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Posted

Has anyone heard anything from U Mass-Amherst? I saw three entries on the Admissions Results page "accepted by phone" w/funding. Any more news?

Cultural Anthropology is my subfield.

Thank you!

Posted

Has anyone heard anything from U Mass-Amherst? I saw three entries on the Admissions Results page "accepted by phone" w/funding. Any more news?

Cultural Anthropology is my subfield.

Thank you!

I applied there to exactly that program and I haven't heard anything.

Posted

I applied there to exactly that program and I haven't heard anything.

They have given notice of acceptances last week. All incoming students are guaranteed 3 years TAships at least. I suggest to contact them to check on the status of your appication.

Good luck!

Posted

I contacted the department and they told me that the 12 applicants who have been accepted have been notified. They hold off sending denial letters because "there can be some movement as people accept or reject our offers."

Congratulations and Good Luck to those accepted!

Good Luck to everyone else!

  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

All incoming students are guaranteed 3 years TAships at least.

This is absolutely not true. The only incoming students guaranteed any kind of funding are the three receiving "recruitment TAships." If you are not one of these, and you do not receive an RA position through your advisor, then you probably will not get any financial assistance through the department. Also, you are not guaranteed any funding for any length of time (i.e., at least 3 years). Although there are loopholes, usually you are in "Tier 1" (the Tier where funding is most likely) for about 4 semesters. After that, you will typically have to find your own means of income outside of the department. Considering the department routinely takes in far more students per year than confers degrees, I suspect that the length of time a student will have in Tier 1 will continue to drop as student enrollment increases....that or there will not be enough TA positions to offer to everyone in Tier 1.

Remember, this is a huge program (~80 graduate students). The fight for funding is highly competitive, and after you have used your TAship semesters, you will be competing against students who have been here 7-14 years already and have preference for other funding opportunities. Outside of the TA positions and those opportunities that come through your advisors (i.e., RA positions) the odds are very much stacked against students early in their career, regardless of academic standing and teaching background. If you are in the biological subfield, you will have an even more difficult time finding help in this department, as the administration in this department have interests heavily weighted toward cultural and archaeological studies. Unfortunate (given the remarkable accomplishments of the biological staff), but true.

One last thing to keep in mind with regard to cost- if you are out-of-state, you will always be out-of-state. While many schools allow you to apply for in-state residency after one year, UMASS does not. The only way you will ever become in-state is if you can prove you moved to Massachusetts for some reason other than to attend school. Keep this in mind, as Amherst is a very expensive place to live, and the average length of time to get a PhD in this program is almost 11 years (longest in the whole university). This means that odds are good you will have to take out loans for at least a few years, and the loans will not be enough to survive off of without at least another part time job- trust me!

I know this might all seem like a downer, but I feel it is important that someone tells you this before you accept a position here.

Edited by Excelsior
Posted

Thanks for this very long explanation, it will surely be useful to many other students as well.

I presume you are a student in the department and things have been quite hard for you on the financial side...

I know this might all seem like a downer, but I feel it is important that someone tells you this before you accept a position here.

Posted

No problem. I think being unfunded at UMASS would probably be as hard as being in any big program unfunded. But the way the funding actually works is very misleading, at least when you read the website and the letters that they send when you are accepted. Even though there is a tier system based on certain criteria, there's a lot of ambiguity to the system, and TA positions are really the only ones monitored by the department.

But I think the "out of state" thing is probably the more important, just because of the heavily-increased costs (such that they will cap your financial aid). For example, out of state student fees (not including tuition) for one year were $12,000 (and you're still not allowed to use the campus gym- you'll have to pay an extra $400 for that). Say you get some type of scholarship or fellowship that waives tuition. That will definitely help, but you'll still have to pay the $12,000 out of (your future) pocket every single year you are in school here, unfunded. Additionally, as health care is mandatory in MA, you'll have to pay for that too. While the state of MA will consider you a legal resident, UMASS will not. I know several people who have applied for residency...I haven't met one yet who was approved.

None of this is really a major concern if you're an MA student who gets a recruitment TA spot- you'll probably be fine as it should only take you ~2 years to graduate. But odds are if you're a PhD, or MA/PhD student (recruitment TA or no), or an unfunded MA student, you'll have to play the "groceries, car insurance, or gasoline?" game a few times a month as you juggle your meager budget, and that's with a part time job. It's doable, but very tough.

Thanks for this very long explanation, it will surely be useful to many other students as well.

I presume you are a student in the department and things have been quite hard for you on the financial side...

I know this might all seem like a downer, but I feel it is important that someone tells you this before you accept a position here.

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