All applications must be submitted to the Graduate Program Director of your department. The procedures below are used in the Competitive Dissertation Fellowship, and may be used as suggested guidelines for students and departments, but it is up to each department to adopt them entirely, partially or even establish a completely different set of rules for each year’s applications. Taft does not review applications for allocated dissertation fellowships.
Material:
- Research abstract (125 words)
- Project description (5 pages)
- The applicant's grade record - something that shows your grades for the courses you have taken while at UC.
- A letter of support from the applicant’s dissertation advisor detailing the following:
- Progress in the dissertation process by the time of the application, according to the scheduled proposed on the applicant’s dissertation prospectus.
- The applicant's rank among advanced graduate students and the department's applicants, as well as his or her engagement in extra-curricular activities such as organizing events, taking part in committees, volunteering for departmental activities, etc.
- The applicant’s productivity, in terms of academic publications, during his or her years as a UC student. This part should also reference in-review publications as well as creative writing produced during the same period.
- Whether or not all course work and qualifying exams have been completed, and the applicant has advanced to candidacy;
- Expected completion date of doctoral studies;
- Whether or not the applicant was previously a dissertation fellow;
- Two letters of support from faculty members, detailing the student’s work under their tutelage;
The primary prerequisite for serious consideration of all candidates is proof of significant progress toward the degree in the calendar year prior to the submission of the application. For students who are in the second year of dissertation work, this progress is usually established by the letters of recommendation of the student's advisor and other members of the dissertation committee. Such letters should summarize what has been accomplished and what remains to be accomplished before the dissertation is considered completed. For students who are about to begin a dissertation, significant progress toward the degree is established by completion of preliminary examination and by letters of recommendation. In exceptional circumstances, awards may be made contingent on satisfactory completion of Ph.D. examinations by the end of the second (spring) semester.
Following departmental review and selection, the Graduate Program Director must send to Taft, no later than February 28, a letter detailing:
- The process of selecting the top two or three candidates
- A final ranking of the candidates, along with any information about other fellowships to which any of the candidates have applied (or will apply)
- The selected candidate's M-number, the title of their dissertations and an abstract of their project of no more 250 words.
Candidates who have had or currently have a Taft Dissertation award will not be eligible for another dissertation award unless there are no other qualified candidates within the department, assessed by a two-thirds majority vote of the faculty. In the exceptionally rare case that a candidate is being awarded a Dissertation Fellowship for the second time, the Department must explain this exceptional circumstance and the reasons for it on its report.
Departments should be advised that students who will attain 174 (140 with MA in-hand prior to attending UC) graduate hours during the fellowship year, are not eligible for Graduate Assistant Scholarship (GAS) awards. This fellowship does not require that students receive a GAS award.
Departments may carry-over their allocated award for up to one year if there is no student that meets department and Taft selection criteria for the Dissertation Fellowship, but may not provide more than two allocated awards in a given academic year.