Archive for Paying for SIPA – Page 23

External fellowship — Boren Fellowship for U.S. citizens

Are you thinking about applying to SIPA as an international dual degree candidate or are you already enrolled as a student here but plan to study abroad?  You may be eligible to apply for a Boren Fellowship.

You are eligible to apply for a Boren Fellowship if you are:

  • A U.S. citizen at the time of application
  • Either matriculated in or applying to a graduate degree program at a U.S. college or university located within the United States and accredited by an accrediting body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education.  Boren Fellows must remain matriculated in their graduate programs for the duration of the fellowship and may not graduate until the fellowship is complete.
  • Planning an overseas program that meets home institution standards in a country outside of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, or New Zealand.  Boren Fellowships are not for study in the United States.

Boren Fellowships are funded by the National Security Education Program (NSEP).  Boren Fellowships provide up to $30,000 to U.S. graduate students to add an important international and language component to their graduate education through specialization in area study, language study, or increased language proficiency.

For more information on the Boren Fellowships, click here.  The Boren Fellowship deadline is January 31, 2013.

Funding your education at SIPA – part 2

While a limited number of SIPA admits are offered direct funding (for year one), a higher percentage of SIPA students – typically half or more – are funded for their second year of study.  Currently, the average second year award is an assistantship that provides approximately half of tuition, and consists of both tuition credits (a scholarship) and salary for part-time employment at SIPA.  Some students with assistantships work in SIPA offices or as research assistants with academic departments, institutes or faculty; others are appointed as teaching assistants, and those TA positions pay more and also include a stipend payment at the start of each term for indirect expenses such as textbooks and living expenses.

Some first year students will receive a renewable scholarship, and if qualified may also receive an assistantship in addition to their scholarship in their second year of study.

The application deadline for second year awards is typically late February or early March, and the Office of Student Affairs will hold an information session prior to that, early in the spring semester, at which you will have the opportunity to learn more about available positions, eligibility criteria, and the selection process.

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

 

Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs & Graduate Foreign Affairs Fellowships

The 2013 Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs & Graduate Foreign Affairs Fellowships competition, provided by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation is now open.

They are seeking highly motivated and academically excellent college juniors and graduating seniors or college graduates who have an interest in pursuing a Foreign Service career in the U.S. Department of State.  The goal of the programs is to attract outstanding students from all ethnic and social backgrounds who are dedicated to representing America’s interests abroad. Women, members of minority groups historically underrepresented in the Foreign Service, and students with financial need are encouraged to apply to one of the two Programs.

The Programs provide:  

  • Up to $40,000 annually for academic expenses, covering the last year of undergraduate study and first year of graduate study (Undergraduate Fellowship); or the first and second year of graduate study (Graduate Fellowship)
  • Two paid State Department summer internships (domestic and abroad)
  • Access to the Pickering Fellows network

Eligibility requirements at the time of application:

  • Undergraduate applicants: college junior or equivalent
  • Graduate applicants: entering a two-year terminal master’s degree program in the fall of the Fellowship year
  • Have a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.2 (4.0 scale)
  • Be a United States citizen

Application Deadlines:

Graduate Fellowship: January 21, 2013

Undergraduate Fellowship:  February 7, 2013

To apply visit:  www.woodrow.org/Pickering

 

 

PPIA Fellowship Program 2013

The Public Policy and International Affairs Fellowship Program  (PPIA) Fellowship program prepares undergraduates to be competitive candidates for top degree programs in the fields of Public Policy, Public Administration, International Affairs, or a related field through a consortium of over 30 graduate schools of Public Policy and International Affairs in the U.S.   Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs is one of the 30 graduate schools that make up the consortium.

PPIA is currently accepting applications for the 2013 Junior Summer Institutes; which gives students the chance to strengthen their prospects of attending graduate school and achieving a career in public service.  The entry point for the PPIA program is acceptance and attendance to one of its Junior Summer Institutes. Each year, the national program selects an outstanding group of college juniors from across the U.S. to participate in the JSIs.

Participation in a JSI will provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to succeed in graduate school and, ultimately, in influential roles serving the public good. Upon completion of their institutes, students have access to opportunities for mentoring and career development through an extensive alumni network. JSI participants are also guaranteed a minimum, one-time financial award of $5,000 for their graduate school education if they attend one of the programs in PPIA’s graduate school consortium. Most PPIA alumni who are accepted to a consortium school receive well above this figure in financial aid towards their graduate education.

Interested applicants can access the application online at  www.ppiaprogram.org/programs. Deadline for all materials is November 1st, 2012.

To learn more about PPIA, please visit: www.ppiaprogram.org.

"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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