
Summer Seminars and Institutes for College and University Teachers
are offered by the National Endowment for the Humanities to provide
college and university faculty members and independent scholars
with an opportunity to enrich and revitalize their understanding
of significant humanities ideas, texts, and topics. These study
opportunities are especially designed for this program and are
not intended to duplicate courses normally offered by graduate
programs, nor will graduate credit be given for them. Prior to
completing an application, please review the enclosed letter from
the project director and consider carefully what is expected in
terms of residence and attendance, reading and writing requirements,
and general participation in the work of the project.
Each seminar includes 15 participants working in collaboration
with one or two leading scholars. Participants will have access
to a major library collection, with time reserved to pursue individual
research and study projects. Institutes provide intensive collaborative
study of texts, topics, and ideas central to undergraduate teaching
in the humanities under the guidance of faculties distinguished
in their fields of scholarship. Institutes aim to prepare participants
to return to their classrooms with a deeper knowledge of current
scholarship in key fields of the humanities. Please note: The
use of the words
ELIGIBILITY
These projects are designed primarily for teachers of American
undergraduate students. Qualified independent scholars and those
employed by museums, libraries, historical societies, and other
organizations may be eligible to compete provided they can effectively
advance the teaching and research goals of the seminar or institute.
Applicants must be United States citizens, residents of U.S. jurisdictions,
or foreign nationals who have been residing in the United States
or its territories for at least the three years immediately preceding
the application deadline. Foreign nationals teaching abroad are
not eligible to apply.
Applicants must complete the NEH
application cover sheet and provide all the information requested
below to be considered eligible. Applicants must have completed
professional training by the application deadline. An applicant
need not have an advanced degree in order to qualify. Candidates
for degrees are generally not eligible. Adjunct and part-time
lecturers are eligible to apply. Individuals may not apply to
study with a director of a seminar or institute who is a current
colleague or a family member. Individuals must not apply to seminars
directed by scholars with whom they have previously studied. An
individual may apply to no more than two NEH seminars or institutes
in any one year.
SELECTION CRITERIA
A selection committee reads and evaluates all properly completed
applications in order to select the most promising applicants
and to identify a small number of alternates. (Seminar selection
committees consist of the project director and two colleagues.
Institute selection committees consist of three to five members,
usually drawn from the institute faculty and staff members.) Selection
committees are charged to give first consideration to applicants
who have not participated in an NEH-supported seminar or institute
in the last three years.
The most important consideration in the selection of participants
is the likelihood that an applicant will benefit professionally.
This is determined by committee members from the conjunction of
several factors, each of which should be addressed in the application
essay. These factors include:
1. quality and commitment as a teacher, scholar, and interpreter
of the humanities;
2. intellectual interests, both generally and as they relate
to the work of the seminar or institute;
3. special perspectives, skills, or experiences that would
contribute to the seminar or institute;
4. commitment to participate fully in the formal and informal
collegial life of the seminar or institute;
5. the likelihood that the experience will enhance the applicant's
teaching and scholarship; and
6. for seminars, the conception and organization of the applicant's
independent project and its potential contribution to the seminar.
When choices must be made among equally qualified candidates,
several additional factors are considered: Preference is given
to applicants who have not previously participated in an NEH seminar
or institute, or who would significantly contribute to the diversity
of the seminar or institute.
Institute selection committees are advised that only under
the most compelling and exceptional circumstances may an individual
participate in an institute with a director or a lead faculty
member who has previously guided that individual
STIPEND, TENURE, AND CONDITIONS OF AWARD
Individuals selected to participate in six-week long projects
will receive a stipend of $3,700; those in five-week projects
will receive $3,250; and those in four-week projects will receive
$2,800. Stipends are intended to help cover travel expenses to
and from the project location, books and other research expenses,
and living expenses for the duration of the period spent in residence.
Adjustments in cases where the stipend is insufficient to cover
all expenses are not possible.
Seminar and institute participants are required to attend all
meetings and to engage fully in the work of the project. During
the project's tenure, they may not undertake teaching assignments
or any other professional activities unrelated to their participation
in the project. Participants who, for any reason, do not complete
the full tenure of the project must refund a pro-rata portion
of the stipend.
At the end of the project's residential period, participants
will be asked to submit evaluations in which they review their
work during the summer and assess its value to their personal
and professional development. Special forms for this report will
be distributed by each project director. Completed forms should
be returned directly to the Endowment. They will become part of
the project's grant file and may become part of an application
to repeat the seminar or institute.
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS
This application packet should accompany a letter from the
project director that contains detailed information about the
topic under study; project requirements and expectations of the
participants; the academic and institutional setting; and specific
provisions for lodging, subsistence, and extracurricular activities.
If you do not have such a letter, please request one from the
director of the project in which you are interested before you
attempt to compete and submit an application. All application
materials should be sent to the project director. Sending application
materials and reference letters to the Endowment will result in
delay.
CHECKLIST OF APPLICATION MATERIALS
The following items constitute a completed application to a
summer seminar or institute:
- three copies of the completed application cover sheet,
- three copies of a detailed résumé,
- three copies of an application essay as outlined below, and
- two letters of recommendation (sent separately).
The Application Essay
The application essay should be no more than four double spaced
pages. This essay should include any relevant personal and academic
information. It should address reasons for applying; the applicant's
interest, both academic and personal, in the subject to be studied;
qualifications and experiences that equip the applicant to do
the work of the seminar or institute and to make a contribution
to a learning community; a statement of what the applicant wants
to accomplish by participating; and the relation of the project
to the applicant's professional responsibilities. Applicants to
seminars should be sure to discuss any independent study project
that is proposed beyond the common work of the seminar. Applicants
to institutes may need to elaborate on the relationship between
institute activities and their responsibilities for teaching and
curricular development.
REFERENCE LETTERS
The two referees should be chosen carefully. They should be
familiar with the applicant's professional accomplishments or
promise, interests, and ability to contribute to and benefit from
participation in the seminar or institute. They should specifically
address these issues in their recommendations. Letters from colleagues
who know the applicant's teaching and from those outside the applicant's
institution who know his or her scholarship are often more useful
than letters from college or university administrators. Referees
should be provided with copies of the director's description of
the seminar or institute and the applicant's essay. If an applicant
has previously participated in an NEH summer seminar or institute,
a recommendation from the director or lead scholar of that program
would be useful. It is the applicant's responsibility to ask the
referees to send their letters directly to the project director
and to make certain that their letters are mailed to arrive not
more than one week after the March 1 deadline.
SUBMISSION OF APPLICATIONS AND NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE
Completed applications should be submitted to the project director
and should be postmarked no later than March 1, 2003.
Successful applicants will be notified of their selection by
April 1, 2003, and they will have until April 15 to accept or
decline the offer. Applicants who will not be home during the
notification period are advised to provide an address and phone
number where they can be reached. No information on the status
of applications will be available prior to the official notification
period.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY STATEMENT
Endowment programs do not discriminate on the basis of race,
color, national origin, sex, disability, or age. For further information,
write to the Equal Opportunity Officer, National Endowment for
the Humanities, 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C.
20506. TDD: 202/606 8282 (this is a special telephone device for
the Deaf).
If this page is reproduced by computer, the information must
appear with the headings listed in the order printed here. Do
not exceed the space allotted on this page. Incomplete or illegible
applications may be deemed ineligible.
NAME:
HOME ADDRESS:
WORK ADDRESS:
(department,
institution,
street address,
city/state/ZIP)
E-MAIL:
INSTITUTION TYPE: Public Private
2-year College 4-year College University
COURSES TAUGHT THIS YEAR--INDICATE U (UNDERGRADUATE) OR G (GRADUATE):
NUMBER OF STUDENTS TAUGHT THIS YEAR:
DEGREES YOUR DEPARTMENT GRANTS:
HOW MANY YEARS HAVE YOU BEEN TEACHING?
CITIZENSHIP (IF NOT U.S., SPECIFY COUNTRY, MONTH AND YEAR U.S.
RESIDENCE BEGAN)
TELEPHONES, HOME AND WORK (include at least one where a message
can be left and indicate which):
NAME OF DIRECTOR AND TITLE OF SEMINAR OR INSTITUTE TO WHICH
YOU ARE APPLYING:
LIST DATES AND TITLES OF NEH SEMINARS AND INSTITUTES YOU HAVE
PARTICIPATED IN:
HOW DID YOU LEARN ABOUT THIS SEMINAR OR INSTITUTE?
E-MAIL___ NEH FLYER (POSTED___OR SENT TO YOU___) NEH WEBSITE___
OTHER (SPECIFY)__________
____________________________________________________________________________________
(printed name) (signature) (date)