NYU-IES Pre-Doctoral Fellowship Opportunities
The 2-Year IES-PIRT Fellowship application deadline has been extended to Thursday, January 22nd, 2009!
Fellowship Description:
NYU's Institute of Human Development and Social Change (IHDSC) in association with faculty from six academic units - Applied Psychology, Humanities and Social Sciences in the Profession, Teaching and Learning (Steinhardt); Economics and Sociology (FAS); and the Wagner School of Public Service - was recently awarded a 5-year, $5 million award to train 28 doctoral students from diverse backgrounds to become outstanding researchers in the educational sciences.
This interdisciplinary fellowship program is designed to train the next generation of quantitative educational researchers in methodological techniques developed to more accurately identify educational effects. These techniques include the utilization of randomized experimental designs, quasi-experimental methods, and other statistical approaches appropriate for causal inference and the analysis of multi-level data on students, teachers, schools, and developmental contexts.
Eligibility and Benefits:
2-year fellowships will be awarded to advanced doctoral students and 4-year fellowships to entry-level and first year doctoral students over the next several years. Applicants must be from one of the six participating academic units listed above and must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Applicants must also be either an incoming or current student. Awarded fellows will receive:
- tuition remission;
- conference travel support; and
- a $30,000 stipend during each academic year of the award.
It should be noted that this is a highly competitive external award. Students who receive this award need to contact their department's Director of Graduate Studies to discuss coordination of funding if they are currently receive other support.
Responsibilities:
Fellowship activities are designed to complement and enhance existing departmental offerings and facilitate doctoral studies in the students’ home departments. NYU-IES fellows will commit to full participation in the following enhanced training experiences:
- Attendance at the weekly IES pro-seminar colloquium series (Mondays, 12-1:30);
- 20 hour per week involvement during the academic year in a research apprenticeship training opportunity provided by
either:
- any one of the participating “ IES predoctoral training program affiliate” faculty members (listed below),
- one of NYU’s collaborating research institutions (i.e., the Institute for Education and Social Policy, http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/iesp/ or the Institute for Human Development and Social Change, http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/ihdsc/), or
- one of the initiative’s two key program partners (i.e., MDRC, http://www.mdrc.org/ and the emerging Research Alliance for New York City Schools, http://nycresearchpartnership.ssrc.org/);
- For entry-level doctoral students, future enrollment in advanced statistical and interdisciplinary coursework recommended by their faculty advisor and appropriate to their specific discipline as well as 2 courses in the IES Fellowship Program’s “quantitative core;”
- Commitment to writing a dissertation on a question relevant to education policy or practice with methods that permit causal inference; and
- Participation in other supplemental professional development activities (such as national conference participation) in preparation for tenure-track academic/research jobs and for grant-writing.
To Apply
Candidates who wish to apply for the 2-year fellowships in 2009-2010, should submit the following materials via mail by 6:00 p.m. on January 22nd to:
IES Fellowship Selection Committee
c/o
Claudette Carter/ Program Coordinator
Institute of Human Development and
Social Change, New York University
726 Broadway, Suite 525, Room 535B, New
York, NY 10003-9502
E-mail: claudette.carter@nyu.edu
Applications should include:
- 1- to 2-page
statement of interest.
This statement will be evaluated using the following criteria:- The extent to which the applicant makes a compelling case for his/her interest in education. <
- The applicants plan to use quantitative methods that permit causal inference.
- The clarity and depth of the applicants interdisciplinary focus.
- Letter of recommendation from faculty advisor.
- Letter of commitment from one of the participating NYU-IES affiliate faculty listed on the website indicating their agreement to mentor the applicant in the completion of a research apprenticeship.
- Curriculum Vitae, including listing of research experience, related experience in education, publications, honors or awards.
- Writing Sample.
- Listing of GRE test scores and transcript (this information will be verified by the department); and
- 1-page discussion of dissertation plans that demonstrate pursuit of a question relevant to education policy or practice with methods that permit causal inference.
Decisions will be made by March 1st.
Please refer to the IES-PIRT website for more details and a copy of the complete application instructions at: http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/ihdsc/iespirt
IES TRAINING GRANT PROGRAM – PARTICIPATING FACULTY:
Cybele
Raver, Director IHDSC, Applied Psychology
Aber, IES Training Program
Director, Applied Psychology
Richard
Arum, IES Training Program Deputy Director, Sociology and HMSS-Steinhardt
Amy Ellen
Schwartz, Director IESP, Wagner and HMSS-Steinhardt
LaRue
Allen, Applied Psychology
Josh
Aronson, Applied Psychology
Clancy
Blair, Applied Psychology
Jack
Buckley, HMSS-Steinhardt
Elise Cappella,
Applied Psychology
Dalton Conley, Sociology
Erin
O’Connor, Teaching and Learning
Sean
Corcoran, IESP, HMSS-Steinhardt
Christopher
Flinn, Economics
Perry
Halkitis, Applied Psychology
Jennifer
Hill, HMSS-Steinhardt
Diane Hughes,
Applied Psychology
Sandee McClowry,
Applied Psychology
Christine
McWayne, Applied Psychology
Ann
Morning, IESP, Sociology
Marc Scott,
HMSS-Steinhardt
Edward
Seidman, Applied Psychology
Pat Shrout,
Psychology
Selcuk
Sirin, Applied Psychology
Leanna Stiefel,
IESP, Wagner and HMSS-Steinhardt
Catherine
Tamis-LeMonda, Applied Psychology
Florencia
Torche, Sociology
Niobe Way,
Applied Psychology
Sharon
Weinberg, HMSS-Steinhardt
Matthew
Wiswall, IESP, Economics
Lawrence Wu, Sociology