by jtap114 » Thu Nov 30, 2017 6:11 pm
I will start grad school Fall 2018 in either aerospace engineering or mechanical engineering depending on where I go. I have already been accepted to several schools, but have not yet decided where I will attend. I only found out about the SMART program recently. The application is due tomorrow and I have everything done, but need some advice about a few things:
1.) I currently do not know if I will continue on for a PhD or end with the MS. I am about 65% sure I will do the PhD. Should I indicate PhD or MS as my degree goal on the SMART application?
2.) What happens if I indicate MS (2 years), am awarded the scholarship, then decide I want to continue on to the PhD (another 2-3 years)? Would I be able to have the SMART scholarship for my MS, then put off my service obligation until after I finish my PhD? so the timeline would look like: 2 years for MS with SMART
2-3 years for PhD NOT with SMART
2 years DoD service to "pay back" the 2 years for MS
then whatever I want.
3.) What happens If I indicate PhD (5 years), am awarded the scholarship, then decide I want to leave with the MS after only 2 years? Can I end my scholarship early and only serve with the DoD for the 2 years it took to get the MS?
4.) Is it better the list preferred sponsoring facilities or not? There are SO MANY and I would be very happy with more than 3. If I list 3 and none of them want me, there are still many others I would be happy with, but those others will see I did not list them so then they may not want me either.
5.) Is it bad to list multiple subdisciplines? Within aero/mech engineering, I am interested in physical dynamics and this has applications to dynamics & control, astrodynamics, and structural dynamics. Should I only indicate one of these or is it fine to list all three?
Any help with any of these questions would be greatly appreciated. I have the application done and it is due tomorrow. I'm just not sure if I should indicate MS or PhD, if I should list sponsoring facilities or not and if I should limit myself to one subdiscipline.
I will start grad school Fall 2018 in either aerospace engineering or mechanical engineering depending on where I go. I have already been accepted to several schools, but have not yet decided where I will attend. I only found out about the SMART program recently. The application is due tomorrow and I have everything done, but need some advice about a few things:
1.) I currently do not know if I will continue on for a PhD or end with the MS. I am about 65% sure I will do the PhD. Should I indicate PhD or MS as my degree goal on the SMART application?
2.) What happens if I indicate MS (2 years), am awarded the scholarship, then decide I want to continue on to the PhD (another 2-3 years)? Would I be able to have the SMART scholarship for my MS, then put off my service obligation until after I finish my PhD? so the timeline would look like: 2 years for MS with SMART
2-3 years for PhD NOT with SMART
2 years DoD service to "pay back" the 2 years for MS
then whatever I want.
3.) What happens If I indicate PhD (5 years), am awarded the scholarship, then decide I want to leave with the MS after only 2 years? Can I end my scholarship early and only serve with the DoD for the 2 years it took to get the MS?
4.) Is it better the list preferred sponsoring facilities or not? There are SO MANY and I would be very happy with more than 3. If I list 3 and none of them want me, there are still many others I would be happy with, but those others will see I did not list them so then they may not want me either.
5.) Is it bad to list multiple subdisciplines? Within aero/mech engineering, I am interested in physical dynamics and this has applications to dynamics & control, astrodynamics, and structural dynamics. Should I only indicate one of these or is it fine to list all three?
Any help with any of these questions would be greatly appreciated. I have the application done and it is due tomorrow. I'm just not sure if I should indicate MS or PhD, if I should list sponsoring facilities or not and if I should limit myself to one subdiscipline.