by graduate student » Fri Apr 08, 2022 2:18 am
You can submit a Service Agreement Amendment Request (SAAR). They may decide to grant your request, or they may choose to decline. If you cannot finish in time, and they decline your request for an extension, they may declare you in noncompliance and send you a debt notice for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Or they may direct you to submit another SAAR requesting a LOA, where you pay your own tuition and they stop stipend payments, but let you finish your degree before moving onto phase 2.
Any number of things can happen, and none of us can tell you what the SMART program will be doing in 4 years, because it won't necessarily be what they're doing now. (5 years ago there wasn't even a debt-collection process in place!)
PhD degrees funded through the SMART program are very high risk, since it's very difficult to predict how long you'll be in the program. I suspect 5-7 years or longer is more common than 4. The NDSEG fellowship is a far better deal, so that's definitely worth considering as an alternative. Funding from graduate teaching assistantship or research assistantship positions are less lucrative but much lower risk than a SMART fellowship.
You can submit a Service Agreement Amendment Request (SAAR). They may decide to grant your request, or they may choose to decline. If you cannot finish in time, and they decline your request for an extension, they may declare you in noncompliance and send you a debt notice for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Or they may direct you to submit another SAAR requesting a LOA, where you pay your own tuition and they stop stipend payments, but let you finish your degree before moving onto phase 2.
Any number of things can happen, and none of us can tell you what the SMART program will be doing in 4 years, because it won't necessarily be what they're doing now. (5 years ago there wasn't even a debt-collection process in place!)
PhD degrees funded through the SMART program are very high risk, since it's very difficult to predict how long you'll be in the program. I suspect 5-7 years or longer is more common than 4. The NDSEG fellowship is a far better deal, so that's definitely worth considering as an alternative. Funding from graduate teaching assistantship or research assistantship positions are less lucrative but much lower risk than a SMART fellowship.