Part I What is a Master’s Degree? DIFFERENCES FROM UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES Fewer courses each...
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Transcript of Part I What is a Master’s Degree? DIFFERENCES FROM UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES Fewer courses each...
Graduate Studies Workshop
Social Welfare and Social Development
2014By NJB/CDT/Litalien/Patriquin/Chen
DIFFERENCES FROM UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
Fewer courses each semester
Courses more independently driven
Much more reading and writing
You choose classes, professors, supervisors, and committees
All aspects of graduate programs, from application to completion, assume that you take the initiative.
TYPES OF PROGRAMMES
Format 1: Coursework only
Format 2: Coursework plus major paper or project
Format 3: Coursework plus Masters’ Thesis
A few programmes – in any of the forms listed above – may require “qualifying examinations” or “comprehensive examinations.”
Tips when applying for an MA
MA applications and scholarship applications are due early in the autumn.
You should decide which programs you want to apply to during the summer following your third year of undergraduate studies.
Please give your professors at least two weeks to prepare your letters of reference.
Why should you do an M.A.?
1) Financial advantage (earn more money)
2) Better job opportunities
3) Lower unemployment rate
4) You can get university funding to do an MA ($2000-$10,000/year)
5) You may also pay for your MA by becoming a research assistant or a teaching assistant
Incentives
more people earn undergraduate degrees
a master’s degree: increasingly useful in distinguishing candidates with university education
smarter than most
dedicated enough to set your sights on a tough goal and attain it
MA: a prerequisite to a PhD program
IncentivesSalaries
College graduate
Bachelor Master’s Doctoral
$35,000 $45,000 $60,000 $65,000
The median annual earnings among those who were working full time in 2007
In sum, earn $15,000 more a year with an MA. It is a huge income gap
Incentives
Many MA degree’s take two years full-time
Some MA degrees can take only one year to complete
Ontario Graduate Scholarships (OGS)
1) Awards = each university gives them individually + sets their own deadlines
2) Apply for an OGS to each of the universities you are interested to attend
3) Graduate Studies Office at eligible Ontario Institutions will be responsible for administering the OGS Program
4) At Nipissing: Sarah Clermont is the Research and Graduate Studies Coordinator (F307): [email protected]
Funding - Canada
Qualifying Canadian universities receive a Canada Graduate Scholarships Master’s Program (CGS M) allocation.
Allocation indicates the number of students to whom they can award scholarships
Allocations are divided by broad fields of study: 1) health, 2) natural sciences and/or 3) engineering and 4) social sciences and/or humanities
Funding - Canada
The CGS M Program supports 2,500 students every year.
Financial support in all disciplines
Administered jointly by Canada’s three federal granting agencies:
1) CIHR -Frederick Banting and Charles Best Canada Graduate Scholarship
2) NSERC - Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship
3) Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship
FUNDING POSSIBILITIES - Links
Canada Graduate Scholarships - Master’s Program (CGS M) (September-December): 1) CIHR –
Frederick Banting and Charles Best Canada Graduate Scholarships
2) NSERC – Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship
3) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) – Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships
4) Canada Graduate Scholarship – Michael Smith Foreign Study Program
OTHERFUNDING POSSIBILITIES
University & Programme Scholarships
Teaching Assistantships
Research Assistantships
You can pay for your MA!
Social Work
Wilfrid Laurier University (MSW)
York University (MSW)
University of British Columbia (Advanced MSW or Foundation MSW)
University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC) MSW
University of Calgary (MSW)
University of Victoria (MSW)
University of Windsor (MSW)
Dalhousie University (MSW)
University of Regina (MSW)
Sociology
University of Windsor (Ontario)
University of Lethbridge (Alberta)
Memorial University (Newfoundland)
Political Science
York University (Ontario)
Queen’s University (Ontario) 12 months
University of Western Ontario (Ontario) 12 months
Wilfrid Laurier (Ontario)
McMaster University (Ontario) 12 months
Brock University (Ontario)
Social and Political Thought
York University (Ontario) 2 years
Acadia University (Nova Scotia) 2 years
University of Regina (Saskatchewan) 2 years
Public Administration
Ryerson University (Ontario)
Dalhousie University (Nova Scotia) – 1 to 4 years
Carleton University (Ontario)
McMaster and University of Guelph (Ontario)
International development and
Global Studies (IDS) University of Ottawa (Ontario) $16,500 guaranteed
University of Waterloo (Ontario) 16 months
University of Waterloo (second degree)
McGill University (Québec)
Saint Mary’s University (Nova Scotia)
Guelph University (Ontario)
Dalhousie University (Nova Scotia)
Indigenous/Native Studies
Trent University (Ontario)
Queen’s University (Ontario)
University of Toronto (Ontario)
University of Manitoba (Manitoba)
University of Winnipeg (Manitoba)
University of Victoria (British Columbia)
University of Saskatchewan (Saskatchewan)
Women’s/Gender Studies
Queen’s University (Ontario) $14,000
Lakehead University (Ontario)
Carleton University (Ontario)
McMaster University (Ontario)
Simon Fraser (British Columbia)
University of Ottawa (Ontario)
Interdisciplinary MAs
Political Economy (Carleton University)
Work & Society (McMaster University)
Community Development (MACD) (University of Victoria)
Social Justice and Equity Studies (Brock University)
Social Justice and Community Engagement (Wilfrid Laurier)
Philanthropy and Non-Profit Leadership (MPNL) (Carleton)
Fall Graduate Studies Workshop
The following topics will be covered: The Application Process
Statement of Purpose
Letter of Reference
Sample of Written Work