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All Ph.D. applicants for full-time study
are automatically considered for departmental financial support. These
awards are based on academic merit, not financial need. We offer long-term
fellowship support for five years, and the holder of a fellowship can
be assured of keeping that fellowship, provide that he or she is making
normal progress toward the degree. As of 1994, all state-supported graduate
assistants are unionized through the Graduate Student Employees Union,
which negotiates such issues as health-care insurance, salary increases,
and grievance and arbitration procedures.
In addition to departmental Teaching Assistantships, outstanding applicants
to the Ph.D. program in English at UB may be considered for special
university-based fellowships in the following categories. They should
submit all standard application materials no later than January 2. Nominations
for these awards will then be made by the department and forwarded to
a committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for review. Award recipients
will be notified by mid-March. For M.A. applicants who received their
undergraduate degree from UB, please note the new partial tuition waiver
program. To find out more about these grants, see http://www.grad.buffalo.edu/general/financial-aid.htm).
Presidential Teaching Fellowships
The Presidential Fellowship Program, inaugurated in Fall 1984, is designed
to support students of proven excellence in UB's various graduate departments.
Presidential Fellowships, awarded by the
College of Arts and Sciences in conjunction with the Graduate School,
provide a full tuition award, plus a ten-month stipend of $14,400, or
$16,400. They are renewable for four years. You will be offered fifth-year
funding (the base stipend level of $10,400) provided you have submitted
at least one chapter of your dissertation during the fourth year.
Both standard teaching assistantships and
Presidential Fellowships require teaching only one course each semester,
usually the ENG 101 or 201 composition courses. After successful completion
of the Oral Exams, students may apply to teach literature courses.
Dean's Scholarships
Dean's Fellowships are similar to Presidential Fellowships: they offer
an assistantship (which carries a stipend of $10,400) and a full tuition
scholarship. In addition, Dean's Scholars are awarded a four-year fellowship
stipend of $4,000, which totals $14,400. In the fifth year, the student,
if in good standing, will receive a base stipend of $10,400.
College Fellowships
College Fellowships are similar to Presidential and Dean's Fellowships:
they offer a full assistantship and a full tuition scholarship. In addition,
College Fellows will receive a fellowship enhancement of $2000, totaling
$12,400. These fellowships are normally renewable for a total of four
years of support, with fifth year funding guaranteed, if in good standing,
from the department at the base stipend level of $10,400.
Dissertation Fellowships
Outstanding graduate students who have reached the stage of preparing
their doctoral dissertations may apply on a competitive basis to receive
a Dissertation Fellowship, which carries with its a stipend of $4000
for one academic year. There are a limited number of these Fellowships,
which entail no teaching or other form of obligation. They are intended
to assist advanced doctoral candidates in the preparation of their dissertations.
These Fellowships may be used to supplement other forms of financial
support a student received, or they may be awarded to students who are
otherwise unfunded.
Arthur A. Schomburg Fellowship Program
The Graduate Minority Fellowships were established in 1987 by the New
York State Legislature to support graduate study for members of underrepresented
minorities: African-Americans, U.S. Latinos and Native Americans. Each
year there are about 20 awards university-wide, available only to full-time
students entering a graduate degree program for the first time. The
Schomburg Fellowships are awarded on a university-wide basis; therefore
all fellowships are highly competitive. The Department's Admissions
Committee will nominate prospective candidates for review by the Faculty
of Arts and Sciences Fellowship Committee and the Office of Public Service
and Urban Affairs.
The Schomburg Fellowships are four-year awards
with an annual stipend of $7,000 plus a full award of graduate tuition.
These fellowships are awarded in addition to teaching assistantships,
which carries a stipend of $10,400. The English Department makes available
a fifth year of support to all Schomburg Fellows in good standing in
our Ph.D. program who are making normal progress. For more information
on this fellowship, see http://wings.buffalo.edu/psua/psua/Schombrg.htm
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