GreekChat.com Forums  

Go Back   GreekChat.com Forums > GLO Specific Forums > Alpha > Alpha Kappa Alpha
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

» GC Stats
Members: 331,083
Threads: 115,704
Posts: 2,207,369
Welcome to our newest member, zasamanthagoole
Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 03-27-2011, 04:08 PM
DrPhil DrPhil is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 14,733
For those who are unfamiliar:

GA = graduate assistantship and consists of RA (research assistantship) or TA (teaching assistantship)

I recommend looking into a TA or RA, starting with your department and then seeing what the university in general (i.e. admissions) has to offer. You may not get the assistantship with your department for your first year but may be offered one in your second year. TA and RA within your department are preferred because, although you may still need loans and grants, you get the experience, networks, and resources to place on your resume` and use for your graduate student and career prospects.

I must shout this from the roof top, loud and clear:
I do not recommend being a residential assistant. Generally speaking, graduate student residential assistants waste a lot of time and patience living around and putting up with undergraduates. You never know how relaxed or how stressful your experience will be until you are in the experience. Unless your career path is residence life or student affairs you will get nothing out of being a residential assistant except for room and board. But, it isn't free in terms of what it requires from you and you don't get paid much (if at all) besides the room and board. By the time those undergraduates are finished with you, you will probably wish you lived off campus and paid for your own room and board. The last thing a graduate student needs is to finish a stressful day of classes, comprehensive exams, etc. and come "home" to some darn college students. Please believe it.

Last edited by DrPhil; 03-27-2011 at 04:16 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 03-27-2011, 04:25 PM
IndianaSigKap's Avatar
IndianaSigKap IndianaSigKap is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Sweet Home Indiana
Posts: 2,089
Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPhil View Post
For those who are unfamiliar:

GA = graduate assistantship and consists of RA (research assistantship) or TA (teaching assistantship)

I recommend looking into a TA or RA, starting with your department and then seeing what the university in general (i.e. admissions) has to offer. You may not get the assistantship with your department for your first year but may be offered one in your second year. TA and RA within your department are preferred because, although you may still need loans and grants, you get the experience, networks, and resources to place on your resume` and use for your graduate student and career prospects.

I must shout this from the roof top, loud and clear:
I do not recommend being a residential assistant. Generally speaking, graduate student residential assistants waste a lot of time and patience living around and putting up with undergraduates. You never know how relaxed or how stressful your experience will be until you are in the experience. Unless your career path is residence life or student affairs you will get nothing out of being a residential assistant except for room and board. But, it isn't free in terms of what it requires from you and you don't get paid much (if at all) besides the room and board. By the time those undergraduates are finished with you, you will probably wish you lived off campus and paid for your own room and board. The last thing a graduate student needs is to finish a stressful day of classes, comprehensive exams, etc. and come "home" to some darn college students. Please believe it.
While this IS true is some cases, it is not true in ALL cases. It definitely depends on the university and the housing unit itself. Yes, there are some nightmare floors, but there are many other types of living situations. There are honors floors, major specific floors, upperclassmen floors, married student housing, on campus apartments, co-ops, etc that do not have these nightmares. My three grad student friends who were RAs did have the luxury of choosing their living circumstance. One was placed the married student housing dorm because she was older and closer in age to the residents. Her most common nuisance was when one spouse would lock the other one out and she had to let one in.

It really depends on how much financial assistance the OP wants. If a higher level of assistance is needed, both GAs and RAs are viable options. I know there are people who do not want large loans to deal with when they graduate.

Thanks for clarifying the GA, TA thing. I forget that not everyone on CG is in higher ed.
__________________
Sigma Kappa
One Heart One Way since 1874
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 03-27-2011, 04:32 PM
DrPhil DrPhil is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 14,733
Quote:
Originally Posted by IndianaSigKap View Post
While this IS true is some cases, it is not true in ALL cases. It definitely depends on the university and the housing unit itself. Yes, there are some nightmare floors, but there are many other types of living situations. There are honors floors, major specific floors, upperclassmen floors, married student housing, on campus apartments, co-ops, etc that do not have these nightmares.
Like I said, "you never know how relaxed or how stressful your experience will be until you are in the experience." No one can predict that and it doesn't matter what anyone says.

I highly recommend against it and that's based on my experiences and friends' experiences. College students are college students regardless of the university, housing unit, and floor. As a graduate student, undergraduates are best dealt with in the classroom but not after hours when you're "home."
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 03-27-2011, 06:53 PM
DeltaBetaBaby DeltaBetaBaby is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: ILL-INI
Posts: 7,220
Send a message via AIM to DeltaBetaBaby
Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPhil View Post
For those who are unfamiliar:

GA = graduate assistantship and consists of RA (research assistantship) or TA (teaching assistantship)
Some schools define this differently. An RA and a TA are as you described, but then a GA is none of the above. GA's are usually administrative work, and very often outside of your department. Many that I see posted at my school are for computer programming work of one sort or another. They do, however, come with the same type of tuition waivers as RAs or TAs.

In many departments, masters students only get funded if there is money leftover after the phd students are taken care of. Some might suggest that a student looking to get a masters should apply as a phd student to get funding, and then "change her mind" once she is accepted. Also, if you want an assistantship, you must get your application in long before the real application deadline.

The bottom line is that funding is very different from school to school and department to department, and if you are applying to grad schools, you should find a way to get funding info sooner rather than later.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Graduate School ADPiZXalum Alpha Delta Pi 4 02-27-2005 01:47 PM
Graduate School EXColony Careers & Employment 1 01-10-2005 10:30 PM
Got into Graduate School APhi Sailorgirl Alpha Phi 5 03-11-2004 04:37 PM
Graduate School Cluey Careers & Employment 1 11-06-2002 10:52 PM
Graduate School Supermodel1908 Alpha Kappa Alpha 16 06-06-2001 09:07 AM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:39 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.