Assistantships and Stipends 
High-achieving graduate students at the master's and doctoral level may qualify for a graduate assistantship - monetary awards combined with tutoring, grading or lab support.
 

Assistantships and Stipends 


This page features all the information you will need to apply:


CDM Graduate Funding Opportunities 


Assistantships are tuition and/or monetary awards based on academic merit, experience in the field, and recommendations. An assistantship typically requires the recipient to perform some service for the School of CDM such as tutoring, grading or lab support. The school of CDM awards two kinds of assistantships:

Graduate Assistantships:
 Intended for any degree-seeking (PhD, MS, MA and MFA) graduate student in the school of CDM. A graduate assistantship may include tuition awards for one or more courses per quarter and a small stipend (not sufficient to satisfy the financial requirement for a student visa). Full graduate assistant awards require that the student works 20 hours per week and include two course tuition waivers. Partial awards require that the student works 10 hours per week and include one course tuition waiver.

Ph.D. Stipends: Intended for full-time students pursuing a PhD in the College of CDM. All PhD stipends include tuition awards for two courses per quarter plus a living stipend (sufficient to satisfy the financial requirement needed to obtain a student visa). This award requires that the student works 20 hours per week (typically, tutoring or lab support). PhD stipends are primarily intended for new PhD students starting in the fall quarter, and the award decisions are made at the same time that fall quarter admissions decisions are made. However, current PhD students without funding may also apply.


What Types Of Duties Are Assigned To Graduate Assistants?

Masters’ students are typically assigned tutoring, grading or lab support. Doctoral students may be involved in tutoring, technical support, lab management, or research. Students must re-apply every year.


How To Apply For A Graduate Assistantship?


You may apply only if you are a degree-seeking student. Your status is considered "degree-seeking" if: 

  • You have been admitted as a PhD student at CDM
  • You are pursuing an MS, MA or MFA and you have completed the prerequisite phase.

Newly admitted students should schedule a Prerequisite Phase Assessment with a faculty advisor before they apply for a graduate assistantship.

Part 1: Online Application 
CDM is not accepting graduate assistantship applications at this time.   Please revisit this site for more information.  The typical application period is in early spring.

Part 2: Recommendations
Current CDM students must request two recommendations from CDM faculty members, who MUST submit all recommendations online. Students should request recommendations verbally or through e-mail and should give the faculty member appropriate lead-time to submit the recommendation before the deadline. If a faculty member has not confirmed that he or she will submit a recommendation, the student is urged to seek another faculty recommendation. You can check to see if a recommendation has been made through MyCDM.

New or recently admitted students who have not spent much or any time at DePaul in classes should use the downloadable faculty recommendation form. Downloadable recommendation forms are only available to applicants after submitting the assistantship application. The paper recommendation forms should be given to the faculty at the school where the previous degree was earned.

Part 3: Interview
After you have submitted your application, you may be contacted and invited for a short interview with a faculty. The goal of this interview will be to assess your technical expertise and communication skills (for tutoring duties).


How To Apply For A PhD Stipend?


If you are applying to the PhD program, you should submit a separate application form requesting financial aid. The stipend application form must be submitted by the January deadline for fall admission. Notice that only applicants for fall admission will be considered for financial aid.

Current PhD students without a PhD stipend can apply for financial aid by submitting the stipend application form before the January deadline for fall quarter admission. In addition to the stipend application form, the continuing PhD students should also submit:

  • A resume summarizing the research activities and experience to date
  • 3 recommendation letters , including one from the PhD thesis advisor
  • personal statement describing accomplishments during the years the student has been in the program and the student’s research plans for the following years
  • And a list of publications and conference presentations .

Students awarded a PhD stipend will receive funds for a maximum period of five years, including periods funded by other grants.


How To Improve My Chances?


The graduate assistantships are extremely competitive. We reject many students who have high (or even perfect) grade point averages. Most graduate assistants will perform tutoring, grading or lab support duties. Therefore, in our selection, we will tend to focus on the student's technical expertise and potential as a tutor. We give a lot of weight to excellent letters of recommendation that explicitly discuss the student's technical expertise and potential as a tutor. 


When Will I Be Notified?


Prior to the start of the upcoming quarter, you will be notified via e-mail on the result of your application. 

Why Should I Consider An Assistantship? 

"My graduate assistantship is a great way to learn more about my degree and the school of CDM, and also provides excellent networking opportunities with faculty advisors in my program of study. Working closer with the faculty and staff can only help me in my career search and advancement." Nolan Bona - Digital Cinema, CDM Advising Office, 2007-2008 Academic Year

"What I enjoy most about being a CDM tutor is the diversity of programs that we cover. The wide range of questions I get from students makes things interesting and keeps me sharp." Marko Petrovic - Computer Graphics and Animation, CDM Tutor, 2007-2008 Academic Year

"I choose to be a CDM tutor as part of my graduate assistantship because I like to help other CDM students specially in programming and logic problems. In addition, it helps me refresh my memory on various topics and reinforce concepts and my experience." Zein Wali - Computer Information and Network Security, CDM Tutor, 2007-2008 Academic Year