I. Scholarships and Fellowships: 200 Edition
I. Scholarships and Fellowships: 200 Edition
I. Scholarships and Fellowships: 200 Edition
LIBRARY RESEARCH GRANTS AVAILABLE FROM THE FRIENDS OF THE PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY –UP TO $3,500 USD
Application deadline: January 15, 2011
Each year, the Friends of the Princeton University Library offer short-term Library Research Grants to promote
scholarly use of the research collections. The Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Fund
also supports a limited number of library fellowships in Hellenic studies, and the Cotsen Children’s Library supports
research in its collection on aspects of children’s books. The Maxwell Fund supports research on materials dealing with
Portuguese-speaking cultures. In addition, awards will be made from the Sid Lapidus '59 Research Fund for Studies of the
Age of Revolution and the Enlightenment in the Atlantic World. This award covers work using materials pertinent to this
topic donated by Mr. Lapidus as well as other also relevant materials in the collections.
These Library Research Grants, which have a value of up to $3,500 each, are meant to help defray expenses incurred
in traveling to and residing in Princeton during the tenure of the grant. The length of the grant will depend on the
applicant’s research proposal, but is ordinarily up to one month. Library Research Grants awarded in this academic year
are tenable from May 2011 to April 2012, and the deadline for applications is 15 January 2011.
Applicants are asked to complete an online application form and submit a single Word or PDF file (preferred) containing a
budget form, a curriculum vitae or résumé, and a research proposal not exceeding one thousand words in length.
Applicants must also arrange for two confidential letters of recommendation to be sent directly to the Library Research
Grants Committee.
A committee consisting of members of the faculty, the library staff, and the Friends will award the grants on the basis of
the relevance of the proposal to unique holdings of the library, the merits and significance of the project, and the
applicant’s scholarly qualifications. Awards will be made by April 7th, 2011.
The Middlebury Fellowships in Environmental Journalism each year take 10 journalists near
the start of their careers and help them work through an ambitious reporting project in print,
web-based, or radio journalism, from the beginning through publication or broadcast. Fellows
meet together twice during the year, once in the fall on the Middlebury campus in Vermont,
and once in the spring at the Monterey Institute of International Studies in California.
At these meetings professional journalists help participants plan their reporting and shape their stories. Graduate
fellows each receive $10,000 to help with reporting and living expenses during the fellowship year—enough, we
hope, to let the reporting project be one significant focus of their year’s work. We interpret the environment broadly—
reporting projects dealing with economics, culture, global issues, and the like are fine, as long as they center in some way
on the human relationship with the physical world.
Application Requirements
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Interested applicants should write a two- or three-page letter pitching their idea, just as they would to an editor at a
magazine or a broadcast program. The letter should demonstrate enough preliminary research to make clear there’s really
a story, and that it will be possible for the applicant to successfully report it. The letter should also include a proposed
plan of research for the fellowship year. Web and video applications should demonstrate the same focus on reported
stories emphasizing context and history as long-fact written pieces.
Applicants should enclose three writing or broadcast samples, preferably of professionally published work, as well as
recommendations from two people who have worked with the applicant as an editor or teacher, and a resume with contact
information. Resumes, pitches and letters should be written or copied on plain recycled copier or printer weight paper,
double-sided if possible, and held together using paper clips rather than staples. Recommendations should be enclosed
with the application unless arrangements are made ahead of time, but need not be sealed.
Journalists from outside the United States are encouraged to apply if they can demonstrate proficiency in written English.
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The Warren Center will host a year-long interdisciplinary faculty seminar to explore the manifold
experiences of complex ritual sites around the world and across all periods of human history.
Sacred ecology refers to the human experience of divinity in relation to the natural environment, real or
represented. Landscape is construed for our purposes not simply as natural scenery, but as a cultural
complex in which the natural world and human practice, conceptual and material, are dynamically
linked and constantly interacting. An investigation of landscape may focus on pastoral or picturesque scenes, earthly
elements and celestial movements, or constructed places and objects, such as a temple, altar, or stage. We are also
interested in exploring the temporal rhythms of human-landscape relations, whether regular or periodic, as well as the way
in which transformations of space through activities enacted at sacred sties are received and replicated to encode other
sacred spaces.
The seminar’s investigations of setting, nature, and monuments will offer a chance to revisit sacred places and to see them
in a new light. Our intentionally broad definition leaves room for participants to introduce new topics to the table, such as
(but not limited to): the practicalities of survey and excavation and the mapping of ritual; the natural landscape and its
representation in words and images; geomorphology and its influence on planning and architectural design; the
modification and improvement of natural features to accommodate human ritual; poetry and performance, whether on-
site or remote venues; or the visualization of landscape as a means of facilitating ecstatic experience.
We invite applications from scholars in all disciplines whose lively presence will help to focus our work and stimulate
discussions. We anticipate that the successful applicant will have completed the terminal degree in her/his field at the
time of application and will have a record of scholarly publication. The seminar meets weekly and will allow the visiting
fellow ample time to pursue a major research project. The combined interests of the visiting fellow and the Vanderbilt
faculty fellows will determine the form and content of seminar discussions.
The visiting fellow is provided with a spacious office within the Center’s own building. The fellowship pays a stipend of
up to $45,000 and provides $2,000 in moving expenses.
Application materials available here: http://www.vanderbilt.edu/rpw_center/VF_info.htm
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MELLON FELLOWSHIPS FOR DISSERTATION RESEARCH IN ORIGINAL SOURCES – IN THE
HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
The Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) is pleased to offer fellowships generously funded by The Andrew
W. Mellon Foundation for dissertation research in the humanities in original sources. The purposes of this fellowship
program are to:
• help junior scholars in the humanities and related social-science fields gain skill and creativity in developing
knowledge from original sources
• enable dissertation writers to do research wherever relevant sources may be, rather than just where financial
support is available
• encourage more extensive and innovative uses of original sources in libraries, archives, museums, historical
societies, and related repositories in the U.S. and abroad, and
• provide insight from the viewpoint of doctoral candidates into how scholarly resources can be developed for
access most helpfully in the future.
The program offers about fifteen competitively awarded fellowships a year. Each provides a stipend of $2,000 per
month for periods ranging from 9-12 months. Each fellow will receive an additional $1,000 upon participating in a
symposium on research in original sources and submitting a report acceptable to CLIR on the research experience.
Thus the maximum award will be $25,000.
An applicant may be of any nationality but must be enrolled in a U.S. graduate school and be studying here, not on a
campus abroad even if operated by a U.S. institution. Proposed research may be conducted at a single or multiple sites
abroad, in the U.S., or both. Any relevant repository may be used, including government archives and private collections
accessible to the applicant. Preference is given to applicants who will be studying away from their home institution. Those
who are conducting original source research using online sources in novel or innovative ways are eligible to apply for this
fellowship.
CollegeWeekLive, provider of the world’s largest college fairs and admissions events, announces a $2,500 scholarship for
non-U.S. students. To be eligible, register and login to CollegeWeekLive INTERNATIONAL DAY on Tuesday December 14,
2010. CollegeWeekLive INTERNATIONAL DAY is online and free! Chat live with admissions representatives from 250
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CollegeWeekLive on Facebook!
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II. News You Can Use
The Student Union is a blog that follows the lives of about 15 students who have come
from all over the world to study in the U.S. It's primarily written by the students
themselves, who talk about what they had to do to come here and what it's like now that
they've arrived. They offer valuable advice for other prospective students, as well as interesting
insights about the surprising cultural differences they've encountered.
We also use the blog to share links to information from across the web that will be interesting and useful to prospective
students. Many of our writers actually used your regional offices when they were planning their studies here, and one of
them, Senzeni, worked as an EducationUSA Adviser at the Zimbabwe office.
Again, I hope you will find this blog a valuable resource and share it with your EducationUSA advisees. In addition, I want
to let you know that everything VOA publishes is in the public domain and available for your use with a link back to the
source. I welcome any feedback you may have - feel free to contact me at jstahl@voanews.com or
202-203-4954.
Jessica Stahl
VOA English Web www.facebook.com/voiceofamerica
(202) 203-4954
jstahl@voanews.com www.youtube.com/voavideo
The Boston Architectural College www.the-bac.edu/ (BAC) is a dynamic institution on the leading edge of design education.
The BAC now offers low-residency Master of Design Studies (MDS) degrees in Sustainable Design and in Historic
Preservation. Combining online study and week-long intensive learning events at the BAC's Boston campus, the program
allows enrollment from wherever students live and work. The concentration in sustainable design is grounded in the BAC's
leadership in online graduate education in sustainable design with over 30 specialized courses taught by international
experts. Using Boston's rich historic built environment as a laboratory, the MDS in Historic Preservation addresses the
technical and cultural issues confronting today's preservationists.
The classes in Sustainable Design are endorsed by the USGBC, the American Institute of Architects, and the Royal Institute
of British Architects. The BAC is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges.
For more information about global and online education at the BAC visit www.the-bac.edu/online and
www.the-bac/international. Email: admissions@the-bac.edu
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college or university www.EducationUSA.state.gov