potential of immigrants and children of immigrants across the United States.

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Notes From a Writer's Desk: The Genius of a Problem and Solution Framework

Imagine you are writing an article and there is a paragraph that just keeps getting longer and longer despite all your attempts to stop it. What would it look like to pause and think about the paragraph in terms of the problem and solution? 

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  • WCEE Dissertation Completion Fellowship
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  • WCEE Research Grants for PhD Students

The inaugural WCEE Dissertation Completion Fellowship will be awarded to outstanding PhD students at the University of Michigan. The Weiser Center for Europe & Eurasia will provide a year-long stipend to facilitate the finalization of a student’s doctoral dissertation.

The award consists of a $45,000 stipend. WCEE will grant one award per year, beginning in the 2024-25 academic year.

Eligibility: Applicants must be enrolled full-time in a doctoral program at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Research focusing on societies in Central and Eastern Europe, as well as Eurasia are eligible. All disciplines are eligible. Students who can demonstrate that they will defend their dissertation by the end of the fellowship year will be most competitive.

Application Opens: December 1, 2023 Deadline: March 1 at 11:59 pm

Application Requirements

  • Application form
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • A copy of your official transcript
  • A personal statement describing your dissertation (up to 1500 words)
  • Two letters of recommendation

Contact: [email protected]

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Our Mission

The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) invites applicants who wish to investigate architecture and the built environment in focused projects that unfold over a span of years. Students embarking on a doctorate conduct original research that yields new insights into past, current, and future developments of architecture and building practices.

Doctoral Studies promotes independent critical thinkers and research specialists across a range of fields within the increasingly broad fields of architecture and the built environment.

dissertation completion fellowship

Program History

The University of Michigan’s Ph.D. in Architecture was one of only four such programs in the United States when it was established in 1969. Since that date, the program has continued to evolve in response to changes in the discipline and the profession. Studies currently underway at Michigan testify to rapidly shifting disciplinary boundaries and increasingly global outlooks in the field overall but particularly in areas in which our faculty are strong, such as global modernism, media practices in architecture, space syntax, structural modeling, envelope design, and urban history.

Michigan’s remarkable research facilities allow our students to develop interdisciplinary research projects with partners across campus. The Horace H. Rackham Graduate School awards the Ph.D., generally after five or six years of study.

Additional Resources

The architecture school environment continues to provide Doctoral Studies with a rich supporting context, ranging from robust lecture and seminar series, to remarkable technical facilities that support spatial and numeric data and global information systems as well as fabrication and testing facilities.

A broad array of resources beyond our home on North Campus includes extensive research libraries and computing facilities that are among the best in the country. Students are encouraged to seek out resources that are necessary to develop and carry out topics of research, particularly for the dissertation, if any are unavailable on campus.

dissertation completion fellowship

Expectations

We require a relatively high number of course credits (40 in total), and a significant time commitment to completion of degree. Four years are normally spent in residence and are fully funded with tuition, stipend, and benefits. Two additional years of tuition benefit allow students to complete the degree with fellowship support from other university units or external sources, support that is typically raised in their fourth and fifth years.

The first two years of the degree are devoted to intensive coursework intended to train students in the principal methods and materials used in our subfields (organized here by faculty specialization as BT, DS, and HT). The third year is spent preparing for and passing doctoral examinations and identifying a dissertation project. Students advance to candidacy after taking their preliminary examinations, by January of the third year at the latest. HT students must satisfy the language requirement (minimally, competence in one research language) by this time as well.

At the end of the third year, students defend their dissertation proposal in a public defense with their dissertation committee. Years four and five and, if necessary, six, are spent in researching, writing, and defending the dissertation. During the initial phase of dissertation research, students may spend substantial time off campus, supported by internal and external fellowships. They often return to Ann Arbor to write up the results of research. The dissertation is defended in a formal dissertation defense. Time to degree varies among the specializations of our program, but students typically take at least five or six years to complete the degree.

dissertation completion fellowship

/ Major and Minor Areas of Specialization

Each doctoral student identifies a major and a minor area of specialization and works with faculty advisors associated with those areas.  These advisors should be identified and contacted by the middle of the second year of coursework at the latest, although many students have identified a primary advisor before arriving in Ann Arbor.

The major can be defined in dialogue with the student’s advisor; several possible major areas are listed below:

  • Building Technology
  • Critical Urban Studies
  • Computational Design
  • Design Studies
  • Digital Fabrication
  • History and Theory
  • Media Studies

The minor is a distinct subject area that complements the major. The minor may lie in Architecture, in Urban and Regional Planning, or in another University of Michigan department, program, or center.

Coursework in the minor must be approved for Rackham graduate credit, deemed appropriate by the Doctoral Advisory Committee, and approved by the major advisor.

/ Degree Requirements

Please see the  Doctoral Studies Handbook for further details about these components.

Incremental Requirements

Requirements that must be taken in sequence, as the student moves through Doctoral Studies, include:

  • Preliminary Examinations
  • Dissertation Proposal
  • Dissertation

Standing Requirements

Requirements that must be completed, either as a condition of admission or as a condition of continuance in the program, include:

  • Annual Program of Study Report
  • English Language Proficiency
  • Continuous Enrollment
  • Satisfactory Progress

/ Steps to Candidacy and Beyond

Because many of our entering students come from professional degree programs, we emphasize the importance of the subtle but substantive shift from design-based studio work to research in major subfields of architectural practice and study. This shift often requires significant re-training in basic skills such as reading, writing, and research methods.

Students are required to complete a minimum of 40 credit hours of graded coursework (including core courses and electives) prior to achieving candidacy. All courses must be completed before Preliminary Exam preparation can begin.

Coursework consists of:

  • ARCH 801 Doctoral Colloquium [1 credit x 4 terms = 4 credits]
  • ARCH 812 Theory in Architectural Research [3 credits]
  • ARCH 813 — Research Methods [3 credits]
  • ARCH 823 , 824 , or 825 Area Seminar [3 credits]
  • ARCH 839 Research Practicum [3 credits] or URP 801 [3 credits]
  • 2 cognate courses (graduate level courses outside of Architecture) [6 credits]
  • 6 additional upper-level classes (500- to 800-level) in Architecture or as approved by advisor [18 credits]

In summary, students take:

  • 16 credit hours of core courses* (5 courses, including the Research Practicum)
  • 9 credit hours of letter graded courses in the major specialization area (3 courses)
  • 9 credit hours of letter graded courses in the minor specialization area (3 courses)
  • 6 credit hours of letter graded elective coursework (2 courses)

The Preliminary Examination

The preliminary examination forms a bridge between coursework and dissertation research. It is designed to consolidate and test students’ command of their major and minor research fields and is based upon the initial formulation of a dissertation topic. Students should take the preliminary examination by January of the third year (check  candidacy deadlines  on the Rackham website).

Preparation

During the second year, students provide a tentative list of the three members of their Preliminary Examination Committee to their advisor and the Doctoral Coordinator. This committee consists of the student’s primary advisor (normally the anticipated chair of his/her Dissertation Committee) and at least one other faculty member from Architecture, with the third member invited from the department that houses the student’s minor area. Major and minor advisors should meet with the student in the last weeks of the winter term of the year prior to the examination to define the areas of questioning and to help with the initial reading lists. The student should begin studying over the summer and continue through to the test date of the following semester. One full meeting of the Preliminary Examination Committee should take place early in the fall semester of the third year, and subsequent meetings may occur at periodic intervals until the test date, as requested by student or committee members.

Please note that students must have completed the research practicum and be registered for at least one credit hour of 990 to be eligible to sit for the preliminary examination.

The preliminary examination first requires the compilation of reading lists based on a series of questions articulated with the help of the Preliminary Exam committee. The examination itself consists of two parts: a written component (also comprising two parts) and an oral defense.

The written test consists of a Major area question, and a Minor area question. The student’s major advisor administers the Major area question, after prior consultation with the student. The minor advisor administers the Minor area question, after prior consultation with the student. The written exam is followed by an oral examination with the full Preliminary Examination Committee following the completion and assessment of both components of the written exam. The meeting offers an opportunity to discuss issues not addressed or insufficiently treated in the written exam and can thus provide the committee with further information about the student’s knowledge of the field. The meeting is also the occasion for looking forward and beginning to discuss preparation of the dissertation prospectus.

Failure . A student must pass all parts of the preliminary examination in order to proceed in the degree. He/she may be asked to retake unsatisfactory portions of the examination. Failure of the Preliminary Exam, however, may also result in permanent suspension from the program. Students cannot re-sit either part of the examination more than once.

The Dissertation

This guideline is intended to help students plan the research and writing of the dissertation, making it possible to finish within two or three years of passing the preliminary examinations, and sometimes earlier. Students should bear in mind that the successful completion of a dissertation is a two-way process of negotiation between student and advisor(s), drawing where appropriate on the advice and expertise of the other members of his/her committee.

Dissertation Proposal [End of Winter semester of third year]

Students who have passed their Preliminary Examination and achieved candidacy are expected to form a Dissertation Committee comprised of no fewer than four and no more than five members (see below) and to write a prospectus of their doctoral dissertation. This should be completed and defended at the end of the sixth term. All members of the committee should be brought into the discussion about the proposed dissertation as soon after successful completion of the Preliminary Exam as possible. All members of the Dissertation Committee should be present at the prospectus defense.

The proposal details concisely the dissertation project and situates the work in the field. The core of the document is typically no longer than 2500-3000 words in length, and the proposal includes a thesis statement, a review of the state of the field in which the dissertation is intervening, a tentative chapter outline, a research plan (including travel necessary to completion of research and a schedule for completion), and a working bibliography. The student should consult with the advisor and all members of the committee in the months when he or she is formulating this important document, which serves as the intellectual plan for subsequent dissertation research and as the basis for grant applications. The dissertation proposal defense typically opens with the student offering a brief presentation (no longer than 20 minutes) of his/her project. This is followed by comments from the members of the committee, and responses from the candidate. Students may pass the defense outright, or they may pass conditionally, with revisions required. Students are normally not permitted to schedule the defense until their committee deems them capable of passing this requirement, although in rare cases it is possible to fail a proposal defense. In that case, students will be given a fixed period of time for revision before a re-examination is scheduled. The defense provides a crucial opportunity for the committee and the student to discuss intellectual and methodological aspects of the project and formulate research plans and strategies to aid the student in timely completion of the work. A copy of the approved proposal with all requested changes should be filed with the degree office within two weeks after the proposal defense.

Dissertation Committee

The Rackham Graduate School requires that each Dissertation Committee have a minimum of four members, three of whom must be regular members of the Rackham faculty. One of these three Rackham faculty members serves as the student’s doctoral advisor; the advisor is primarily responsible for guiding the student through the process of dissertation writing and takes greater responsibility than other members of the committee for the student’s progress. One of these three Rackham faculty members must hold an appointment in a cognate field outside of the Architecture Program. The Program further requires that the dissertation committee include at least two Architecture faculty members. In certain cases, a student may elect to ask two faculty members to serve as co-advisors on their dissertation. Emeritus faculty members do not normally serve on dissertation defense committees after three or more years of retirement.

On the Committee composition, see:  http://www.rackham.umich.edu/downloads/oard/forms/disscommitteeguidelines.pdf

The members of the Dissertation Committee should be registered with the Program directly after the Preliminary Exam defense and well before the Dissertation Proposal defense, since all members of the Dissertation Committee should help the student to craft a viable dissertation project. When necessary, changes may be made in the committee’s membership in consultation with the Coordinator of Doctoral Studies. All changes must be registered with the Coordinator and the Rackham Graduate School.

Faculty Responsibilities

  • The dissertation advisor or co-advisors respond to students’ work-in-progress on the dissertation.
  • While on sabbaticals or other leave of absence from the Department, advisors or co-advisors continue to supervise their advisees’ doctoral dissertations.
  • If a student fails to meet the agreed-upon deadlines for submitting chapters, the student should re-negotiate the missed deadline with the advisor(s) in a timely fashion. While chapter deadlines may shift somewhat, any change to the overall time schedule should be negotiated with the advisor(s), who remains responsible for ensuring satisfactory progress.

Submitting the Dissertation

A student will be expected to present the completed dissertation and defend it at an oral defense conducted by the dissertation committee. It is the student’s responsibility to obtain information on dissertation deadlines, format, and procedures from the Rackham Graduate School well in advance of the defense. Procedures and requirements are outlined on the  Rackham website .

Students continue to register for ARCH 995 (8 credits) during the semester in which they defend the dissertation.

A final draft of the dissertation must be submitted to all members of the dissertation committee at least two months in advance of the proposed defense date. It is to a student’s advantage to submit the preliminary final draft to the advisor or co-advisors well before this date. This ensures that any suggested revisions may be properly discussed and incorporated in the final draft in a satisfactory manner.

A dissertation can be completed within a given academic year only if the defense takes place before the end of the winter semester. This ensures that the advisor or co-advisors and members of the dissertation committee will be in a position to attend the defense. Spring or summer term defenses may also be scheduled if all committee members agree.

The entire dissertation committee (minimum four members) must be present at the dissertation defense. A speaker phone or skype connection will be set up if one or two members are resident outside of Ann Arbor. The defense is public and peers may attend.

After the defense, the student must incorporate corrections required at the defense and submit a final version to Rackham, approved by the advisor or co-advisors or a proxy by the Rackham deadline . The due date for submitting the final, approved dissertation in a given term is set by Rackham and is absolutely inflexible. Should a student miss the deadline for a given term by even a day, he/she will be compelled to pay tuition to enroll the following term.

Rackham sets specific dates each academic year for receiving the degree. These roughly correspond to the following: early October for a December degree; mid-April for a May degree; and late June for an August degree. Students and advisors should consult the Rackham website for specific dates in a given year.

Please see the Doctoral Studies Handbook for further description of these degree components.

/ Sample Schedule

All students who anticipate working with quantitative or qualitative data manipulation are required to complete at least three credit hours of graded coursework in statistical analyses and/or advanced research methods (beyond the required core course).

Students must complete two consecutive terms of full-time graduate work in residence beginning in the fall term of their first year so that the core courses may be taken in the required sequence. Students who have been offered special admission may be required to complete additional coursework.

Rackham requires that graduate-level cognate courses of at least four credit hours be satisfactorily completed in a department or program other than the Doctoral Studies in Architecture and the Architecture Program. These courses may be used to satisfy the major or minor requirement and must be approved by the student’s major professor. These credit hours are not additional to the 40 required program hours. Upon satisfactorily completing all Ph.D. coursework, a Ph.D. student is eligible to apply for and be awarded the master of science degree.

The university  class schedule  is a great resource to other interesting and beneficial courses offered outside of architecture.

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Core Course Offerings

The core curriculum for the program consists of courses in the theoretical foundations of architecture, research methods, and seminars relating to the student’s major and/or minor specialization areas. For detailed descriptions of these courses, see the course descriptions section.

  • Arch 801: Doctoral Colloquium (4 credit hours)
  • Arch 812: Theory in Architectural Research (3 credit hours)
  • Arch 813: Research Design and Methods in Architecture (3 credit hours)
  • Arch 823: Area Seminar
  • Arch 824: Area Seminar
  • Arch 825: Area Seminar
  • Arch 839: Research Practicum (3 credit hours)
  • TOTAL: 16 credit hours

With approval from the Doctoral Program, a student may elect to take another three hour methods course in lieu of Arch 813.

Architecture Independent Study Approval Form – ARCH 810   (Ph.D. students only)

/ Recent Graduates

Graduates from the Ph.D. in Architecture program have completed Doctoral Dissertations on topics ranging from “Aural Architecture as Affect: Understanding the Impact of Acoustic Environments on Human Experience” to “Curating a Nation in Skopje: A Tale of One City’s Architecture and Politics.” View a selection of recent Doctoral Dissertations .

/ Faculty Teaching Core Courses

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Mania Aghaei Meibodi

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Sean Ahlquist

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Catherine Griffiths

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Linda N. Groat

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Andrew Herscher

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El Hadi Jazairy

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Lars Junghans

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Jong-Jin Kim

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Joy Knoblauch

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Kuukuwa Manful

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Malcolm McCullough

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Wesley McGee

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John McMorrough

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Ana Morcillo Pallarés

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Upali Nanda

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Mojtaba Navvab

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Łukasz Stanek

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Peter von Bülow

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Craig Wilkins

See all Faculty

/ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the rackham graduate school.

The Rackham Graduate School and Taubman College work as a team to manage the application review process. As an applicant you will be interacting with both offices.

Do I need to submit GRE scores?

No. Effective for 2022 applicants and beyond, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores are no longer required nor considered for admission to all graduate programs, including the Master of Urban Design, at Taubman College.

Do I need an official transcript to apply?

Yes. The Rackham Graduate School requires applicants to upload a scanned copy, front and back, of their official transcript /academic record issued by the Registrar or Records Office to the applicant, to ApplyWeb for each bachelor’s, master’s, professional, or doctoral degree earned or in progress.

Is there an interview process?

Yes. As part of the competitive process of admission evaluation, the Admissions Committee will conduct personal interviews with each applicant. Interviews are arranged after the deadline and applications have been reviewed.

My English proficiency score doesn’t meet the minimum requirement, can I still apply?

Yes, you can still apply. However, Taubman College doesn’t provide conditional admission. We encourage you to retake the test until you receive the minimum score.

How do I check the status of my application?

Applicants can verify application data and status online approximately 10–15 days after their application is submitted. The admissions office will send an email to each applicant that includes the University of Michigan Identification Number (UMID). You will need to use a login ID and password to confirm some personal data before viewing your application status. Student Service staff will try to keep all materials received current. However, please allow sufficient time for processing before contacting the office. See the Apply page application status and evaluation section.

When will I receive my admission decision?

Applicants will be notified of their admission decision by late-February or early March. If you are admitted, you will be able to see that you have been recommended for admission via the online Wolverine Access web application status portal. Decision  letters are sent via email.

Are there any resources available for International Students with questions related to the visa application, health insurance or Life in Ann Arbor?

Yes. The Website of the International Center at the University of Michigan offers helpful resources for incoming international students related to topics such as Immigration and Visas, Health Insurance and Housing or Local Transportation.

https://internationalcenter.umich.edu/resources

When do I need to enter my decision?

April 15th.

Where can I find more information regarding the University’s COVID-19 vaccination requirements, safety and prevention efforts and testing programs?

Please refer to https://campusblueprint.umich.edu/ for latest news on the coronavirus situation on campus and the COVID-19  policies currently in place for students and faculty.

Do I need to secure an advisor prior to applying?

No, we only encourage students to become familiar with our Ph.D. faculty and research interests. Please feel free to reach out to faculty directly as well.

/ Funding Support and Resources

Making decisions about the next step in your educational journey is a time full of opportunity and potential; however, it may also be accompanied by concerns about costs. Taubman College provides full funding to all students admitted to its doctoral programs, including a full tuition waiver, health insurance, and a generous stipend package.

Taubman College Career and Professional Development offers a variety of programs, services and resources to assist students and alumni in exploring careers, securing positions and continuing skill development and management.

For additional information on career opportunities, visit our career and professional development page.

Alumni Profile

Conrad kickert, m.u.d. ’06, ph.d. arch ’14 ,.

Assistant Professor of Urban Design, University at Buffalo - School of Architecture and Planning

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Out of the Centre

Savvino-storozhevsky monastery and museum.

Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery and Museum

Zvenigorod's most famous sight is the Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery, which was founded in 1398 by the monk Savva from the Troitse-Sergieva Lavra, at the invitation and with the support of Prince Yury Dmitrievich of Zvenigorod. Savva was later canonised as St Sabbas (Savva) of Storozhev. The monastery late flourished under the reign of Tsar Alexis, who chose the monastery as his family church and often went on pilgrimage there and made lots of donations to it. Most of the monastery’s buildings date from this time. The monastery is heavily fortified with thick walls and six towers, the most impressive of which is the Krasny Tower which also serves as the eastern entrance. The monastery was closed in 1918 and only reopened in 1995. In 1998 Patriarch Alexius II took part in a service to return the relics of St Sabbas to the monastery. Today the monastery has the status of a stauropegic monastery, which is second in status to a lavra. In addition to being a working monastery, it also holds the Zvenigorod Historical, Architectural and Art Museum.

Belfry and Neighbouring Churches

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Located near the main entrance is the monastery's belfry which is perhaps the calling card of the monastery due to its uniqueness. It was built in the 1650s and the St Sergius of Radonezh’s Church was opened on the middle tier in the mid-17th century, although it was originally dedicated to the Trinity. The belfry's 35-tonne Great Bladgovestny Bell fell in 1941 and was only restored and returned in 2003. Attached to the belfry is a large refectory and the Transfiguration Church, both of which were built on the orders of Tsar Alexis in the 1650s.  

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To the left of the belfry is another, smaller, refectory which is attached to the Trinity Gate-Church, which was also constructed in the 1650s on the orders of Tsar Alexis who made it his own family church. The church is elaborately decorated with colourful trims and underneath the archway is a beautiful 19th century fresco.

Nativity of Virgin Mary Cathedral

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The Nativity of Virgin Mary Cathedral is the oldest building in the monastery and among the oldest buildings in the Moscow Region. It was built between 1404 and 1405 during the lifetime of St Sabbas and using the funds of Prince Yury of Zvenigorod. The white-stone cathedral is a standard four-pillar design with a single golden dome. After the death of St Sabbas he was interred in the cathedral and a new altar dedicated to him was added.

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Under the reign of Tsar Alexis the cathedral was decorated with frescoes by Stepan Ryazanets, some of which remain today. Tsar Alexis also presented the cathedral with a five-tier iconostasis, the top row of icons have been preserved.

Tsaritsa's Chambers

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The Nativity of Virgin Mary Cathedral is located between the Tsaritsa's Chambers of the left and the Palace of Tsar Alexis on the right. The Tsaritsa's Chambers were built in the mid-17th century for the wife of Tsar Alexey - Tsaritsa Maria Ilinichna Miloskavskaya. The design of the building is influenced by the ancient Russian architectural style. Is prettier than the Tsar's chambers opposite, being red in colour with elaborately decorated window frames and entrance.

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At present the Tsaritsa's Chambers houses the Zvenigorod Historical, Architectural and Art Museum. Among its displays is an accurate recreation of the interior of a noble lady's chambers including furniture, decorations and a decorated tiled oven, and an exhibition on the history of Zvenigorod and the monastery.

Palace of Tsar Alexis

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The Palace of Tsar Alexis was built in the 1650s and is now one of the best surviving examples of non-religious architecture of that era. It was built especially for Tsar Alexis who often visited the monastery on religious pilgrimages. Its most striking feature is its pretty row of nine chimney spouts which resemble towers.

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Gagarin Cup Preview: Atlant vs. Salavat Yulaev

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Gagarin cup (khl) finals:  atlant moscow oblast vs. salavat yulaev ufa.

Much like the Elitserien Finals, we have a bit of an offense vs. defense match-up in this league Final.  While Ufa let their star top line of Alexander Radulov, Patrick Thoresen and Igor Grigorenko loose on the KHL's Western Conference, Mytischi played a more conservative style, relying on veterans such as former NHLers Jan Bulis, Oleg Petrov, and Jaroslav Obsut.  Just reaching the Finals is a testament to Atlant's disciplined style of play, as they had to knock off much more high profile teams from Yaroslavl and St. Petersburg to do so.  But while they did finish 8th in the league in points, they haven't seen the likes of Ufa, who finished 2nd. 

This series will be a challenge for the underdog, because unlike some of the other KHL teams, Ufa's top players are generally younger and in their prime.  Only Proshkin amongst regular blueliners is over 30, with the work being shared by Kirill Koltsov (28), Andrei Kuteikin (26), Miroslav Blatak (28), Maxim Kondratiev (28) and Dmitri Kalinin (30).  Oleg Tverdovsky hasn't played a lot in the playoffs to date.  Up front, while led by a fairly young top line (24-27), Ufa does have a lot of veterans in support roles:  Vyacheslav Kozlov , Viktor Kozlov , Vladimir Antipov, Sergei Zinovyev and Petr Schastlivy are all over 30.  In fact, the names of all their forwards are familiar to international and NHL fans:  Robert Nilsson , Alexander Svitov, Oleg Saprykin and Jakub Klepis round out the group, all former NHL players.

For Atlant, their veteran roster, with only one of their top six D under the age of 30 (and no top forwards under 30, either), this might be their one shot at a championship.  The team has never won either a Russian Superleague title or the Gagarin Cup, and for players like former NHLer Oleg Petrov, this is probably the last shot at the KHL's top prize.  The team got three extra days rest by winning their Conference Final in six games, and they probably needed to use it.  Atlant does have younger regulars on their roster, but they generally only play a few shifts per game, if that. 

The low event style of game for Atlant probably suits them well, but I don't know how they can manage to keep up against Ufa's speed, skill, and depth.  There is no advantage to be seen in goal, with Erik Ersberg and Konstantin Barulin posting almost identical numbers, and even in terms of recent playoff experience Ufa has them beat.  Luckily for Atlant, Ufa isn't that far away from the Moscow region, so travel shouldn't play a major role. 

I'm predicting that Ufa, winners of the last Superleague title back in 2008, will become the second team to win the Gagarin Cup, and will prevail in five games.  They have a seriously well built team that would honestly compete in the NHL.  They represent the potential of the league, while Atlant represents closer to the reality, as a team full of players who played themselves out of the NHL. 

  • Atlant @ Ufa, Friday Apr 8 (3:00 PM CET/10:00 PM EST)
  • Atlant @ Ufa, Sunday Apr 10 (1:00 PM CET/8:00 AM EST)
  • Ufa @ Atlant, Tuesday Apr 12 (5:30 PM CET/12:30 PM EST)
  • Ufa @ Atlant, Thursday Apr 14 (5:30 PM CET/12:30 PM EST)

Games 5-7 are as yet unscheduled, but every second day is the KHL standard, so expect Game 5 to be on Saturday, like an early start. 

The Unique Burial of a Child of Early Scythian Time at the Cemetery of Saryg-Bulun (Tuva)

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Pages:  379-406

In 1988, the Tuvan Archaeological Expedition (led by M. E. Kilunovskaya and V. A. Semenov) discovered a unique burial of the early Iron Age at Saryg-Bulun in Central Tuva. There are two burial mounds of the Aldy-Bel culture dated by 7th century BC. Within the barrows, which adjoined one another, forming a figure-of-eight, there were discovered 7 burials, from which a representative collection of artifacts was recovered. Burial 5 was the most unique, it was found in a coffin made of a larch trunk, with a tightly closed lid. Due to the preservative properties of larch and lack of air access, the coffin contained a well-preserved mummy of a child with an accompanying set of grave goods. The interred individual retained the skin on his face and had a leather headdress painted with red pigment and a coat, sewn from jerboa fur. The coat was belted with a leather belt with bronze ornaments and buckles. Besides that, a leather quiver with arrows with the shafts decorated with painted ornaments, fully preserved battle pick and a bow were buried in the coffin. Unexpectedly, the full-genomic analysis, showed that the individual was female. This fact opens a new aspect in the study of the social history of the Scythian society and perhaps brings us back to the myth of the Amazons, discussed by Herodotus. Of course, this discovery is unique in its preservation for the Scythian culture of Tuva and requires careful study and conservation.

Keywords: Tuva, Early Iron Age, early Scythian period, Aldy-Bel culture, barrow, burial in the coffin, mummy, full genome sequencing, aDNA

Information about authors: Marina Kilunovskaya (Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation). Candidate of Historical Sciences. Institute for the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Dvortsovaya Emb., 18, Saint Petersburg, 191186, Russian Federation E-mail: [email protected] Vladimir Semenov (Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation). Candidate of Historical Sciences. Institute for the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Dvortsovaya Emb., 18, Saint Petersburg, 191186, Russian Federation E-mail: [email protected] Varvara Busova  (Moscow, Russian Federation).  (Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation). Institute for the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences.  Dvortsovaya Emb., 18, Saint Petersburg, 191186, Russian Federation E-mail:  [email protected] Kharis Mustafin  (Moscow, Russian Federation). Candidate of Technical Sciences. Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.  Institutsky Lane, 9, Dolgoprudny, 141701, Moscow Oblast, Russian Federation E-mail:  [email protected] Irina Alborova  (Moscow, Russian Federation). Candidate of Biological Sciences. Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.  Institutsky Lane, 9, Dolgoprudny, 141701, Moscow Oblast, Russian Federation E-mail:  [email protected] Alina Matzvai  (Moscow, Russian Federation). Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.  Institutsky Lane, 9, Dolgoprudny, 141701, Moscow Oblast, Russian Federation E-mail:  [email protected]

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  1. Bertha Bermúdez Tapia awarded the Graduate School Dissertation

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COMMENTS

  1. Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    The Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships support advanced graduate students in the last year of PhD dissertation writing to help them complete projects in the humanities and interpretive social sciences that will form the foundations of their scholarly careers. Since its launch in 2006, the program supported more than 1,000 promising ...

  2. Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    Dissertation completion fellowships provide advanced doctoral students in the humanities and social sciences with an academic year of support to write and complete their dissertation. Dissertation Completion Fellowships | The Harvard Kenneth C. Griffin Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

  3. Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowships

    Dissertation awards are intended to support Fellows who will be spending the majority of their time writing and defending the dissertation during the fellowship year. Participation in full-time paid or unpaid internships or other paid activities, even if required for degree completion, should not be undertaken during the fellowship year.

  4. Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    Dissertation completion fellowships are available to students who have: completed all departmental requirements; completed an approved dissertation prospectus; completed two draft dissertation chapters (or one draft article for students in fields where the dissertation consists of three articles), confirmed by two faculty advisors, one of whom ...

  5. Dean's Completion Fellowship / PGRA Program

    Dean's Completion Fellowships. These fellowships pay the Dissertation Completion Enrollment (DCE) tuition fee and provide fellowship funding at the full standard stipend rate to selected sixth-year students. These fellowships may be held in the fall or spring. Postgraduate Research Associate Program

  6. Fellowships

    Every fellowship has specific criteria and application instructions, but as a general rule, most competitions ask for: A fellowship proposal, explaining your research topic and what you plan to do if you are granted the fellowship ; Recommendation letters ; A budget of expenses you expect to incur, especially for fellowships requiring travel

  7. Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    Dissertation Completion Fellowships support final-year doctoral students. These non-service fellowships allow students to focus exclusively on their research and writing without service obligations. Fellows are expected to defend their dissertation by the end of the academic year.

  8. Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    During the Dissertation Completion Fellowship, recipients are expected not to teach, hold other employment, or pursue other projects during this time, as students are expected to complete their dissertations during the period of the award. Students who have previously received writing/completion grants from other sources are not eligible.

  9. Stanford Dissertation Fellowships

    The SHC Dissertation Prize Fellowships, endowed by Theodore and Frances Geballe, are awarded to doctoral students whose work is of the highest distinction and promise. The fellowship stipend includes three academic quarters of funding (fall/winter/spring). In 2023-24 the funding amount was $38,700; the exact amount for 2024-25 will be announced ...

  10. Graduate Fellowships, Grants and Awards

    Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships The American Council for of Learned Societies (ACLS) invites applications for the Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships, which support a year of research and writing to help advanced graduate students in the humanities and related social sciences in the last year of Ph.D. dissertation ...

  11. Dissertation Completion Fellowship

    The student must be engaged full-time in the completion of the research and writing of the dissertation, including continued communication with the major professor/s. This Fellowship is not to be used for funding after a successful dissertation defense.

  12. Completion Fellowship

    The Graduate College Completion Fellowship is a merit-based award to support degree completion of outstanding graduate students enrolled in one credit for their last semester or last year of a doctoral, MFA, or other terminal degree on-campus immersion graduate program. This is a competitive fellowship award; all applications are reviewed by faculty and selected based on the significance and ...

  13. 2024 Dissertation Completion Fellowship Recipients

    The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES) awarded four graduate students from Harvard University a Dissertation Completion Fellowship to conduct research on Europe during the 2024-2025 academic year. Natalie Behrends (History) - British ideas of tropical space between 1870 and 1935. Sherah Bloor (The Study of Religion) - Anatomy ...

  14. Dissertation Completion Fellowships (DCF)

    Dissertation Completion Fellowships are funded by the Graduate School at Michigan State University and are intended to expedite the completion of strong dissertations by providing students additional funding and thus time to dedicate to the completion of their dissertations. The College may provide a small number of additional College-funded DCFs. DCF 2023-2024 AnnouncementDownload Expand ...

  15. Call for Applications

    The fellowship is intended help students offset the costs incurred as a result of research and writing activities necessary for the successful completion of the dissertation. The ISA Dissertation Completion Fellowship is open to applicants from across the social sciences and humanities working in the broad field of International Studies.

  16. Dissertation Completion Fellowship

    2024-25 DISSERTATION COMPLETION FELLOWSHIP. Applications are once again invited for the Society of Fellows Dissertation Completion Fellowship. We expect to offer one fellowship for the 2024-2025 academic year, with stipends beginning in Summer 2024. Research during the SoF Fellowship may be carried out at the University or elsewhere.

  17. 2022 Dissertation Completion Fellowship Recipients

    The Graduate Division extends its congratulations to the recipients of 2022's Dissertation Completion Fellowships. As the name implies, the Dissertation Completion Fellowship is intended for students who will complete their dissertations during the fellowship year.

  18. Instructions for Dissertation Completion Fellowships

    The dissertation completion fellowships ordinarily may not be combined with grants from other sources, although exceptions are made for smaller grants. Also as noted, they are intended to be held for the entire academic year and must be confined within a single academic year.

  19. WCEE Dissertation Completion Fellowship

    The inaugural WCEE Dissertation Completion Fellowship will be awarded to outstanding PhD students at the University of Michigan. The Weiser Center for Europe & Eurasia will provide a year-long stipend to facilitate the finalization of a student's doctoral dissertation. The award consists of a $45,000 stipend. WCEE will grant one award per ...

  20. Dissertation Completion Fellowship Program

    The applications for the 2025 Dissertation Completion Fellowship program will be available in the fall of 2024. Inquiries can be directed to [email protected]. The FINRA Foundation's mission is to empower underserved Americans with the knowledge, skills, and tools to make sound financial decisions throughout life.

  21. Ph.D. in Architecture

    A dissertation can be completed within a given academic year only if the defense takes place before the end of the winter semester. This ensures that the advisor or co-advisors and members of the dissertation committee will be in a position to attend the defense. Spring or summer term defenses may also be scheduled if all committee members agree.

  22. Academic Policies and Procedures for Graduate Students

    Thesis and Dissertation Preparation and Completion. For specific instructions regarding the preparation and submission of master's theses and doctoral dissertations, students should consult the Graduate School Manual. The absolute deadline for fulfilling thesis and dissertation requirements is approximately ten working days prior to Commencement.

  23. PDF CONTENTS

    Fellowships 12 Loans13 Off-Campus Employment Options 13 ... 16 RCR Training Under NSF and NIH Grants 16 Enrollment Requirements 16 Academic Performance Requirements 17 Thesis and Dissertation Requirements 17 Guidelines for Ph.D. Dissertation Research 17 ... Graduate Education staff monitors your completion of them, while the Registrar's ...

  24. PDF agecon.tamu.edu

    agecon.tamu.edu

  25. PDF z Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Institutskii per. 9

    In what follows, we will measure the magnetic eld strength in units of Bc (1) and take the electron mass m, the Compton wavelength of the electron = ~=mc 3:86 10 11 cm, and its ratio to the speed of light =c 1:29 10 21 s as the units of mass, length, and time, respectively. Formally, this means that ~ = = c = 1.

  26. Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery and Museum

    Zvenigorod's most famous sight is the Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery, which was founded in 1398 by the monk Savva from the Troitse-Sergieva Lavra, at the invitation and with the support of Prince Yury Dmitrievich of Zvenigorod. Savva was later canonised as St Sabbas (Savva) of Storozhev. The monastery late flourished under the reign of Tsar ...

  27. Gagarin Cup Preview: Atlant vs. Salavat Yulaev

    Much like the Elitserien Finals, we have a bit of an offense vs. defense match-up in this league Final. While Ufa let their star top line of Alexander Radulov, Patrick Thoresen and Igor Grigorenko loose on the KHL's Western Conference, Mytischi played a more conservative style, relying on veterans such as former NHLers Jan Bulis, Oleg Petrov, and Jaroslav Obsut.

  28. The Unique Burial of a Child of Early Scythian Time at the Cemetery of

    Burial 5 was the most unique, it was found in a coffin made of a larch trunk, with a tightly closed lid. Due to the preservative properties of larch and lack of air access, the coffin contained a well-preserved mummy of a child with an accompanying set of grave goods. The interred individual retained the skin on his face and had a leather ...