U of M GRADUATE SCHOOL FELLOWSHIPS FOR NEW STUDENTS—2009-10

Instructions to the Nominating Program

 


Schedule

DEADLINE :

12:00 Noon, Friday, January 23, 2009
Graduate Fellowship Office, 314 Johnston Hall
East Bank Campus — in five sets of each nomination.

RESULTS:

Notification of offers to the DGS by early March

OFFER OUTCOMES:

DGS report of offer acceptances/declines due back at the Fellowship Office by Thursday, April 16


 

PROGRAM  DESCRIPTION:  

The purpose of the Graduate School Fellowship (GSF) program is to assist directly in the recruitment of outstanding students to our PhD programs (and selected terminal master’s programs—see ‘Eligibility’ below) by providing the incentive of an academic-year merit-based fellowship, coupled with additional support by the nominating program.  The Fellowship includes an academic-year stipend of $22,500, academic-year tuition at regular Graduate School rates for up to 14 graduate credits each semester, and subsidized health insurance through the graduate assistant plan for the academic year and for summer 2010.  Fellows are responsible for all student fees or special charges, tuition beyond 14 credits, and tuition for any registration in non-Graduate School colleges.

The Graduate School expects to make a high number of offers this year:
At least 80 percent of all offers will be for three-year fellowships.  For maximum flexibility, Fellows will be able to take their second and third years up through their fifth year of graduate study.  The remaining offers will be one-year awards.

 

ELIGIBILITY :  

Eligible nominees are those who have applied for 2009-10 admission by the deadline, and who will enter the University of Minnesota Graduate School for the first time in Fall 2009 in: 

  1. A PhD program;  or
  2. A terminal master’s degree program in a field where the faculty terminal degree is typically the master’s degree, such as the MFA degree in art or the MArch in architecture.  The DGS nominating letter must make clear that this is the faculty terminal degree.

Doctoral programs may nominate a student who initially plans to seek a master’s degree, but the student’s goals/objectives statement must specify that s/he plans to continue on for the PhD immediately following completion of the master’s.  The DGS must confirm this in the nominating letter.

By exception, the Fellowship Committee will also consider a nominee who previously earned a
U of M master’s degree, who at the time of nomination has been employed and away from campus for a minimum of a year after graduating, and is returning for the PhD in the same major.  These nominees would come from fields of high workforce demand at the master’s level, such as engineering, education, or nursing.

            Terms of Award

The award is tenable only in the major program that nominated the Fellow.  Fellows will be expected to carry a full course load each semester and maintain a minimum 3.5 GPA.  Fellows may hold a supplemental appointment of up to the value of a 25 percent graduate assistantship in the student’s department in each semester, and programs are encouraged to provide summer support in any amount.  Programs may nominate students who would enter in Spring 2010, but any award would be pro-rated.  Awards may not be deferred, nor may they be used to supplement other full-support awards.

            Support beyond the Fellowship Year

The Graduate School views this fellowship program as a partnership with graduate programs in recruiting and supporting outstanding students.  Therefore, programs must guarantee the Fellow’s support through degree completion, subject to satisfactory progress and performance.  Priority for fellowship awards will go to programs that support all of the full-time students they admit through degree completion.  [Programs seeking advice and technical assistance in this financial planning goal are urged to contact Associate Dean George Green at 625-4858.]

 

NOMINATING  PROCEDURES:  

The number of nominations the program may submit is limited to the number of nominations assigned to the program in the November 2008 Graduate School Dean’s memo — minus the number that the program reserves for nominating to the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship competition in March. 

The GSF nomination must be completed online for each nominee.  After submitting the forms (available after December 1, 2008) electronically, print and transmit five sets of the following materials for each nominee, with each set stapled in the upper left-hand corner, in this order (note the ‘s’ in ‘https’ in the web addresses below):
  1. GSF Electronic Nomination Form ( https://www.grad.umn.edu/GradForms/GSF)
  2. Director of Graduate Studies’ Nomination Evaluation Statement (http://www.grad.umn.edu/fellowships/gsf/GSFevaluation2009.doc)  Do not transmit this statement in letter form.
  3. GRE scores [obtainable from PeopleSoft], if applicable—do not use old scores, and do not list scores from more than one test
  4. TOEFL [obtainable from PeopleSoft] or IELTS or MELAB scores (paper copy), if applicable
  5. Nominee’s narrative statement on goals/career objectives
  6. Transcripts, including their interpretation pages, from each college/university attended (photocopies acceptable)
  7. Three letters of recommendation (electronic cover sheets are not required) - more than three will not be reviewed

Note should be made of any documents missing upon submission, with estimated forwarding date.  Reviewers may not be able to consider nominations if crucial documents are delayed more than a few days.


Evaluation Statement from the DGSThis statement, critical to the nomination’s success, must be completed through the online form.  The evaluation statement should assist the Fellowship Committee in evaluating the file by describing the nominee’s relative strengths and fit with the program, explaining clearly why recruiting the nominee is important to the program.  Facts already in the file for reviewers to see, such as the GPA or GRE scores, should not be re-stated without interpretation, nor should extensive verbatim quotes from letters be included.   Also, because faculty reviewers come from across the University (who, to avoid conflict of interest, do not review files from their own areas), any jargon contained in the student’s goals statement and/or in the letters of recommendation should be interpreted.  If nominating more than one, programs may rank-order the nominees, in which case they should describe the basis for the ranking (an individual nominee’s ranking vis à vis others would be included under ‘additional information’)

The evaluation statement, which must be completed using the online form, should include a description and/or interpretation of each of the following nine points:

REVIEW/SELECTION  CRITERIA

The review will be conducted by the Graduate School Fellowship Committee, composed of sixteen faculty from across the University.  Each nomination will be independently reviewed and rated by four faculty members drawn from different disciplines.  At least one of the four reviewers will come from the same broad disciplinary area, such as biology or social sciences, as the nomination.  For example, a nomination from a physical sciences program might be reviewed by a four-member faculty panel from education, history, physics, and plant biology.  Clearly, the nomination must be comprehensible to all individuals in this diverse a review panel — especially since all reviewers have an equal voice in the final decision.  With fellowship funds extremely limited, the Committee will consider only outstanding nominees with solid academic credentials (and strong English skills, in the case of international nominees) whose programs present a compelling case for award.

Programs are advised that all aspects of the file are considered together, and no one factor alone, such as GREs, decides the outcome.  The Committee will select recipients based on the strength of the following elements: