Financial Aid

The Department controls several forms of financial aid. All aid that comes directly from the department is based on merit, rather than financial need. Need-based aid, such as student loans and work study eligibility, is administered by the University’s Financial Aid Office.

Teaching Assistantships and Tuition Scholarships

Each year, the College of Liberal Arts makes available to us a number of Teaching Assistantships. Teaching Assistants receive a living stipend and pay no tuition, though they are required to pay student fees. First- and second-year Assistants usually lead discussion sections of large lecture classes. Assistants with more experience often teach their own sections of either HIST 405, Early American History, or HIST 406, Modern U.S. History. Occasionally, if the Department’s teaching load permits, we are able to assign a T.A. to a semester-long internship at a museum or other outside institution or to work on a special project of interest to the Department. Teaching Assistants take two courses while they teach. Note: All teaching assistants are required to take HIST 970, Graduate Seminar in Teaching History. This is a 2-credit course and may be taken in addition to the other two courses.

The Graduate School makes available to the Department a small number of tuition scholarships each year. These cover all tuition but not fees; recipients must register for a full load, usually three courses.

How Assistantships and Scholarships are Awarded

The Graduate Committee, which is chaired by the Graduate Director, is responsible for making recommendations to the Faculty on aid awards. Student members of the Graduate committee do not vote on aid to current students, nor do they have access to current student files. The Committee makes its decisions each spring for the following academic year. Once a student receives aid, that aid is committed for up to four years. (See below for an explanation of these rules). The number of new awards available, then, depends on the number of current recipients who have either completed their degrees, used up their eligibility, or voluntarily given up aid. The Department then usually divides the available aid between current students and new students who have been admitted for the next academic year. Students who want to be considered for aid need to inform the Graduate Director sometime in January or early February. As the basis for decisions, the committee considers all available material on student academic work. The most important of these for current students are the reports that each faculty member fills out for each graduate student he or she has taught in the previous semester.

Terms of Eligibility

The Department has set guidelines for terms of eligibility, which can be from two to four years. In deciding on these terms, the Department has tried to balance a number of goals, some of which are competing with each other: 1) making aid available to as many students as possible; 2) making aid available for a long enough period of time that students can pursue a consistent and predictable course of study; 3) encouraging students to complete their degrees in a timely fashion; 4) rewarding current students who have performed at a high level; 5) recruiting high quality new students each year.

This has been translated into the following specific guidelines:

  1. We divide newly-available aid roughly equally between current and incoming students.
  2. We try to ensure that all Ph.D. students who want to teach can serve at least two years as Teaching Assistants. The awarding of aid to students who enter the Ph.D. program without aid is made on a competitive basis, subject to the Graduate Committee’s approval.
  3. We consider both an Assistantship and a scholarship as equals when we determine the number of years of total eligibility.
  4. As long as students progress at a normal rate, aid will be renewed at least at the same level for each year of their terms of eligibility.
  5. M.A. students are eligible for up to two and one-half years of support if their M.A. degree is terminal, up to three years if they plan to continue on to the Ph.D.
  6. Ph.D. students are eligible for up to four years for new students or students who receive awards before completing the M.A. (The M.A. portion counts toward the four-year maximum.)
  7. Ph.D. students are eligible for three years of support if they first receive aid after earning an M.A., but before taking the Ph.D. comprehensive exams. (Exception: new students who enter the Ph.D. programs with an M.A. are eligible for four years.)
  8. Ph.D. students are eligible for two years of support if they first receive aid after passing the Ph.D. comprehensive exams.

University Support

There are several potential sources of support for graduate research at UNH:

  • Part-time students can apply each semester for a tuition scholarship. The scholarship usually provides the equivalent of one graduate-level course at the in-state rate. Applications are usually made available about midway through each semester for those wishing to apply for the following semester.
  • Teaching Assistants are eligible to apply for summer T.A. Fellowships to support research projects. The fellowships provide stipends at the T.A. rate for about six weeks during the summer.
  • Ph.D. students who are well-advanced on their dissertation research can apply for Dissertation Year Fellowships from the Graduate School. These fellowships provide a one-year stipend, at about the T.A. rate, but do not require any teaching. They are intended to finance the final year of dissertation writing.
  • Other sources in the University offer grants for expenses. The Graduate school, the Humanities Center and the Institute for Policy and Social Science Research have competitions for grants to defer research expenses. The Graduate school subsidizes travel to conferences for students who are presenting papers.
  • Outside Sources of Funds: While support for history graduate study is by no means plentiful, there are a number of sources that offer support, from small expense grants to relatively handsome living stipends. Several of our students have won grants or fellowships from these highly-competitive programs. Most are listed and briefly described in Grants, Prizes, and Fellowships of Interest to Historians, an annual publication kept in the History Department Office. The most significant awards are usually limited to doctoral-level students. Every Ph.D. student should spend time identifying potential sources of support for her or his project, and plan to apply for appropriate grants and fellowships

Learn more about financial aid opportunities available through the Graduate School.