Friday, October 8, 2010

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) Diversity Fellows Program

DIVERSITY FELLOWS PROGRAM

2011

To assist the development of a diverse and representative faculty, enhance the educational experience of our students, and better prepare UW- Milwaukee graduates for the increasingly diverse nation and interconnected global economy of the 21st century, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) has established the Diversity Fellows Program (DFP). The Diversity Fellows Program provides Fellows with the opportunity to gain teaching experience while becoming acquainted with UWM and Milwaukee. At the same time, the Program provides our faculty the ability to interact with and develop relationships with the Fellows. Fellows will have the option to teach one course during UWM’s Summer Session (May 29 – July 7 2011), or to engage in an intensive research experience. Fellowships may also be available for the 2011 academic year, depending on the needs of the respective departments. Applications for study in any field represented on campus are welcomed.

Founded in 1956, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, a major urban university committed to academic excellence, is located in the commercial and industrial hub of Wisconsin. The campus is in a pleasant residential neighborhood on Milwaukee's northeast side, only a few blocks from Lake Michigan. UW-Milwaukee has a student enrollment of approximately 28,000 and is one of the two "doctoral cluster" campuses in the 13-campus University of Wisconsin System.

ELIGIBILITY: Either advanced or recently graduated underrepresented doctoral/terminal degree students with preference given to US citizens and permanent residents. Fellows receive a $6,000.00 stipend, university housing, and a travel allowance.

APPLICATION PROCESS: DEADLINE: November 15, 2010

Interested applicants should forward their letter of application, curriculum vitae, transcript, and three letters of recommendation to: See our website for application checklist:

Diversity-fellowsprogram@uwm.edu http://www4.uwm.edu/acad_aff/climate/dfp/index.cfm

OR

Diversity Fellows Program

Associate Vice Chancellor for Diversity and Climate

Chapman Hall 230B

P.O. Box 413, Milwaukee, WI 53201

Tel: 414-229-2721

Fax: 414 229-2481

Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships

Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships
Fellowship Details
Stipend: $25,000, plus funds for research costs of up to $3,000 and for university fees of up to $5,000
Tenure: one year beginning summer 2011
Completed applications must be submitted through the ACLS Online Fellowship Application system (ofa.acls.org) no later than 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, November 10, 2010.
Notifications will be sent in late March 2011.

ACLS invites applications for the fifth annual competition for the Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships. This is the first stage of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation/ACLS Early Career Fellowship Program, a significant new fellowship program providing support for young scholars. The first part of this program—the Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships—makes possible a year of supported research and writing, to help students complete their dissertation. The second part of the program provides support for a year, following the completion of the doctorate, for new scholars to advance their research. A grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation supports this program.

The Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships are to assist graduate students in the humanities and related social sciences (1) in the last year of Ph.D. dissertation writing. This program aims to encourage timely completion of the Ph.D. Applicants must be prepared to
complete their dissertations within the period of their fellowship tenure and no later than August 31, 2012.

ACLS will award 65 Fellowships in this competition for a one-year term beginning between June and September 2011 for the 2011-2012 academic year. The Fellowship tenure may be carried out in residence at the Fellow's home institution, abroad, or at another appropriate site for the research. The total award of up to $33,000 includes a stipend plus additional funds for university fees and research support. These Fellowships may not be held concurrently with any other fellowship or grant.

Eligibility

Applicants must:

be Ph.D. candidates in a humanities or social science department in the United States. Applicants from other departments may be eligible if their project is in the humanities or related social sciences, and their principal dissertation supervisor holds an appointment in a humanities field or related social science field. (Students completing master’s degrees are not eligible, even if they are the terminal degree in the field.)
have all requirements for the Ph.D. except the dissertation completed before beginning fellowship tenure.
be no more than six years in the degree program; awardees can hold this Fellowship no later than their seventh year. (2)
Application Requirements

Applications must be submitted online and must include:

Completed application form, including a statement of all university and external support received during graduate study: fellowships, teaching or research assistantships, tuition grants, and summer support.
Proposal (no more than five pages, double spaced, in Times New Roman 11-point font), including a timeline for the expected completion of dissertation writing and defense.
Up to three additional pages of images, musical scores, or other similar supporting non-text materials [optional]
Bibliography (no more than two pages)
Completed chapter of the dissertation (that is neither the introduction, nor the conclusion, nor the literature review) of not more than 25 double-spaced pages, in Times New Roman 11-point font, or a representative 25-page excerpt from a longer chapter. The chapter must be in English, though citations may be in other languages (with translations provided).
Two reference letters
A letter from the applicant’s institution (preferably from the applicant’s department chair or dean), including (1) a statement attesting to the viability of the proposed timeline for completion; (2) stipulation that, in the event of an award, the university will not charge the student tuition or fees beyond a limit of $5,000 and will provide for any additional costs, such as health insurance; and (3) a pledge that if an ACLS award is made, the university will not provide the applicant with any subsequent aid.
Criteria Used in Judging Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowship Applications

Scholars asked to review applications in this program are instructed to use the following three criteria:

The potential of the project to advance the field of study in which it is proposed and make an original and significant contribution to knowledge.
The quality of the proposal with regard to its methodology, scope, theoretical framework, and grounding in the relevant scholarly literature.
The feasibility of the project and the likelihood that the applicant will execute the work within the proposed timeframe.
The scholarly record and career trajectory of the applicant.

Appropriate fields of specialization include but are not limited to: American studies; anthropology; archaeology; art and architectural history; classics; economics; film; geography; history; languages and literatures; legal studies; linguistics; musicology; philosophy; political science; psychology; religious studies; rhetoric, communication, and media studies; sociology; and theater, dance, and performance studies. Proposals in the social science fields listed above are eligible only if they employ predominantly humanistic approaches (e.g., economic history, law and literature, political theory). Proposals in interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary studies are welcome, as are proposals focused on any geographic region or on any cultural or linguistic group.

In special circumstances an applicant and his or her advisor may petition to have an application for an eighth-year fellowship considered. Such applicants must present a compelling case for eligibility.

American Association of University Women Fellowships

The American Association of University Women is offering fellowships to both female students and faculty members. Below is information on the Postdoctoral Research Leave and Dissertation Fellowships in addition to Summer/Short-Term Research Publication Grants.

American Association of University Women
Postdoctoral Research Leave Fellowship
Dissertation Fellowship
Summer/Short-Term Research Publication Grants
Deadline: November 15 (agency); November 8 (internal- faculty)
URL: http://www.aauw.org/learn/fellowships_grants/american.cfm


2011-2012 Academic Year
Postdoctoral Research Leave Fellowship: $30,000
Dissertation Fellowship: $20,000
Summer/Short-Term Research Publication Grant: $6,000
Applications available: Aug. 1–Nov. 15, 2010
Application deadline*: Nov. 15, 2010
Fellowship year: July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012

* All supporting documents must also be received by this date. If an application deadline falls on a weekend or holiday, supporting documents must be received the next business day.

American Fellowships support women doctoral candidates completing dissertations or scholars seeking funds for postdoctoral research leave from accredited institutions. Candidates must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Candidates are evaluated on the basis of scholarly excellence, the quality and originality of project design, and active commitment to helping women and girls through service in their communities, professions, or fields of research.

Candidates may apply for only one of the awards described below. Former recipients of these awards are not eligible to apply for additional American Fellowships or publication grants.

Postdoctoral Research Leave Fellowships offer one-year of support for women in tenure-track faculty positions in support of their earning tenure and further promotions. Candidates must have earned a doctoral degree by Nov. 15, 2010. Postdoctoral fellowships are available in the arts and humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Limited additional funds may be available when matched by the fellow's institution.

Dissertation Fellowships are available to women who will complete their dissertation writing between July 1, 2011 and June 30, 2012. Degree conferral must be between April 1 and September 15, 2012. To qualify, applicants must have completed all course work, passed all required preliminary examinations, and received approval for their research proposal or plan by Nov. 15,2010. Students holding any fellowship for writing a dissertation in the year prior to the AAUW fellowship year are not eligible. Open to applicants in all fields of study. Scholars engaged in science, technology, engineering and math and also researching gender issues are especially encouraged to apply.
Apply now for a Dissertation Fellowship »

Summer/Short-Term Research Publication Grants fund women college and university faculty and independent researchers to prepare research for publication. The grants are intended for tenure-track, part-time, or temporary faculty or new or established scholars and researchers at universities. Time must be available for eight consecutive weeks of final writing, editing, and responding to issues raised in critical reviews. Funds cannot be used for undertaking research. Applicants must have received their doctorates by the application deadline. Scholars with strong publishing records should seek other funding.
Apply now for a Summer/Short-Term Research Publication Grant »

Questions about applications must be directed to the Iowa City office. Please do not contact the AAUW office in Washington, D.C., or local branches for application information. Please call 319/337-1716 ext. 60, e-mail aauw@act.org, or write to the customer service center at

AAUW
Dept. 60
301 ACT Drive
Iowa City, IA 52243-4030

Request a Brochure
Order copies of the AAUW fellowships brochure that includes general descriptions for each fellowship program at http://www.act.org/aauw/brochurerequest.html

Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship

Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship
Deadline: November 8
URL: http://sites.nationalacademies.org/PGA/FordFellowships/PGA_047959


FORD FOUNDATION DISSERTATION FELLOWSHIPS
For Achieving Excellence in College and University Teaching

The 2011 Application Deadline is November 8, 2010

This year the program will award approximately 20 dissertation fellowships.
The dissertation fellowships provide one year of support for individuals
working to complete a dissertation leading to a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
or Doctor of Science (Sc.D.) degree.

Dissertation fellowships will be awarded in a national competition
administered by the National Research Council (NRC) on behalf of the Ford
Foundation. The awards will be made to individuals who, in the judgment of
the review panels, have demonstrated superior academic achievement, are
committed to a career in teaching and research at the college or university
level, show promise of future achievement as scholars and teachers, and are
well prepared to use diversity as a resource for enriching the education of
all students.

Dissertation Eligibility

In addition to the general eligibility requirements, eligibility to apply
for a dissertation fellowship is limited to:

All citizens or nationals* of the United States regardless of race, national
origin, religion, gender, age, disability, or sexual orientation (must have
become a U.S. citizen by November 8, 2010),
Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree candidates studying in an eligible research-based
discipline at a U.S. educational institution, and
Individuals who have not earned a doctoral degree at any time, in any field.
(The term ³national of the United States² designates a citizen of the United
States or a native resident of a possession of the United States. It does
not refer to a U.S. permanent resident who is a citizen of another country.)

Criteria for Selection

The following will be considered as positive factors in choosing successful
candidates:

Evidence of superior academic achievement
Degree of promise of continuing achievement as scholars and teachers
Capacity to respond in pedagogically productive ways to the learning needs
of students from diverse backgrounds
Sustained personal engagement with communities that are underrepresented in
the academy and an ability to bring this asset to learning, teaching, and
scholarship at the college and university level
Likelihood of using the diversity of human experience as an educational
resource in teaching and scholarship
Membership in one or more of the following groups whose underrepresentation
in the American professoriate has been severe and longstanding:

Alaska Natives (Aleut, Eskimo or other Indigenous People of Alaska)
Black/African Americans
Mexican American/Chicanas/Chicanos
Native American Indians
Native Pacific Islanders (Hawaiian/Polynesian/Micronesian)
Puerto Ricans
Review panels may also look at additional factors such as the suitability of
the applicant's proposed institution and the likelihood that the applicant
will fully utilize 9 to 12 months of support prior to receiving the Ph.D. or
Sc.D.


Eligible Fields of Study

Awards will be made for study in research-based Ph.D. or Sc.D. programs that
include the following major disciplines and related interdisciplinary
fields: American studies, anthropology, archaeology, art and theater
history, astronomy, chemistry, communications, computer science, earth
sciences, economics, education, engineering, ethnomusicology, geography,
history, international relations, language, life sciences, linguistics,
literature, mathematics, performance study, philosophy, physics, political
science, psychology, religion, sociology, urban planning, and women¹s
studies. Also eligible are interdisciplinary ethnic studies programs, such
as African American studies and Native American studies, and other
interdisciplinary programs, such as area studies, peace studies, and social
justice. The complete list of eligible fields of study supported at the
dissertation level of the fellowship program is available here: Dissertation
Fields (.pdf).

Individuals enrolled in the following practice-oriented programs will not be
supported: business, management, administration, occupational health,
nursing, consumer science, library and information science, speech
pathology, audiology, personnel, guidance, social work, social welfare,
public health, physical education, physical therapy, kinesiology,
rehabilitation science, educational administration and leadership, fine
arts, filmmaking, and performing arts. In addition, awards will not be made
for work leading to terminal master¹s degrees, the Ed.D. degree, the degrees
of Doctor of Fine Arts (D.F.A.) or Doctor of Psychology (Psy.D.), or
professional degrees in such areas as medicine, law, and public health, or
for study in joint degree programs such as the M.D./Ph.D., J.D./Ph.D., and
M.F.A./Ph.D.


Fellowship Institution

Fellowships are tenable at any fully accredited, nonprofit U.S. institution
of higher education offering a Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree in the eligible fields
of study.


Verification of Doctoral Degree Candidacy

A valid National Academies Verification of Doctoral Degree Candidacy Form,
signed by the adviser or other authorized official, must be received by the
Fellowships Office of the National Academies by January 6, 2011 to confirm
that an applicant has advanced to doctoral candidacy.
Applicants should expect to complete the dissertation during the 2011-2012
academic year, but no later than fall 2012.

Stipend and Benefits

One-year stipend: $21,000
Expenses paid to attend one Conference of Ford Fellows
Access to Ford Fellow Regional Liaisons, a network of former Ford Fellows
who have volunteered to provide mentoring and support to current fellows.

Tenure

The tenure of a dissertation fellowship will be no less than 9 months and no
more than 12 months, with tenure beginning no earlier than June 1, 2011 and
no later than September 1, 2011.


Evaluation and Selection of Fellows

Applications will be evaluated by panels of distinguished scholars selected
by the National Academies. The panels will use academic records, essays,
letters of recommendation, the proposed timetable and plan for completion of
the doctoral degree, the application itself, and other appropriate materials
as the basis for determining the extent to which candidates meet the
eligibility requirements and the selection criteria.


Conditions of the Fellowship

Dissertation fellows are expected to be engaged in a full-time program
leading to a Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree in an eligible field of study. Those who
accept a dissertation fellowship must agree to the stipulations in the Terms
of Appointment for Ford Foundation Fellows that accompanies the award
letter. In addition, Ford Fellows must agree to participate in regular
updates of the Directory of Ford Fellows, as well as periodic surveys
designed to demonstrate the impact of this program.


For additional information:
Fellowships Office, Keck 576
National Research Council
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001

Tel: 202-334-2872
Fax: 202-334-3419
E-mail: infofell@nas.edu

International Dissertation Research Fellowship (IDRF)

International Dissertation Research Fellowship (IDRF)

The International Dissertation Research Fellowship (IDRF) offers nine to twelve months of support to graduate students in the humanities and social sciences who are enrolled in doctoral programs in the United States and conducting dissertation research outside of the United States. IDRF promotes research that is situated in a specific discipline and geographical region but is also informed by interdisciplinary and cross-regional perspectives. Research topics may address all periods in history, but applicants should be alert to the broader implications of their research as it relates to contemporary issues and debates. Seventy-five fellowships are awarded annually. Fellowship amounts vary depending on the research plan, with a per-fellowship average of $18,750. The fellowship includes participation in an interdisciplinary workshop upon the completion of IDRF-funded research.

Eligibility

The program is open to graduate students in the humanities and social sciences -- regardless of citizenship -- enrolled in doctoral programs in the United States. Applicants to the 2011 IDRF competition must complete all Ph.D. requirements except on-site research by the time the fellowship begins or by December 2011, whichever comes first.

The program invites proposals for empirical and site-specific dissertation research outside the United States. It will consider applications for dissertation research grounded in a single site, informed by broader cross-regional and interdisciplinary perspectives, as well as applications for multi-sited, comparative, and transregional research. Proposals that identify the U.S. as a case for comparative inquiry are welcome; however, proposals which focus predominantly or exclusively on the United States are not eligible. Proposals may cover all periods in history, but must address topics that have relevance to contemporary issues and debates.

Students enrolled in Ph.D. programs in public policy, public health, and education, may be eligible to apply if their research projects engage directly with broader theoretical and analytical issues in the humanities and social sciences. The program does not accept applications from Ph.D. programs in law, business, medicine, nursing or journalism. Students who will have undertaken nine or more months of funded dissertation research in one country by July 2011 are not eligible to apply to the IDRF to extend the research time in the same country. The IDRF program will not support study at home institutions, foreign universities, conference participation, short research trips abroad, or projects relying primarily on labwork. For more information on the 2011 IDRF competition, please visit this website:

http://www.ssrc.org/fellowships/idrf-fellowship/

Monday, March 29, 2010

Stop Day Colloquium: Spring 2010

Department of Spanish & Portuguese Stop Day Colloquium
Call for Participants

Are you preparing to make a conference presentation and want to practice your delivery with a friendly audience? Are you considering submitting a paper for a conference and seeking constructive feedback on your work? Do you want to have the professional experience of presenting your work to a scholarly audience without incurring the costs of conference travel?

GRASP and the department's faculty invite you to submit a brief description and title (no more than 100 words) to participate in the Stop Day Colloquium, an informal forum for sharing your work with your colleagues and professors. Presentations will be limited to 20 minutes (normally the equivalent of 9-10 pages of double-spaced text), the standard allotment for conference presentations. Whether you're exploring the experience of reading a paper to an academic audience for the first time or looking to polish your skills before your next conference performance, the colloquium is meant to foster this important aspect of professional development. Feel free to contact your GRASP representatives, Professor Bayliss (rbayliss@ku.edu) or Professor Rivera (ijrivera@ku.edu) for further information. Proposals are due by Friday, April 30 and should be sent to either Professors Rivera or Bayliss.

Summer Job Opportunity: KU Harvest of Hope Leadership Academy

The KU Harvest of Hope Leadership Academy is a pre-college program that serves Kansas high school students from migrant farmwork backgrounds. Most of their students are Latino, many are bilingual, and some are beginning English language learners. The KU Harvest of Hope Leadership Academy needs residence hall staff for June 2010! Please help spread the word about this job opportunity with Latin American Studies students at the junior/senior/grad levels? Preference is given to bilingual (Spanish/English) applicants.

Who Are We?

The Harvest of Hope Leadership Academy (HHLA) is a 3-week residential program for 50 Kansas high school students from migrant farmwork backgrounds, held on the KU campus, June 6-27, 2010. The mission of HHLA is to empower and support migrant high school students through academic enrichment, leadership development, and college preparation.
For more information regarding the program, see www2.ku.edu/~hhla.

What Do RAs Do?

The HHLA Residence Hall Director and Residence Assistants (RAs) have primary responsibility for the overall physical and emotional safety and wellbeing of student participants throughout the Academy. They live in the residence halls with our HHLA student participants for the duration of the appointment: 24-hour residency, 5 days-a-week for three weeks. RAs also attend a 3-day staff orientation, June 2-4. RAs tutor, counsel, teach, supervise, and serve as positive role models.

Attached is a pdf flyer and here’s the link to the KU employment website: https://jobs.ku.edu.

Go to the Unclassified Professional Staff tab and refer to position # 206685.

Questions can be directed to Stacy Mendez by phone (785.864.7027) or email smendez@ku.edu.