Financial Support
All students accepted into the PhD program will receive funding in the form of entrance scholarships and graduate teaching assistantships. In addition, students are encouraged to apply for competitive internal and external scholarships and awards, as well graduate research assistantships.
Graduate Teaching Assistantships (GTAs)
PhD students are eligible for graduate teaching assistantships. Once GTA positions have been assigned, the student must meet with the instructor who will be teaching the course to discuss the expectations of the position and negotiate its terms. The department attempts to assign graduate teaching assistants to courses for which they are most suited.
Graduate Teaching Assistantship Contracts
Every graduate teaching assistant and course instructor must submit a form entitled “Assignment of Work Agreement” which outlines the expectations of the student during the assistantship and the amount of time to be spent on those expectations. The GTA’s duties should be as detailed as possible, and the form must be submitted to the Graduate Program Assistant within seven days of the commencement of employment. Students and instructors should each keep a copy of the work agreement form. The contract should be followed as closely as possible throughout the semester.
Graduate teaching assistants are expected to work 140 hours over approximately 14 weeks. Half appointments are for 70 hours over approximately 14 weeks. If your allocated hours differ considerably from that noted in your Assignment of Work Agreement, please inform the course instructor as soon as possible.
Graduate teaching assistants are unionized. Copies of the collective agreement between the University and the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) are available on the Employee Groups & Agreements page.
If there are any problems with graduate teaching assistant pay, please check with Student Financial Services, located in the University Centre.
Graduate Research Assistantships (GRAs)
Graduate students may be supported through payment from research grants received by faculty members or from other sources that support research in which graduate students can participate.
Sessional Appointments
Doctoral candidates may have an opportunity to teach a course as a sessional as part of their program requirements after they have completed their data collection. You may not hold a GTA and sessional appointment in the same semester, so your GTA position will be moved to another semester.
Scholarships and Awards
There are several departmental awards, some of which require an application:
- Jean, Ian and Sook-Hee Kim Memorial Prize
- Joanne Duncan-Robinson Conference Research Travel Grant
- Koji Victor Ujimoto Graduate Scholarship
- Sid Gilbert Graduate Research Prize
- Wilda M. Blacklock Scholarship
For more information on these awards, visit the U of G Graduate Award Search.
Departmental Conference Travel and Research Grants
The department has funds to assist graduate students who are required to travel to present their thesis/dissertation research at an academic conference or to conduct degree-related research. Only students who are presenting a paper that is subject to some form of vetting and has been accepted for presentation OR students who are conducting thesis or dissertation research to fulfill requirements of MA or PhD programs in our department will be considered for funding. The application guidelines are available from the Graduate Program Assistant
External Funding
Students are encouraged to investigate opportunities for external funding such as the Ontario Graduate Scholarship, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Scholarships, and Canadian International Development Agency Scholarships.
For information on these and other scholarships, fellowships, grants and bursaries, please visit the Graduate Studies website.