Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships

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Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships

The Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships (CGS) program is designed to attract and retain world-class doctoral students by supporting students who demonstrate both leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in graduate studies in the social sciences and humanities, natural sciences and engineering, and health-related fields. Canadian citizens, permanent residents of Canada, and international students are eligible to be nominated for a Vanier Scholarship, which is valued at $50,000 per year for up to three years.

The application is completed online on ResearchNet: https://www.researchnet-recherchenet.ca/rnr16/LoginServlet

UBC Vanier application deadline: 12 noon (PT – Vancouver time) on Thursday, August 31 2023
Graduate program nomination deadline: 4:00 pm PT on Tuesday, September 19 2023

Note: Vanier CGS requires official transcripts – unofficial transcripts are not accepted for non-UBC transcripts.  For details on transcript requrements, applicants are recommended to review our Vanier webpage (section ‘ Application Procedures’).

For more information, including eligibility requirements, application procedures, and nomination procedures, please visit our Vanier webpage: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/vanier-scholarship.

Important to note:

  • Equity, Diversity and Inclusion:  The Vanier CGS program encourages equity, diversity and inclusion, as part of the Tri-Agency’s broader commitment to excellence in research and research training in Canada. Resources for applicants, institutions, referees and the selection committees are available at: http://www.vanier.gc.ca/en/equity_diversity_inclusion-equite_diversite_inclusion.html. Applicants are encouraged to review the resources before they begin writing their application.
  • Self-Identification of Indigenous (First Nations, Inuit, and/or Métis) Applicants: Additional funding allocations may be made available to the University to accommodate applicants who self-identify as Indigenous (First Nations, Inuit, and/or Metis). Applicants who choose to self-identify as Indigenous (First Nations, Inuit, and/or Metis) should complete the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship (Vanier CGS) Voluntary Self Identification Form (https://vanier.gc.ca/en/pdf/vanier_cgs-besc_vanier_indigenous_self-identification_form-bil.pdf) and upload it within their application.

 

GradUpdate – CGS-D Proposal Writing, The Art of Saying No, Resilience: Coping Strategies for Anxiety and Stress, and more

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GradUpdate

In this issue, CGS-D Proposal Writing, The Art of Saying No, Resilience: Coping Strategies for Anxiety and Stress, and more.

Seats available

Harnessing your Resilience: Coping Strategies for Anxiety and Stress in Grad School and beyond
In person | Thursday, Jul 13 | 1:30 – 4:30 pm Register

Events and Opportunities

A selection of upcoming events are highlighted below.  Visit  community.grad.ubc.ca and grad.ubc.ca/current-students/professional-development for our full events calendar.

ACADEMIC

The Art of Saying No
The target audience for this session is faculty, and it will discuss how to make decisions on saying yes or no to academic opportunities.
Sign up with UBC’s subscription, then register.

RESEARCH

Join tables in R
Online | Thursday, Jul 13 | 11 am – 12:00 pm Register

TEACHING

Representing Open Education Work in Reappointment, Tenure and Promotion Processes
Online | Wednesday, Jul 12 | 10 – 11:30 am
This session is for faculty members who are instructors. If you are a PhD nearing an academic position, join this discussion on how you can represent your open education work.
Part of the Program for Open Scholarship and Education (POSE) Register.
Browse all POSE events.

WRITING AND COMMUNICATION

CGS-D Proposal: Crafting a Compelling Research Story
Hybrid | Wednesday, Jul 12 | 10 am – 12 pm
Register.

JUNE 28 2:00 – 3:00 Dekaban Scholar Seminar

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Dekaban Scholar Seminar

Please join Prof. Maciej Oziembłowski from University of Wrocław, Poland, who is here as part of the Dekaban Foundation programme for a Scientific Seminar on “Indigenous plant bioactive characterization, extraction and formulation research at University of Wrocław” in FNH 140 from 2:00-3:00pm Wednesday 28th June 2023

Anubhav Pratap-Singh

Help to Support UBC Undergraduate Research

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Happy Friday!

We are emailing on behalf of the AMS club, Undergraduate Research Opportunities (URO), to inquire as to whether you would be interested in participating as a mentor in the Research EXperience Program (REX).

What is REX?

REX is a six month long program designed to help undergraduate students build essential research skills through a proposed research project (no results required). The skills acquired by the prospective students include:

  •         Formulating research questions or topic
  •         Understanding how to perform literature reviews
  •         Synthesizing and performing a research project
  •         Creating & printing a research poster
  •         Learning how to present a research poster

As a REX mentor you will guide 2-4 undergraduates through a mini proposed research project (no results required) within your field of expertise. Your mentee will present at a local undergraduate conference or publish their project in a local undergraduate journal. URO provides workshops on the basics of research methodology to ease the students’ transition into the program. As a mentor, you will take a supervisory role in the students’ projects, and it is recommended you commit a minimum of 4 hours each month for 6 months (October to March).

For an undergraduate, finding a chance to work/volunteer in a given field of research can be very difficult. REX seeks to help undergraduates experiment with research earlier in their careers and make a more informed decision about graduate school. If this opportunity interests you and you would like to become a mentor, please complete the initial registration form here. (This is NOT the final registration. The final registration and bio submission opens in early August and will confirm your registration in the program for this year.)

Further information

Last year’s REX Mentor Brochure

REX website

If you have any questions, comments or other inquiries please do not hesitate to contact us at rex.uro.ubc@gmail.com. Thank you for your time and consideration. We look forward to hearing from you!

Sincerely,
Matthew Chung
REX Committee Co-Chair
UBC Undergraduate Research Opportunities AMS Student Nest, Room 3302H

uroubc.com | fb.com/uro.ubc

LFS Graduate Student Travel Awards

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Good afternoon:

I hope you’ve all been enjoying your summer so far.

You’ve been keeping me busy with your travel award applications!  It’s wonderful to see so many of our graduate students once again attending conferences and getting a chance to present your research and network with colleagues and peers.

I want to remind you that when you submit your applications, please make sure you include the total costs of the conference.  You need to submit receipts up to $1500 for reimbursement, but the total cost is really important.  Later this summer, I’ll be reviewing the funding levels for next year’s travel award.  If I’m going to propose increasing the award value, then I need data to support that recommendation.  As an example, up until 2015, our LFS GSTA funding levels were 1 award per program, $400 MSc and $600 PhD.  When the award value increased to $1500 in 2015W, up until last year, the average award was approximately $1250.  For 2022W, the average costs to students to attend a conference were approximately $2,028.00. I’d say that’s a substantial increase.   I’ll likely be sending out a Qualtrics survey within the next couple of weeks to get your feedback on funding levels for the LFS Graduate Student Travel Award.  Again, your feedback will be very helpful.

As always, please don’t hesitate to let me know if you have any questions.

Shelley

Shelley Small
Administrative Manager, Graduate & Postdoctoral Studies