Applicants to Rutgers SoE should research the types of fellowships or other types of financial support that may be available to them. Here, we describe the types of financial support available to graduate students in engineering. Please note that financial support decisions are made by the graduate programs that admit you. The Office of Graduate Education in Engineering, the Graduate School, or the Office of Graduate and Professional Admissions do not make financial aid decisions.
Financial aid can be in one of these forms:
- Research Assistantship. If you are offered a research assistantship, you will be contacted by the faculty member whose research funding will pay for your assistantship. Note that if you accept an offer for a research assistantship, you have in essence selected your adviser in graduate school. A research assistant is expected to do research related duties in conjunction with the research project that is supporting the assistantship.
- Teaching Assistantship. The chair of the department to which you have been admitted will contact you offering this support. In general, teaching assistants are expected to work 15 hours a week to fulfill their teaching duties. Such duties include grading of homework and projects, assistance in proctoring and grading exams, as well as teaching of laboratory and recitation sections.
- A Fellowship Given by Rutgers. In general, all students admitted to a graduate program in SOE are considered for departmental or university-wide fellowship awards. These fellowships are awarded on a highly competitive basis. In general, recipients of fellowships are not expected to perform any duties in return for their fellowships. Departments in the SOE have a limited number of such fellowships, which are funded by departmental endowments, School of Engineering, or by the Graduate School. These fellowships are usually limited to one or two years.
- A Fellowship Outside of Rutgers. You apply for these fellowships directly. Most of these fellowships require U.S. citizenship. Some require a joint proposal with a faculty member (check the details carefully). We strongly encourage all applicants who are eligible to apply for these fellowships. Apply early. Given below is a partial listing of fellowships of interest to engineering students (also contact the web site of the graduate program to which you are applying for more opportunities): Printed information on many fellowships is sent to all universities each year, usually in the fall. Please check your bulletin board or with your school's financial aid office. You may also find information at the Financial Aid Information Page to be of interest.
- American Society of Engineering Education Fellowship Home PageAmerican Society of Engineering Education SMART Fellowship
- American Society of Civil Engineering Fellowships
- AT&T Internships and Fellowships
- AAUW (American Association of University Women) Fellowships
- Department of Energy Computational Science Fellowships
- Department Homeland Security Graduate Fellowships
- Fannie and John Hertz Foundation Fellowships
- Ford Foundation Minority Fellowships
- Gates Millennium Scholars
- GEM Fellowships for underrepresented minorities
- The Institute for International Education (resources for foreign students)
- Bell Labs Graduate Research Fellowship Program
- NASA Graduate Student Researchers Program
- National Defense Science and Engineering Grants
- National Center for Environmental Research
- National Science Foundation Fellowships
- Nuclear Regulatory Commission Graduate Fellowships
- Oak Ridge Associated Universities
- Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
- Whitaker Foundation
- Amelia Earhart Fellowship
- Please Note: The financial aid awards are made solely by the department you applied to and NOT by the School of Engineering, the Graduate School, or the Office of Graduate and Professional Admissions. Please do not contact them to find out if you have received financial aid.