Get financial support for your master's or Ph.D.
Teaching and Research Assistantships can lighten the load
Science students can pay for their education and support themselves — if not always in grand style — without incurring any educational debt. Students who do incur some debt view their education as an investment in themselves and in their future career in science. It is important to note that most master's and doctoral students in science obtain funding through a combination of research assistantships (RAs), teaching assistantships (TAs), fellowships and other means. This can make a graduate degree in science more accessible and affordable to students from a wide range of socioeconomic backgrounds.
According to a recent National Science Foundation report, around 70 percent of full-time STEM graduate students that primarily received federal government funding received RAs, which come from research grants. TAs and fellowships are mainly institutionally funded, whereas nearly half of RAs are funded through federal academic research grants.
Many students pick up a TA position early in their graduate studies while they are still taking classes and before they have begun their thesis projects. TAs involve teaching or assisting undergraduate classes and also include other obligations such as grading papers and meeting students during office hours to answer questions. Some teaching assistants teach recitation sessions, often a supplementary lecture or Q&A session associated with larger lecture courses.



