- Mentoring from individuals at all levels – their faculty mentors, program staff, and MMUF alumni
- Guidance on how to find research mentors and sustain relationships, build positive skills for thriving in research, and more
- Access to a cohort of scholars doing research in humanities and social sciences and learning about graduate school
- Opportunities to network and present research to peer Mellon Mays fellows from other institution’s program at the regional Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship conferences
- Financial award: term-time stipend (for two academic years) and summer research support (for two summers), contingent upon satisfactory program participation and serious commitment to doing scholarly research while a fellow
Mellon is dedicated to elevating the knowledge that informs more complete and accurate narratives of the human experience and lays the foundation for more just and equitable futures. We call this objective multivocality, and this commitment is at the core of MMUF. Some research themes and rubrics that may satisfy this goal include, but are not limited to, the following: historical and contemporary treatments of race, racialization, and racial formation; intersectional experience and analysis; gender and sexuality; Indigenous history and culture; questions about diaspora; coloniality and decolonization; the carceral state; migration and immigration; urban inequalities; social movements and mass mobilizations; the transatlantic slave trade; settler colonial societies; and literary accounts of agency, subjectivity, and community. While it is not required that student applicants work within the above or related rubrics, preference may be given to applicants who do.
Please note: students applying to year long study abroad programs are ineligible for the MMUF program. If you are interested in studying abroad for a semester, you must speak with the MMUF administrative and faculty coordinators during the MMUF application process about your plans to determine if your study abroad program is in alignment with the fellowship's goals.
Program Eligibility
Visit the Mellon Foundation website to review all eligibility requirements before applying.
Questions about the application process or other aspects of Columbia's MMUF program?
Please direct all questions about Columbia's MMUF program to ugrad-urf@columbia.edu. Please do not reach out to the Mellon Foundation, as the application process is overseen by each member institution, and URF is therefore best situated to answer any and all queries.
Eligible Fields of Study
To be eligible for selection as an MMUF fellow, students must be planning to study in one or more of these fields:
- Anthropology and archaeology
- Area/cultural/ethnic/gender studies
- Art history
- Classics
- Geography and population studies
- English
- Film, cinema, and media studies (theoretical focus)
- Musicology, ethnomusicology, and music theory
- Foreign languages and literatures
- History
- Linguistics
- Literature
- Performance studies (theoretical focus)
- Philosophy and Political Theory
- Religion and theology
- Sociology
- Theater (theoretical focus)
Program Expectations
Program Overview
By connecting fellows with a faculty mentor and providing intellectual guidance and financial assistance throughout the two years of membership, the Columbia University MMUF program works toward three goals:
- Prepare fellows to apply to graduate school;
- Equip fellows to thrive in graduate school and prepare for faculty positions;
- Offer an academic enhancement to the undergraduate experience.
Accepted fellows will receive a yearly stipend of $4000 and summer research funding of up to $4500 for each of two summers. In addition, they are eligible for travel expense reimbursement up to $800 and, for seniors, a research stipend of $400. After entering a Ph.D. program in one of the designated fields, Mellon fellows are eligible for up to $10,000 in undergraduate tuition loan repayment.
Please note: students applying to year long study abroad programs are ineligible for the MMUF program. If you are interested in studying abroad for a semester, you must speak with the MMUF administrative and faculty coordinators during the MMUF application process about your plans to determine if your study abroad program is in alignment with the fellowship's goals.
Sophomore Year
Fellows are accepted into the program during the spring of their sophomore year. Upon acceptance they will work with the Program Coordinator and Graduate Assistant to plan for a productive summer, and identify a faculty mentor.
During the summer, fellows will work independently, with the guidance of their faculty mentor, the program coordinator, and the graduate assistant, to develop their research. Fellows will receive a summer stipend of $3,900.
Fellows will also participate in a research workshop during the week prior to Labor Day. The program will provide campus housing.
Junior Year
Fellows will continue to develop their research ideas with the guidance of the faculty mentor. Fellows also participate in the weekly dinner meetings. These weekly meetings will include:
Presentations of student research at various stages of development
Visits from Columbia faculty, who will share stories and thoughts about their work and career paths
Visits from Columbia graduate students, who will share stories and thoughts about their experience of graduate school
Visits from relevant Columbia administrators, who will share information about fellowships, applying to graduate school, and other relevant opportunities
Fellows will receive a stipend of $1,800 each semester during their Junior Year, and during the summer fellows continue their independent research and receive a stipend of $3,900. In addition, fellows participate in a GRE workshop during the week prior to Labor Day, where the program will provide campus housing.
Senior Year
Fellows will continue their research throughout their senior year, which is typically transformed into a senior thesis, and continue to participate in the weekly dinner meetings. Fellows applying to graduate school immediately will prepare applications and visit schools during the fall semester, ahead of graduate school application deadlines, which typically are due in December - February of the senior year.
Fellows will receive a stipend of $1,800 each semester of their senior year in addition to a one-time stipend of $400 to cover expenses for their senior thesis research.
Post-Graduate Benefits
Loan Repayment
Fellows who matriculate into PhD programs within 39 months of graduating from Columbia University will be eligible to receive up to $10,000 in loan repayment. Repayments are made in five installments: four installments of $1,250 — one for each of the first four years of graduate study — and one final installment of $5,000 upon earning the doctorate.
Columbia arranges the loan repayment directly with students' lenders. In order to claim the repayment, students must:
1. Complete the Loan Repayment Form
2. Submit, no later than May 1, the completed form and a current loan payment slip to Undergraduate Research and Fellowships.
Resources for Graduate Students
Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship alumni who matriculate into PhD programs no more than 39 months after earning their undergraduate degrees are entitled to many forms of support for their research and professional development:
- Years 1-3: Summer Conference
- Years 2-5: Predoctoral Research Development Grant
- Years 2-5: Graduate Studies Enhancement Grant
- Years 3-6: Proposal Writing and Dissertation Development Seminar
- Years 4-6: Travel & Research Grant
- Years 5-7: Preparing for the Professoriate Seminar
- Years 6-7: Dissertation Writing Retreat
- Year 6: Dissertation Grant
- Years 6-7: Dissertation Completion Grant
Additional information can be found on the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mellong Mays Undergraduate Fellowship website.
FAQs
I am not sure that I want to go on to a PhD and into the professoriate. Should I apply for the MMUF?
It can very dificult for a sophomore student to be sure that the PhD and professoriate is the right career choice. You are still in the early stages of your college years, and students pursuing a four-year liberal arts education would not typically be expected to be sure of any career path at this time. As a result, in order to apply for the MMUF program you are not required to be 100% sure that this is the right path for you. Instead, we are looking for talented, hard-working students who at this point in their college career are seriously and in good faith considering the the PhD and professoriate, probably alongside one or two other career options.
How big is the program?
Each year we can recruit no more than five Columbia University sophomores. As a result, during the academic year there are no more than ten students participating in the weekly dinner meetings.
I want to study abroad. Is this compatible with the program?
Students applying to year long study abroad programs are ineligible for the MMUF program. If you are interested in studying abroad for a semester, you must speak with the MMUF administrative and faculty coordinators during the MMUF application process about your plans to determine if your study abroad program is in alignment with the fellowship's goals.
I am a junior, but really interested in the program. Can I apply?
MMUF provides a two-year academic enhancement program designed to assist students apply to, and thrive in, PhD programs. As a result, only sophomores are eligible to apply for this program.
How many fellows go onto graduate school?
This program is geared toward students who are seriously considering graduate school, and a significant proportion of MMUF fellows go on to pursue postgraduate study.
I want to learn more. Who can I talk to?
Depending on the nature of your questions, you can talk to:
- Dean Ariella Lang, Administrative Coordinator: AL223@columbia.edu