Monthly Archives: December 2019

Spring 2020 Undergraduate Research Fellowships

Spring 2020 Undergraduate Research Fellowshipsprovide up to $1,000 to support expenses for independent research or creative activity in any major.
Sponsored by the Office of the Vice President for Research and the academic colleges, URF awards cover costs associated with academic research projects proposed and written by student applicants and undertaken with the supervision of a faculty member. Awards are made in the fall and spring through the Office of Undergraduate Research.
The spring 2020 URF deadline is 11:59 p.m. Monday, Feb. 3. Students conducting independent research are invited to learn more about the award (including the application process, eligibility, and writing tips) and access the online application. More info about other sources for student research funding can be found on the OUR scholarships page.
Students can learn more about the application process at our URF info sessions Friday, Jan. 24 (10 a.m.) and Thursday, Jan. 30 (1 p.m.) in FAC 4.

Coro Southern California’s Fellowship Program in Public Affairs

 Coro Southern California’s Fellowship Program in Public Affairs

 

Students graduating in Fall 19 or Spring 20 who are interested in Public Affairs should consider applying for the Coro Southern California’s Fellowship Program in Public Affairs. This might be a good fit especially for students who have participated in the Archer Fellowship.

It is a graduate-level fellowship that is a 9-month transformational leadership program in public affairs that provides fellows with a diverse range of practical, cross-sector experiences to become effective leaders. Each year, Coro Southern California selects 12 fellows from a national selection process to engage in one of the most unique and transformative group learning experiences. Meet the current class of fellows in my Southern California cohort here.

 

Fellows use the city as a classroom while participating in five high-level cross-sector placements: the public sector, the private sector (business), nonprofits/philanthropy, labor organizations, and electoral politics. Supplementary to the placements, fellows also participate in focus weeks, retreats, and bi-weekly seminars for further learning.

 

It is a rigorous program for future leaders in some of the nation’s largest cities, like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, and New York City. Candidates must demonstrate exemplary dedication to creating change through responsible and ethical governance and leadership. Ideal candidates must also be willing to assume the role of a learner and observer, while reflecting upon their own visions for society, in the various settings the program provides to build a true understanding of how these cities operate to serve a vast, complex constituency.

 

Fellows will have the opportunity to interface with Coro’s network through various meetings and events; this network includes some of the most influential community leaders. In addition, the expansive Coro alumni network provides resources and support to fellows as they build their careers.

 

The application is online. Note that deadlines are soon approaching.

Texas Student Research Showdown

The Office of Undergraduate Research invites undergraduates to submit a 2-minute research video and compete for $6,500 in the Texas Student Research Showdown.

The Texas Student Research Showdown is a research communication competition for undergraduate researchers at The University of Texas at Austin. Student researchers create videos explaining their research or creative activity to a general audience. As selected by a panel of faculty judges, the top two videos in two categories (arts, humanities, and social sciences; science, technology, and engineering) will receive $2000 and $750 awards, and an “audience choice” winner selected by UT students will receive $1000. Student awards are provided through the generous support of Kimberly and Scott Martin.

The competition is open to any UT undergraduate involved in research or creative activity in any major. Submissions reflecting group projects, research outside the STEM fields, and thesis-work-in-progress are particularly encouraged.

What are the 2020 deadlines? 
Feb. 18: Video submissions close
March 10: Winners announced at reception

Interested students can read the full rules and submit their information through our online submission form.

Athletics Student Services Job Postings

Student tutors may be undergrads (at least juniors) or grad students. Tutors work between 5 and 19 hours and the schedule is flexible. Pay is based on experience and education and starts at $12.50 for undergrads and $14.50 for grad students. Students can apply by sending a resume, cover letter, and four academic or professional references (including name, title, relationship, and email address) to:  Jobs.StudentServices@athletics.utexas.edu

 

Latin American Scholarship Opportunity

The Pan American Round Table of Austin offers one $2,000 scholarship to a currently enrolled (AY 2019-20) junior or senior UT Austin undergraduate from Latin America. It is called the Jeannie Hunter Hackett Memorial Scholarship. The deadline to apply is in March 9, 2020.

Link to info is here: https://austinpanam.com/scholarships/

Link to the application itself is here: https://form.jotform.com/81076667684167

2020 Texas Student Research Showdown

The Texas Student Research Showdown is a video competition for undergraduate researchers at The University of Texas at Austin. Student researchers create videos communicating their research or creative activity to a general audience. As selected by a panel of faculty judges, the top two videos in two categories (arts, humanities, and social sciences; science, technology, and engineering) will receive $2000 and $750 awards, and an “audience choice” winner selected by UT students will receive $1000. Student awards are provided through the generous support of Kimberly and Scott Martin.

The Showdown is open to any UT undergraduate involved in research or creative activity in any major. Your work can be an independent project, a team project, or a collaboration with a professor to which you have made substantive contributions. Even if your project is still in progress, we encourage you to consider a submission.

Feb. 18: Video submissions close
March 10: Winners announced at reception

To enter, read the full rules and submit your information through our online submission form.

GSC Hot Chocolate Bar

Feeling stressed before finals? Come by the GSC to relax and treat yourself.

NEXT Tuesday, 12/10 
12-3 PM 
Gender and Sexuality Center (SAC 2.112.) 
2201 Speedway, Austin, TX 78712

Join us for a FREE hot chocolate bar (with marshmallows, and whipped cream) we will also have coffee, tea, and snacks, while they last. There will be vegan options, as well! Hope to see you there!

Bittersafe Poetry Submission

Every soul has a story, and too many stories are never told. The beautiful thing about humans is they are and forever will be continually and uniquely beautiful.

There are no “un-creative” people; there are simply unshared songs, unshaped stories, and unseen melodies.

Please lend your voice to a “crowd-sourced” poetry anthology — either anonymously, under pseudonym, or under your own name — by submitting at least four of your best or favorite poems by December 15th, 2019. Length and subject of your choosing. All profit will be gifted to Austin’s SAFE Alliance. But, maybe, the greater gift will be letting your story see the light.

Email submissions to: bittersafepoetry@gmail.com

For waiver/disclosure in English, Spanish, and ASL: 
https://laneonfire.com/bittersafe/

We want to donate all of profits from the book to The SAFE Alliance (safeaustin.org).