Eligibility
The department has a limited number of scholarships and tuition awards that it distributes to on-campus graduate students each spring. Our policy is to reward students who have proven themselves since matriculation into one of our programs, so students in the English Department’s programs are eligible if they will have completed at least 12 credits of graduate work towards their current degrees by the end of the Spring 2013 semester and priority is given to students who are going to return for the Fall 2013 semester. At this time, funding is not available for student taking classes in Summer 2013.
Review and selection process
Applications will be reviewed by the Graduate Advisory Committee (GAC), which represents all graduate specializations in the department.
Application process
To be considered for one of these financial awards, please submit an application, a letter of application that addresses the criteria below, transcripts, and a CV (curriculum vitae) to Prof. Evelyn Funda’s mailbox no later than 12 noon on Friday, February 22. You should present evidence of your achievements in the CV and you should also highlight and comment on the CV in a letter that supports your application. The letter is also a chance to discuss your career goals.
The letter should be addressed to the Graduate Advisory Committee and it should be no more than two pages long, single-spaced, set in 11- or 12-point typeface, with margins of at least an inch all around. For help with creating a CV, please click here.
Criteria
1) Engaging in scholarly or creative activity.
Graduate students are here primarily to do advanced study and make good progress towards their graduate degrees. We assume they are also moving towards the goal of participating in their chosen scholarly or creative fields as academic professionals who interact with their peers or colleagues in the field.
2) Sharing expertise.
Graduate Instructors should list the courses they have taught and student evaluation scores they have received, along with any other evidence of excellence (e.g., reports by observers, unsolicited letters of appreciation from students). Other evidence that students may submit, whether or not they are GIs, may include such things as assisting professors through teaching internships, guest lecturing to classes on or off campus, teaching writing workshops or organizing reading groups for communities outside the department, tutoring in the Writing Center or privately tutoring students, consulting, teaching below the college level, etc.—in short, any activity that involves sharing the knowledge and expertise that has been gained as a graduate student with others who are not peers or colleagues in the field. This work may be done for pay, for credit, or pro bono.
3) Leading and serving.
Academic professionals find ways to sustain or improve their academic communities through forms of leadership and service within them that do not fall under categories 1) and 2) above.
To evaluate this third criterion, the GAC will look for evidence of active involvement (leadership and/or service) in committees or organizations relating to students’ roles as academic professionals: for instance, serving on departmental or university committees, assisting with professional development workshops for graduate students, working as a Graduate Student Senator, helping organize a regional conference, chairing a session at an on-campus or national conference, judging a local writing contest, working for the local chapter of a national academic organization, helping organize a poetry reading series, reviewing textbooks for a publisher, writing letters of recommendation for students, etc. Service work may be paid or unpaid.

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