Graduate Assistantships
Because of their potential to remit all tuition, graduate assistantships can be a very useful way to support one's graduate studies. Graduate assistantships include the following types of appointments:
Teaching Assistantships (TA) are instructional positions that include duties such as lecturing, grading papers, supervising laboratories, and leading discussion sections.
Project Assistantships (PA) involve project-related assignments. This work varies by department, and may or may not be related to a student's academic program.
Research Assistantships (RA) provide students with opportunities
to participate in faculty research programs. Often, a research
assistantship can be structured to meet the requirements for the
master's or doctoral thesis. Sometimes students and faculty write grant
proposals to fund topics that they both wish to study; in these cases
students incorporate their own funding support as research assistants
into the budget of the proposals. Although all graduate students are
eligible to hold graduate assistantships, preference is usually given to
students who are pursuing individual (thesis) research.
Where to Find Graduate Assistantships
TA and PA positions are usually found by contacting programs, departments, and sometimes faculty directly. Some are advertised via departmental newsletters, web sites, and bulleting boards. A few are posted with the UW Student Job Center, through its online listing. Bookmark this web page and visit it frequently.
Historically, our students have been very successful in obtaining TA positions in the biological sciences (e.g., biocore, botany, and zoology), but other departments offer opportunities as well. The best time to apply is during the formal mid-semester recruitment. But if you’ve missed the formal application deadline, it’s still a very good idea to submit an application or resume if a department is open to this idea. Regardless of when you apply, it is imperative that you check back with all potential employers on a regular basis, up through the first week of classes–even if the positions are filled. Every year we have had students who landed a TA position in the final weeks before a new term began (when currently appointed TAs may be accepting other funding offers). So make this an essential part of your strategy. You may want to begin with our TA Tip Sheet.
RA positions are rarely advertised. Because they usually arise as a
result of successful grant initiatives by the faculty, it’s important to
contact all faculty who are conducting research in areas that you might
consider as possibilities for your own thesis research. Our online
directory of Nelson
Institute Faculty may be a good starting point.
Some graduate assistantship announcements are also posted in
Graduate Funding New$, our weekly
electronic newsletter for graduate support. Don't rely upon this or any
other resource as your one and only funding strategy. But do consider
adding it to your list.
When to Apply
All graduate students--both continuing and new or incoming
students--are encouraged to apply for all graduate assistantships that
match their qualifications. It is not necessary to be on campus to
pursue a potential assistantship. Any incoming student who is planning to
enroll as a graduate student in an upcoming term is
eligible to apply for UW-Madison graduate assistantships that will
be starting in that particular term. Acceptance of an application for a
graduate assistantship is not contingent upon the applicant's
matriculation. Your ultimate appointment to a particular position is
contingent upon your matriculation, but this does not mean that your
application for an assistantship must be delayed until your
matriculation. In short, do consider applying for any graduate
assistantship for which you may be qualified, provided that the assistantship
appointment will be starting within the same semester in which you plan to begin
your graduate study at UW-Madison.
Benefits
Graduate assistantships offer a number of significant benefits,
particularly if the
appointment meets the minimum criteria. Every assistantship provides a stipend.
In addition to the stipend, a graduate assistantship appointment of 1/3
time or greater, when carried over a complete semester, also includes
full tuition remission as well as benefits such as health insurance.
(Please note that tuition remission does not include segregated fees;
currently the cost of segregated fees is $365/semester for
non-dissertators and $138/semester for most dissertators.) For complete
details on UW-Madison tuition remission, eligibility factors, and
benefits, check the
Bursar’s Tuition
Remission Policy.
Many appointments are timed to begin at the same time as one of the
academic terms. But it is not uncommon to find a graduate
assistantship after classes have begun. In that case an appointment of
1/3 time (i.e., 33 1/3% appointment) would not be sufficient to obtain
the tuition remission or the health insurance benefits. However, it is
often possible to negotiate a higher appointment rate for the remainder
of a semester in order to become eligible for those benefits. The rate
that qualifies one for benefits (such as tuition remission) is that
which would be necessary to produce the same number of hours of work that
a 1/3 time appointment over the course of an entire semester would
produce (roughly equivalent to 260 hours). This is explained in greater
detail in the Bursar’s Tuition
Remission Policy for specific types of appointments.
Obligations
Graduate assistantship appointments usually include a number of obligations
including minimum or maximum enrollment requirements and training
requirements.
Enrollment Requirements
If you obtain a graduate assistantship that is supported by the
Nelson Institute, please note the following minimum enrollment
requirements:
Academic Year Appointment:
Teaching Assistant, 8 graduate credits; (3 cr for dissertators)
Project Assistant, 2 graduate credits; (3 cr for dissertators)
Research Assistant, 8 graduate credits; (3 cr for dissertators)
Summer Sessions Appointment:
Teaching Assistant, no enrollment required
Project Assistant, no enrollment required
Research Assistant, 2 graduate credits in 8-wk session; (3 cr for
dissertators)
Nelson Institute graduate students who wish to request consideration for
an exception to the above minimum enrollment requirements must
submit a written request to the Chair of the Academic Programs
Office, 70 Science Hall, 550 N Park St, Madison, WI 53706.
Students who are awarded assistantships in other departments should
verify enrollment requirements with those departments; other employing
departments may require different credit loads. Enrollment may also
be required for other reasons such as visa conditions, on-campus housing rules, fellowship requirements, student-loan
stipulations, or graduation. Check with the appropriate offices for
specific enrollment requirements.
Training Requirements
Teaching Assistantship appointments may include an added obligation to
attend one or more training sessions. Most employing departments require
their TAs to attend training workshops during the week preceding the
beginning of classes. The Nelson Institute requires all of its new,
inexperienced TAs to attend one of the following workshop series:
College of Letters and
Science's TA Workshop for TAs at all levels
College of
Engineering New Educator's Orientation (NEO) for new TAs
College of
Engineering Teaching Improvement Program (TIP) for continuing TAs