Here are some resources:
Interested in graduate school and want to learn more about the process? Please feel free to join our workshop series this fall! Find out zoom information to the right and please feel free to reach out to me at mckaylameier@ufl.edu for more information.
Open positions in Mineralogy, Petrology, and Volcanology: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1adv3ovhg0c-TIby_-dOEUJI9xzqh77mi/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=118299529398379869430&rtpof=true&sd=true
Open positions in Planetary Science: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12yRS2c9-eW4DGLcb3cPgZU759gll_QZjnDk-ptlh3k4/htmlview
Open positions in Earth and Environmental Science: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Lq4UcVCvQGQflgizn8oJuHoZmz3ytCkqmVYpmQkvprk/edit?usp=sharing
Unsure of exactly which area of the field you want to go into? Pursuing a Master's might be a great step to determine your next career steps! A Master’s degree is a 2-3 year program based around 1 project. An MS degree is good for if you aren’t 100% sure about your choice of study area or aren’t planning to go into academia.
A Ph.D. is a great aim for students coming out of a Bachelors or Masters who know which field they want to continue working on as their career. A doctoral degree typically lasts around 5 years but can range between 3-9 years (depending on if you already have a MS, how wide of a project you are working on). The degree typically has one main project that includes smaller projects within it (3-4 chapters). This is the typical degree required to go into academia and will provide you with a solid background in a specified area.
The graduate school application process can be a very taxing process, so below are some summaries and tips for what to expect.
Within the planetary and geosciences programs, it is standard to reach out to potential advisors (in august-november before application deadlines). Some programs even require this and many researchers won’t even look at applicants who don’t contact them beforehand! Contacting possible advisors helps you learn a lot about the program while also getting your foot in the door. You want to put your best foot forward and see if they have any projects that fit what you want to do. This also helps the advisor grasp which of their projects would be best for you.
Tips for drafting an email to potential advisors:
Most graduate school applications require 3 letters of recommendation, with positions for up to 5 letters to be received. August-october before application deadlines is a good time to start asking for letters of recommendation.
Who can write you a letter?
Professors, research advisors, academic advisors, bosses, internship advisors, etc.
Tips for letters of recommendation:
Keeping organized makes the graduate application process much less stressful and helps you accomplish tasks much easier. For creating an outline of the graduate school process, use a tool that works best for your planning style (word documents, spreadsheets, gantt charts, etc.).
To make a deadline schedule, you should include each thing below for every school of interest:
Tips for staying on schedule:
When deciding where to go for your graduate education, it is important that funding for you is covered. You should not have to take out loans to fund your graduate career!
When discussing with potential advisors, make sure to ask:
How to know if you can afford the school:
Other ways to fund your education: Fellowships!
For more funding opportunities, additional fellowships and scholarships are listed below.
Have a good advisor-advisee relationship is vital to making the most of your graduate career. Finding the right advisor is a difficult process where you have to know what does and doesn't work for you.
When looking for an advisor, ask yourself:
Tips for finding the advisor for you:
Finding a program that fits your needs and expectations is important to the success of your graduate career. Your program should be a community that helps and promotes you and your research. For longer degrees (Ph.D.), make sure you are moving to a place that works for your needs.
Tips for picking the program:
Where ever you decide to go, the #1 thing to do is make your new home your place to be. Find communities and activities that fulfill your needs outside of your schooling.
Fellowships
NASA Future Investigators In NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology: 3 years of funding
https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/funding/future-investigators-in-nasa-earth-and-space-sci-3/
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program: 3 years of funding (including tuition and fees)
https://www.nsfgrfp.org/
Ford Foundation Fellowship Program: 3 years of funding
https://sites.nationalacademies.org/PGA/FordFellowships/index.htm
AMS Graduate Fellowship: 1 year of funding
https://www.ametsoc.org/index.cfm/ams/information-for/students/ams-scholarships-and-fellowships/ams-graduate-fellowships/
NDSEG Graduate Fellowship Program: 3 years of funding
Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship: Renewable funding for up to four years
Space Grants and Fellowships: Most states have a Space Grant system that provides grants or 1-year fellowships to students
https://spacegrant.org/
Amelia Earhart Fellowship: 1 year of partial funding for women pursuing a doctoral degree in aerospace engineering and/or planetary science
Graduate Women in Science National Fellowship Program: 1 year of partial funding for women identifying, gender-fluid, or non-binary students in STEM
Scholarships and Grants
Geological Society of America Graduate Student Research Grants
https://www.geosociety.org/GSA/grants/gradgrants.aspx
American Geophysical Union Student Grants
Mineralogical Society of America Grant for Research in Mineralogy and Petrology, and Crystallography
http://www.minsocam.org/msa/Awards/Min_Pet_Award.html/
http://www.minsocam.org/msa/awards/crystallography_award.html
International Association of Geochemistry Research Grants for PhD Students
Space Generation Advisory Council
https://spacegeneration.org/scholarships
Association for Women Geoscientists GEOID Scholarship
MAES Scholarship for Latinx/Hispanic researchers pursuing a higher education in STEM
Sigma Xi Grant in Aid of Research
https://www.sigmaxi.org/programs/grants-in-aid-of-research/apply
The Editing Press Laura Bassi Scholarship for funding research publications
https://editing.press/bassi
Additional Funding Opportunities
https://genatjsg.org/graduate-funding
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1MQuuXFMgWSf7J77jFXBkw_i2u9zZKtJD6O14KIs2C2Y/edit?usp=sharing
Internships
(Graduate and Undergraduate)
NASA Pathways Internships: internships for students working on a long-term position with NASA
Lunar and Planetary Institute Internship Program: Summer internships for undergraduate and graduate students
NASA Academy: Paid internship for addressing a central research project on a dynamic team of a variety of expertise
NASA STEM Gateway Internships: centralized list of NASA internships for a variety of NASA facilities
NASA L'Space Academy: STEM Undergraduate student online program
SETI Institute Research Experience of Undergraduates: Paid internship for undergraduate students interested planetary science
Zed Factor Fellowship: Internship program for underrepresented background students in aerospace
https://zedfactorfellowship.org/apply
Patti Grace Smith Fellowship: Internship program for Black and African-American undergraduate students in aerospace
https://www.pgsfellowship.org/apply
Brooke Owens Fellowship: Internship program for gender minority undergraduate students
http://www.brookeowensfellowship.org/apply
Matthew Isakowitz Fellowship Program: A paid summer internship program at commercial spaceflight companies
https://www.matthewisakowitzfellowship.org/about
Field Courses
NSF GeoSPACE Field Course: planetary volcanology in-person and remote field course for undergraduate and graduate students
Center for Lunar Science and Exploration Field Training and Research Program at Meteor Crater
https://www.lpi.usra.edu/exploration/mcFieldCamp/?view=program
Center for Lunar Science and Exploration Field Training and Research Program in the San Francisco Volcanic Field
https://www.lpi.usra.edu/exploration/sfvfFieldCamp/?view=program
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