by DifferentGuest » Mon Jul 31, 2017 9:08 am
hokie06 wrote:Hi everyone. Is there anyone on here who started off as a Recruitment applicant, worked their service commitment, then applied as a Retention applicant with their SF and went back to school? My award is supposed to last for the completion of my B.S./M.S., and I was considering going back to school at the end of my service commitment for my PhD, and I figured that applying as a Retention applicant with my SF would be a good idea.
Is it better to go in as a Recruitment applicant instead of a Retention applicant? Did you find it easier or harder to be re-awarded? Is there any advice or different ideas you have about going about this?
Thanks!
I've only ever been a recruitment applicant, so I can't speak to some of what you asked, but I can say that there are pros and cons to being a retention candidate. First and foremost, the service commitment is not 1:1, it's actually 2:1, so if it takes 4 years for your PhD you'll owe 8 years. On the other hand, instead of a flat stipend, recruitment candidates retain their current salary, so you'd likely be the highest paid PhD student at your school.
SMART requires our SFs higher us as permanent appointments vs term (as is more typical), so we are eligible for a number of tuition programs only available to the limited number of permanent appointments. I would definitely shop around and make sure that going back for a PhD is the best option for you.
[quote="hokie06"]Hi everyone. Is there anyone on here who started off as a Recruitment applicant, worked their service commitment, then applied as a Retention applicant with their SF and went back to school? My award is supposed to last for the completion of my B.S./M.S., and I was considering going back to school at the end of my service commitment for my PhD, and I figured that applying as a Retention applicant with my SF would be a good idea.
Is it better to go in as a Recruitment applicant instead of a Retention applicant? Did you find it easier or harder to be re-awarded? Is there any advice or different ideas you have about going about this?
Thanks![/quote]
I've only ever been a recruitment applicant, so I can't speak to some of what you asked, but I can say that there are pros and cons to being a retention candidate. First and foremost, the service commitment is not 1:1, it's actually 2:1, so if it takes 4 years for your PhD you'll owe 8 years. On the other hand, instead of a flat stipend, recruitment candidates retain their current salary, so you'd likely be the highest paid PhD student at your school.
SMART requires our SFs higher us as permanent appointments vs term (as is more typical), so we are eligible for a number of tuition programs only available to the limited number of permanent appointments. I would definitely shop around and make sure that going back for a PhD is the best option for you.