Pocshy2.0 wrote:
uziq wrote:
just got made assistant editor of the history imprint at my publishing firm. which further means that my PhD funding application this fall will be boosted immensely. schmoozing with the literary elite, that's me.
Where will you be applying to undertake the PhD? As I understand it, the UK graduate school scheme requires you to show proof of funding for the duration of your course prior to your full acceptance. I suppose where you plan to attend will be contingent on who decides to offer partial or full funding as a result?
Congrats on the promotion, too.
i got accepted to univ college oxford 2 years ago, had a supervisor, PhD thesis accepted. didn't get funding (2011-2012 onwards was particularly brutal for funding reorganisation and cuts in the UK). basically you can get funding either from the institution itself (or in oxbridge's case, from individual colleges), or from centralised research councils. these have been cut to shreds though in the UK and made contingent upon all sorts of specious, extra-academic meddling, for e.g. one of the major considerations for funding applications now is 'impact'. impact is a politically charged term for 'how is this relevant to the purse-holders' interests'. i know the engineers of bf2s will pipe up with their job-spec mentality and say 'very well!' but the whole point of academic research is it's kinda supposed to be disinterested and free-thinking. that's how really great ideas and inventions crop up.
but anyway, the funding situation is a nightmare. yes, oxford did ask me to promise something insane like the ability to pay £11k a year, and they wanted the bank statements and guarantees for (3-4) years of this in advance. i'm from a well-off family but i hardly felt like getting a £30k IOU from my parents. not to mention the fact that academia is so hideously competitive and cut-throat (see U.S. tenure system passim) that self-funding is essentially financial AND career suicide.
for myself, next year i'll be reapplying to oxford with the same guy again who green lighted me last time, tweaking my funding application to hopefully nail that formula. i'll also apply to UCL, which is the biggest and most well-funded (not to mention prestigious) college of the university of london. i was accepted there for my master's originally but declined because i had a full scholarship offer on the table. scholarships and funding are supposed to snowball, it's a bit like informal patronage or favouritism. once you get one you tend to accrue awards and stipends more and more easily. you kind of gain momentum.
PM me if you're interested in UK postgrad at all.
Last edited by uziq (2015-08-27 11:28:58)