Graduate
Fellowships
In addition to teaching and research
assistantships,
new graduate students in Geological Sciences may ask to be considered
for the following graduate fellowships:
-
Clark Fellowships for Underrepresented Minorities - Funded
by SUNY, these fellowships for new graduate students are selected
through a Binghamton University-wide competition. Fellows must
be U.S. citizens or permanent residents, and must be either Native
American, African American, or Hispanic American. Stipends are
the same as departmental research or teaching assistantships (approximately
$8-10K for Fall 2001).
All fellowships carry full tuition waivers.
Other Grants and Fellowships
Students may also apply for individual grants or fellowships to support their graduate educational costs.
Among possible opportunities are:
- The American Association of
Petroleum Geologists Foundation Grants in Aid Program - for geoscience graduate students
whose research has application to the search for and development of petroleum and
energy-mineral resources, and/or related environmental geology issues. Grants range from $500
to $2000, and are applied to expenses related to the student's thesis work such as fieldwork,
lab analyses, etc. As part of AAPG's Eastern Section, geoscience graduate students at SUNY
are qualified to apply for the Richard W. Beardsley Named Grant. The Beardsley Grant is
restricted to a student studying petroleum geology in the AAPG Eastern Section or studying
the petroleum geology of the Eastern Section region. All applicants who qualify will be
applying for the unrestricted grants totaling over $130,200.
- National Science Foundation Graduate
Fellowships - These are highly competitive grants which fund 3 years of graduate
education at a stipend level of $30,000 per year, with additional funds for research support and
international travel. Fellowships are intended for individuals in the early stages of their
graduate study. In most cases, an individual has three opportunities to apply: during the
senior year of college, prior to or during the first year of graduate school, and at the
beginning of the second year of graduate school.
For further information, contact Bill MacDonald, the Director of Graduate Studies.
Questions or comments:
webmaster@geol.binghamton.edu
Last modified: June 7, 2007 (adh)
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