bowerbird Posted July 13, 2010 Posted July 13, 2010 I am already deep in debt from my undergraduate degree. What schools in NYC offer the lowest tuition/ best financial aid while having a competitive painting MFA program? Hunter obviously, but has anyone heard anything good/bad about Queens College, Brooklyn College, or City College? Are there other options I am not mentioning? Also, are there any hidden gems across the country that are inexpensive/free? I'd prefer a program in a larger city, though am open to all suggestions. Thanks!
grad_wannabe Posted July 14, 2010 Posted July 14, 2010 Out here in California, the University of Southern California (USC), the University of California at Irvine (UCI) and Stanford all offer fully-funded MFAs.
pile Posted July 16, 2010 Posted July 16, 2010 Northwestern in Chicago, also I think University of Chicago and University of Ilinois at Chicago offer a couple of full-funded scholarships.
Demain Posted July 20, 2010 Posted July 20, 2010 Northwestern in Chicago, also I think University of Chicago and University of Ilinois at Chicago offer a couple of full-funded scholarships. UC San Diego I have also heard is fully funded.
jculler Posted July 20, 2010 Posted July 20, 2010 Rutgers in New Brunswick NJ is free + living stipend to those who receive a TA fellowship, it's about 45 min to NYC by train.
michaelwebster Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 UNC Greensboro is free + 10k assistantship, and is not very competitive to get into. Good safe school. Youve got to go for the interview though. vermillion 1
james Posted August 2, 2010 Posted August 2, 2010 Had a friend who went to Queens college and is in pretty heavy debt from it. A general rule of thumb is that public schools (anything like University of _______ or ________ State University) offer full funding while private schools usually do not, but will sometimes offer smaller scholarships from 10K-50% of tuition. Full funding is often part of a T.A. or G.A. position which means you will also be teaching classes and working for the department, which can put a considerable strain on ones time. Many state schools run three year programs for that reason. Places I know have full-funding: U. Texas Austin, Montclair State University (just outside NYC in Montclair NJ, a cool town on a direct train line), U Mass Amherst, Indiana U. Bloomington, Virginia Commonwealth University, U. Penn, Rutgers U., U of Arizona, U of Michigan Ann Arbor. There are others Im sure...
colbz Posted November 8, 2010 Posted November 8, 2010 Had a friend who went to Queens college and is in pretty heavy debt from it. A general rule of thumb is that public schools (anything like University of _______ or ________ State University) offer full funding while private schools usually do not, but will sometimes offer smaller scholarships from 10K-50% of tuition. Full funding is often part of a T.A. or G.A. position which means you will also be teaching classes and working for the department, which can put a considerable strain on ones time. Many state schools run three year programs for that reason. Places I know have full-funding: U. Texas Austin, Montclair State University (just outside NYC in Montclair NJ, a cool town on a direct train line), U Mass Amherst, Indiana U. Bloomington, Virginia Commonwealth University, U. Penn, Rutgers U., U of Arizona, U of Michigan Ann Arbor. There are others Im sure... Pretty sure UPenn doesn't offer generous funding...I visited there and they told me that although everyone gets to be a TA, they only give TA's $1500 per semester which really kind of sucks considering the price of an ivy league. PS I see you were accepted to Montclair State, I've never heard of it, I like the sound of a school so close to NYC but not inside of it. Do you know anything else about it? Like how selective it is? I'm applying to Rutgers too but I know they are really selective.
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