Archive for October 2012 – Page 2

Funding your education at SIPA – part 1

The students who plan ahead for the costs of a SIPA education are the ones who are best prepared.  A SIPA education is not inexpensive, but there are fellowship or scholarship opportunities, as well as financing strategies, that can make it affordable and manageable.

Once you have been admitted, SIPA will provide you with an estimate of what you will spend on tuition, fees, textbooks and typical living expenses to help you get started in your financial planning, along with information about the aid for which you qualify.  Budgeting your resources is the first step in planning how to manage the costs of your SIPA program.  Remember that New York is an expensive city to live in, but there are on-campus residence options, and Columbia is located in a thriving and bustling residential neighborhood.  Many students live within walking distance of the campus.

In preparing your financing strategy, look at all options, including resources you currently have available.  Examine financial resources you have on hand in salary, savings or assistance from your family in addition to the types of fellowships, scholarships and loans available from SIPA, government sources or private external agencies.  Many SIPA students create a strategy employing three or four of these components.

First Year Fellowship and Scholarship Awards

SIPA scholarship and fellowship awards are competitive and offered to approximately 10 to 15 percent of first year students.  All admitted students are automatically considered, no additional application is required.  These merit-based awards are based entirely on your academic achievement and professional credentials; financial need is not a factor.  SIPA scholarships range in value from $3000 per year up to full tuition; most fall approximately midway in between.  If you are a US citizen/permanent resident, you may submit a FAFSA for student loans, but the FAFSA is not reviewed nor required for fellowship/scholarship determination.

SIPA scholarship and fellowship awards are available to both domestic and international students.

SIPA has arrangements with some external agencies, such as the Rangel, Pickering, Fulbright and other foundations, where we will match part of the award a student receives from that entity.  Please advise us if you have such funding (from these or similar sources) as soon as you are aware of the award so we can consider you for matching funds.

External Awards

While searching for funding from outside foundations and organizations comes with no guarantees, such funding is only a possibility if you take the time to search for it.  The SIPA Financial Aid Office maintains a database of external scholarships and fellowships that we recommend students visit often.  These funding opportunities may be available to all students, first or second year, domestic or international, and may be based on any combination of academic achievement, professional credentials, areas of interest and experience, financial need, or demographic criteria.  SIPA students receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding through outside sources of their own finding every year, and it is not too early to begin your search for these resources.

You may also want to visit the following sites:

www.fastweb.com

www.scholarships.com

www.graduatescholarships.org

www.gradview.com

 

APSIA Admission Forum comes to NYC on Monday

We’ll be participating at several APSIA forums this fall.  The Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs (APSIA) comprises 34 member schools in North America, Asia and Europe dedicated to the improvement of professional education in international affairs and the advancement thereby of international understanding, prosperity, peace, and security.

Each year, APSIA sponsors forums where prospective graduate students, career advisors, and education counselors can learn about programs from officers of APSIA member schools.

In addition, you can:

  • Meet admissions officers from the professional schools of international affairs at leading universities
  • Discuss admissions requirements, common curricula, financial aid packages, joint degree programs, and career opportunities
  • Collect application information on programs of interest
  • Attend career panels featuring alumni of APSIA schools

If you are considering graduate study in international affairs, click below to learn more about specific fairs in your area: 

APSIA New York Forum Oct 15, 2012 Learn more
APSIA DC Forum Oct 16, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Chicago Forum Oct 24, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Atlanta Forum Oct 25, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Seattle Forum Oct 29, 2012 Learn more
APSIA San Francisco Forum Oct 30, 2012 Learn more
APSIA UCLA Forum Oct 31, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Los Angeles Forum Nov 1, 2012 Learn more
APSIA London Forum Nov 10, 2012 Learn more
APSIA St. Gallen Forum Nov 12, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Budapest Forum Nov 14, 2012 Learn more
APSIA Paris Forum Nov 15, 2012 Learn more

Check out our Recruitment Schedule to see where SIPA will be this fall.  See you there!

Thinking about applying to SIPA?

HAPPY FRIDAY!  As many of you know already, we are making available again a J-Term for all those enthusiastic prospective students who have been pushing to start in January, instead of waiting a whole year.  If you missed this news flash (only announced this summer), and you want to be considered for the class that begins January 2013, there’s still time to complete your application.

Yes, the October 15 deadline is around the corner but we will continue to review applications past the deadline.  We will give priority to those who submit their completed application by the deadline date.  And remember we do not need official documents to review your application.  You may upload student copies of your transcript and self report your test scores (which you receive immediately after you complete the exam).  Contact our office if you wish to be considered for the January class but think there may be a slight delay in your application submission… or if you just want to chat.

 

SIPA Summer Internships Abroad

One of the greatest things about SIPA is the opportunity to do a summer internship abroad. And with abroad, I mean almost any corner in the planet. From Bhutan to Brazil or Cambodia to Bolivia, hundreds of SIPA students say goodbye to New York City every May to embark on fascinating adventures.

This past summer I decided to go to Kenya. Before coming to SIPA, I worked for four years in development projects at the Organization of American States, but my experience was centered in Latin America and the Caribbean. The idea of living and working in East Africa has always been appealing to me; my summer internship was a great way to get a taste of what this amazing region has to offer.

My internship, like most students in the MPA in Development Practice program, was with an Earth Institute project. A fellow student and I worked with Millennium Cities Initiatives, a project that provides technical assistance to over 10 cities across Africa to advance urban development.

We were based in Kisumu, a warm and relatively small city in Western Kenya, on the shores of the mystic Lake Victoria. Our mission was to support the District Health Office in identifying all health providers in the District, and carry out a survey to find out more about their infrastructure conditions and the services they provide. In a city where only a handful of streets have a name, we also carried out a geo-mapping of all clinics, hospitals and dispensaries, plotting them in a Google Map that will hopefully help local authorities to better manage health delivery.

Driving around Kisumu slums in a motorbike in search of clinics constantly reminded me of the importance of doing field work to give sense to what we study at SIPA. The challenges governments face to provide quality services and the many obstacles low-income people confront to access them are some of the most present discussions we have in class. Every summer, SIPA students have the opportunity to see these problems first hand, greatly enriching our understanding of the complexities behind development.

Blog post submitted by Mariana Costa.  Mariana is a second year student in the MPA in Development Practice program at SIPA. 

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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