*All Funding Opportunities: April 2013 Archives

Deadline: May 31, 2013

Length: Up to 3 years

Comments: Fellowships awarded women doctoral students to conduct research at an Australian university or tertiary institute. The maximum tenure of the fellowship is three years.Fellowships are open to women scholars who: (a) are graduates of a recognized tertiary institution from any country who are intending to take up or continue postgraduate studies at a recognized tertiary institution in Queensland, Australia, or (b) have graduated at a recognized tertiary institution in Queensland and are intending to take up or continue postgraduate studies at a recognized tertiary institution elsewhere.The annual value of the Fellowships is linked to the value of Australian Postgraduate Awards (APAs) plus 10%. 

Deadline: 5/1/2013 2/1, 5/1, 8/1, 11/1 annually beginning 11/1/2012 

Length: 9 - 17 months

Comments: Awards given to support dissertation research which will improve the quality, safety, efficiency, and effectiveness of health care for all Americans. Candidates are required to address health services research issues critical to AHRQ priority populations. The entire project period must be between 9 to 17 month.Must be enrolled in a doctoral degree program and have completed all non-dissertation requirements for their degrees.Up to $40,000 awarded for the entire project period. 

Deadline: May 20, 2013  

Comments:Up to 20 scholarships for master's and doctoral study in communication sciences and disorders, audiology, and early childhood language development. Up to 4 master's or doctoral student scholarships will be awarded for special purposes including students with disability, minority students, international students, and NSSLHA members.Scholarships are open to full-time graduate students, some awards are for disabled and minority students only. Award amount is $5,000. 

Deadline: June 1, 2013

Length: 1 year

Comments: The AIGC Fellowship program provides approximately $1,200,000 in fellowships to over 400 American Indian and Alaska Native graduate and professional students each year.  Graduate fellowships are monetary awards made to American Indian and Alaska Native graduate or professional degree-seeking students, who meet all eligibility criteria.  The fellowship amount is typically between $1000 and $5000 per academic year (not including summer), and varies from year to year, depending on the number of qualified applicants, the availability of funds and unmet financial need.


To be considered, applicants must be:

  • Pursuing a post-baccalaureate graduate or professional degree as a full time student at an accredited institution in the U.S.;
  • Able to demonstrate financial need through submission of the AIGC Financial Need Form (FNF), and;
  • An enrolled member of a federally recognized American Indian or Alaska Native group, or provide documentation of descent (possess one-fourth degree verifiable federally recognized Indian blood) as verified through submission of a Tribal Eligibility Certificate (TEC). 
URL: http://www.aigcs.org/ScholarshipsGraduate_Fellowships.aspx
Deadline: June 1, 2013

Length: Varies

Comments: Each year The Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality (SSSS) awards two grants of $1,000 each to student memberss who are doing human sexuality research. The purpose of the research can be a master's thesis or doctoral dissertation, but this is not a requirement. Applicants must be enrolled in a degree-granting program and a member (student) of SSSS. Student research grant awards are funded by the Foundation for the Scientific Study of Sexuality.

For More Information

The Society Office

SSSS

P.O. Box 416

Allentown, PA 18105-0416 U.S.A. 

(610) 443-3100

thesociety@sexscience.org 

www.sexscience.org/student_research_grants


Deadline: May 1, 2013

Length: 1 yr.

Comments: One or more grants are awarded annually to foster graduate student research in hydrology and water resources leading to the completion of doctoral dissertations. Nonrenewable. Graduate students at any point during their doctoral program. A grant of $10,000 per year.

Deadline: May 1, 2013

Length: 1-6 months

Comments: Applicants must be enrolled full-time in an accredited doctoral degree program or engaged full-time in a post-doctoral position. PhD Candidates applying for short-term grants (one to six months) should have ABD status by the time of application, but no more than four years before applying. Post Docs applying for short-term grants (one to six months) should have completed their degrees no longer than four years before the time of application. Applicants should have a well-defined research project that makes a stay in Germany essential. Preference will be given to applicants who have been invited by a faculty member at a German university to study or do research in a particular university department. Monthly stipend is approximately €1,000. In addition, DAAD will pay for health insurance and provide a flat rate subsidy for travel costs (US East: €1075 / West: €1425; Canada East: €925 / West: €1,300).

URL: http://www.daad.org/?p=gradresearch

Deadline: May 1, 2013

Comments: Postdoctoral research and dissertation fieldwork grants are available for basic research in all branches of anthropology. Aid is not provided for tuition or travel to meetings. Awards are tenable in the U.S. and abroad.Dissertation applicants must have completed all requirements for a PhD except dissertation and have an advisor willing to supervise the project.Research Grants provide a maximum of US $20,000 and the Osmundsen Initiative supplement provides up to an additional $5,000 for a maximum grant of US $25,000.

URL: http://www.wennergren.org/programs/post-phd-research-grants
Deadline: May 3, 2013

Comments: Up to 10 research grants for postdoctoral work in furthering new investigators' research activities that have particular clinical relevance to audiology and/or speech-language pathology.Must have received master's or doctoral level degree within the past five years. Students enrolled in a degree program are ineligible for this award. The individual must not have received prior funding for research, with the exception of internal university funding. The proposal must be for research to be initiated, not currently in progress. Grants of $5000. 

Deadline: May 6, 2013 

Comments: Up to 20 scholarships offered to support doctoral education and research in the field of communication sciences and disorders. The intention of this program is to support doctoral candidates who will pursue a teacher-investigator career in the academic environment, university/college level. Students must be accepted to, or currently enrolled in, a research doctoral program in communication sciences and disorders. Students enrolled in a clinical doctoral program are not eligible to participate. Students must also be either a NSSLHA member or an ASHA member at the time of application. Stipend of $10,000.
 
Deadline: April 17, 2013

Length: 6-12 months

Comments: Post-doctoral fellowships offered to conduct research on the relation of religiousness and spirituality to physical, mental, and social health. Provides 6-12 months of support for research in residence at the Library of Congress. Must have a doctoral degree conferred prior to April 15. Stipend of $4,200 per month.

URL: http://www.loc.gov/kluge/fellowships/larson.html

Eligibility: Advanced graduate students in the Division of the Social Sciences who will have been admitted to PhD candidacy before Autumn 2013, whose dissertation projects require study and research in Paris, and who would benefit substantially from the resources of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales. The EHESS fellow should be based in Paris.

 

Tenure and Terms of Award: The student selected to represent the Division of Social

Sciences will spend up to six months (two quarters) at the École under the supervision of a member of the École faculty. The award provides for airfare, registration fees at the École and a stipend. Registration fees and a stipend ($1200/month) are paid by the École. During fellowship tenure, the EHESS exchange fellow is charged $286/quarter (pro-forma registration fee) by the Division of the Social Sciences.

Deadline: Monday, April 29, 2013, 5:00 pm

The France Chicago Center is now accepting applications for three different grant and fellowship competitions.  

Francois Furet Travel Grants provide six $2,000 awards to defray expenses associated with a short-term research project or language-study program in France.

De la Vauvre Summer fellowship provides a $5,000 award to a graduate student in the Humanities or Social Sciences Division who wishes to conduct summer research in France.  

Sciences Po Exchange Fellowship is an opportunity for graduate students in the Humanities or Social Sciences Divisions to conduct up to 6-9 months of research at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po) in Paris. 

Information about the France Chicago Center Travel Grant and Fellowships can be found at http://fcc.uchicago.edu/fellowships/guidelines.html

Deadline: Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Duration: Varied

Amount: Varied

The Committee on Southern Asian Studies announces its annual fellowship competition for summer 2013 and AY 2013-14.  COSAS fellowships will be of four kinds: dissertation write-up support; summer language study support; short-term pre-dissertation overseas travel; and other.  Each type of fellowship has a separate application.  Please select and submit the correct form, available at:

 

http://southasia.uchicago.edu/cosas_fellowships.shtml

 

Students will be allowed a maximum of seven quarters of support, including all COSAS fellowship support they have received to date.  The committee reminds students that few sources of funding may be available at the dissertation write-up stage and strongly recommends that students consider applying for six dissertation write-up fellowships and one fellowship in any of the other three categories during their careers as graduate students.  Other patterns of funding may be considered by the committee with good cause. You may request no more than at total of 3 quarters of support in any given year.

 

Priorities and Eligibility by Category

Category I: Dissertation Write-up  

Purpose: This category receives the highest priority in the allocation of funds by the committee.  It is ordinarily intended to support students in the stage following primary research during dissertation write-up.  Eligibility: Students must 1) have completed at least two years of course work in a program of graduate study directly relevant to Southern Asian studies and 2) be admitted to Ph.D. candidacy.  Students must apply annually for this support.

 

Category II: Summer Language Study

Priority and Purpose: A limited number of fellowships may be awarded in this category.  These fellowships are designed to provide or supplement support for summer language study.  Funds may be applied to programs in the U.S. or abroad.  Students must be accepted into an appropriate language study or tutorial program. Eligibility: Students must 1) have successfully completed all first year requirements in a graduate degree program prior to the commencement of the summer program and 2) be planning to continue studies at the University of Chicago during the autumn quarter following the summer program.  Students should make every attempt possible to apply for alternate sources of funding for summer language study before applying to COSAS.

 

Category III: Pre-Dissertation Overseas Travel

Priority and Purpose:  A limited number of fellowships may be awarded in this category.  This typically supports a short-term (often summer quarter) overseas trip. Eligibility: Students must 1) have completed at least two years of course work in a program of graduate study directly relevant to Southern Asian studies and must 2) also plan to continue studies at the University of Chicago during the quarter following the research period.

 

 

 

Category IV: Other

Priority and Purpose: This category receives the lowest priority.  The committee will use its discretion in reviewing the statement of purpose and strongly recommends that the student indicate that he/she has considered all possible sources of funding for the proposed project before applying to COSAS.  Eligibility: Students must 1) have completed at least two years of course work in a program of graduate study directly relevant to Southern Asian studies and 2) be planning to continue studies at the University of Chicago during the quarter following the project. 

 

IMPORTANT INFORMATION:

1) COSAS grants are available to University of Chicago graduate students of any citizenship whose research deals with Southern Asia.  Southern Asia is defined by COSAS as including countries in South Asia, Southeast Asia and Tibet (TAR).  These specifically include Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, East Timor, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka; Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia (Kampuchea), Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam; and Tibet (TAR). 

2) Students should make every effort to apply for other sources of funding (e.g., Summer FLAS, SSRC grants, AIIS grants, Fulbright grants, Divisional funding). Applications that show evidence of such efforts will be looked on more favorably than those that do not.  In addition, the level of COSAS funding is subject to change based on the COSAS annual budget. 

3) COSAS must abide by the Deans of Students' decisions regarding a student's eligibility for COSAS funding.  The terms of a student's previous grant, residency status and other university guidelines may affect these decisions.  Especially note that some grants, including some types of write-up grants (e.g. Mellon, Whiting, etc.), may restrict a recipient from accepting further institutional funds.  COSAS may also consider a student's anticipated employment during the anticipated award period.   Students who have entered a fulltime academic career, for example, generally are not viewed as eligible for COSAS support.

4) We encourage applicants to contact at least one member of the Committee on Southern Asian Studies regarding their proposal.   ___________________________________________________________________________

Applications and recommendation forms are available at:

http://southasia.uchicago.edu/cosas_fellowships.shtml

For information and questions, contact Irving Birkner at ibirkner@uchicago.edu or 773-834-9994.  The completed application forms and all supporting documents are due no later than:

5:00 pm on Wednesday, May 1, 2013

 

Recommendations may be submitted online or to Irving Birkner at ibirkner@uchicago.edu , by regular mail, or by fax.  Hard-copy mailings should be in envelopes with the recommender's name across the seal.Faxed and emailed recommendations should be sent directly from the recommender's fax machine or email account, so the information may be verified if necessary. The application materials include a form and instructions that can be emailed to faculty members. 

 

                         Email:             ibirkner@uchicago.edu

                         Fax:                773-702-1309 

                         Mail:               Committee on Southern Asian Studies

                                                Kelly Hall 104

                                                5848 S. University Avenue

                                                Chicago, IL 60637  

 

Deadline: April 15

Amount: $4,000

Duration: One year

The Martin Marty Center (MMC) of the Divinity School will appoint a set of twelve Junior Fellows for the 2013-2014 academic year.  Ph.D. candidates from the Divinity School, and Ph.D. candidates from the Division of the Humanities or the Division of the Social Sciences whose dissertation examines a topic or topics in religion, are eligible for appointment.  An application consisting of a cover letter, a CV, a copy of the dissertation prospectus, and a letter of support from the dissertation advisor about the dissertation is due to Terri Owens, Dean of Students in the Divinity School, tdowens@uchicago.edu, no later than Monday, April 15th.  The prospectus must include a statement of progress to date on the dissertation.  Awards will be announced in early May.

 

Funded initially through a generous grant from the Henry Luce Foundation, the Junior Fellows program aims to assist its members in the successful completion of their dissertation, and in the initial transition to professional life as public intellectuals.  Directed by Divinity School faculty, the program is organized around a year-long seminar which has as its main business the sharing and discussion of the dissertations.   Since the first public of the scholar is arguably the classroom, Junior Fellows teach a course on an aspect of their dissertation at a local college or university, and these experiences are also part of the shared discourse of the seminar.  In the spring of each year, the culminating event of the seminar is a day-long conference in which the Fellows share a précis of their dissertation research with a cohort of professional people who are not scholars of religion, to test their mettle in communicating complex ideas to an educated and interested audience. 

 

The seminar thus challenges students, as they complete their dissertations, to step back from the immediacies of specialized research to ask themselves, and one another, how that research will contribute to the institutions and the society in which they will pursue their scholarly vocations. 

 

Because of this agenda, successful applicants will have already made significant process in the research and writing of the dissertation and will be poised, programmatically and by disposition, to participate vigorously in all aspects of this work.  Alumni of the seminar describe the experience as having had a seminal influence on their careers.

 

Students from the Humanities or the Social Sciences receive a $4,000 stipend. 

Junior Fellows will be required to attend all seminar sessions as scheduled.

 

All questions should be directed to Terri Owens, Dean of Students in the Divinity School, at tdowens@uchicago.edu, 773-702-8217.

The Division of the Social Sciences is offering project-based research grants for academic year 2013-14, beginning with the summer quarter. The grants will support two categories of research projects: short-term projects for up to 3 months, and long-term projects for 3-12 months, concluding no later than the end of Spring Quarter 2014.

 

Deadline: Friday, April 26, 2013

 

Amount:

Short-term projects: up to $7000. Up to 10 grants will be awarded

Long-term projects: $7000-$20,000. Up to 10 grants will be awarded

 

Duration:

Short-term project: 3 months

Long-term projects: up to 12 months

 

Purpose:

These grants are intended to help defray the additional costs of research projects that advance the student's progress through the degree program. All students in the division are eligible, but preference will be given to research that supports a proposal for a dissertation, or that is part of the dissertation project after admission to candidacy. The level of the grant will be contingent on the itemized costs in the proposal. For students who hold fellowships during the grant period, living expenses will not be covered under this grant unless the research will take the student far from campus and thereby add living expenses to the cost of the project. Awardees will submit a brief report upon completion of their research grant.

 

Application:

Students must submit to the Dean of Students Office:

1. The Research Grant Application Form (see: https://socialsciences.uchicago.edu/about/dean-of-students#forms);

2. A 1500-word (maximum) essay describing the research project;

3. Detailed budget;

4. C.V.;

5. A letter of recommendation from a faculty member familiar with the applicant's work.

 

Deadline:     

Friday, April 26, 2013. Late applications will not be accepted.

Applications and letters of recommendation can be submitted in person to Foster 107 or by email to ssd-fellowships@uchicago.edu.

Deadline: Friday, April 26, 2013  Late applications will not be accepted.

 

Amount: $3,000

 

Duration: Summer Quarter

 

The Division of the Social Sciences is offering grants that can be used for academic activities during the summer of 2013. Grants will be awarded on the basis of merit, financial need and support of progress to a major academic goal.

 

Up to 20 grants will be awarded.

 

Purpose:

The award may be used for various academic activities, including proposal or exam preparation, language study, research and dissertation write-up. It may also be used for conference participation and travel for academic purposes. Students who have a summer grant from their social sciences fellowship are not eligible. There will be a preference for students who are ABD or approaching candidacy.


Application:     

Students must submit to the Dean of Students Office:

1. The Summer Grant Application Form (see: https://socialsciences.uchicago.edu/about/dean-of-students#forms);

2. A 500-word (maximum) statement of purpose;

3. C.V.;

4. A letter of recommendation from a faculty member familiar with the applicant's work.


Deadline:     

Friday, April 26, 2013. Late applications will not be accepted.

Applications and letters of recommendation can be submitted in person to Foster 107 or by email to ssd-fellowships@uchicago.edu.